30
Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2 Molecular Biology syllabus web site

Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Lecture 10

Gene Control in DevelopmentCell type specification

Development of an organism

Reading: Chapter 11:471-2

Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4

Chapter 22.2

Molecular Biology syllabus web site

Page 2: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Cell type specification in the yeast

model system

Page 3: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 4: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 5: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 6: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 7: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

MCM1 is a general transcription factor found in all cell types

Different mating types express specific transcription factors that form complexes with MCM1

Page 8: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 9: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 10: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2
Page 11: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Transcription factors and lessons from yeast

• Factors may act alone or in combinations

• The same factor in different combinations may contribute to complexes that act as repressors or activators.

Page 12: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Cell type specification in animals

Page 13: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Cell type specification in mammals: skeletal myogenesis proceeds through

three stages

Page 14: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

How to identify factors involved in muscle development?

To identify transcription factors that may play a role in “determination” of cells destined for a specific organ:

• Isolation of cDNAs by subtractive hybridization (fibroblasts vs. myoblasts)

• Testing by transformation of undetermined cell types to demonstrate effect on “determination”

• Create “Knockouts” to confirm information on the stage at which a specific factor acts

• Characterization: function as heterodimers (key to specificity is the interaction with other factors) and belong to family of basic helix-loop-helix DNA binding transcription factors (bHLH)

MRFs, muscle regulatory factors binding to “E” box in many genes

Page 15: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Microarray analysis shows global patterns of gene expression during differentiation

Page 16: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Development of an organism: Drosophila melanogaster

Page 17: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Drosophila has two life forms

Page 18: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Patterning information is generated during oogenesis and early

embryogenesis

Page 19: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Formation of the blastula during Drosophila early embryogenesis

Page 20: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Four maternal gene systems (anterior, posterior, terminal, dorsoventral) control early

patterning in fly embryos

Page 21: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Mechanisms controlling pattern formation

Page 22: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Morphogens regulate development as a function of their concentration: maternal bicoid

gene specifies anterior region in Drosophila

Yellow: even-skippedOrange: fushi tarazu

Red: hunchbackGreen: Krupple

Page 23: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Maternally derived inhibitors of translation contribute to early

Drosophila patterning

Page 24: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Nanos regulates the translation of Hunchback and

helps to establish the Hunchback

gradient

Page 25: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Use of mutants to characterize Nanos as a translational inhibitor

Page 26: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

HOX genes and transcription factors discovered through “homeotic mutants” showing transformation of one body part

into another

Page 27: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Expression domains of Hox genes in Drosophila and mouse embryos

Page 28: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Specification of floral-organ identity in Arabidopsis: flowers contain four different

organs

Page 29: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Three classes of genes control floral-organ identity

Page 30: Lecture 10 Gene Control in Development Cell type specification Development of an organism Reading: Chapter 11:471-2 Chapter 15.1; 15.3; 15.4 Chapter 22.2

Expression patterns of floral organ-identity genes