Fragile X mental retardation protein controls trailer hitch expression and cleavage furrow formation in Drosophila embryos Journal Article


Authors: Monzo, K.; Papoulas, O.; Cantin, G. T.; Wang, Y.; Yates, J. R. 3rd; Sisson, J. C.; Anderson, K. V.
Article Title: Fragile X mental retardation protein controls trailer hitch expression and cleavage furrow formation in Drosophila embryos
Abstract: During the cleavage stage of animal embryogenesis, cell numbers increase dramatically without growth, and a shift from maternal to zygotic genetic control occurs called the midblastula transition. Although these processes are fundamental to animal development, the molecular mechanisms controlling them are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that Drosophila fragile X mental retardation protein (dFMRP) is required for cleavage furrow formation and functions within dynamic cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein (RNP) bodies during the midblastula transition. dFMRP is observed to colocalize with the cytoplasmic RNP body components Maternal expression at 31B (ME31B) and Trailer Hitch (TRAL) in a punctate pattern throughout the cytoplasm of cleavage-stage embryos. Complementary biochemistry demonstrates that dFMRP does not associate with polyribosomes, consistent with their reported exclusion from many cytoplasmic RNP bodies. By using a conditional mutation in small bristles (sbr), which encodes an mRNA nuclear export factor, to disrupt the normal cytoplasmic accumulation of zygotic transcripts at the midblastula transition, we observe the formation of giant dFMRP/TRAL-associated structures, suggesting that dFMRP and TRAL dynamically regulate RNA metabolism at the midblastula transition. Furthermore, we show that dFMRP associates with endogenous tral mRNA and is required for normal TRAL protein expression and localization, revealing it as a previously undescribed target of dFMRP control. We also show genetically that tral itself is required for cleavage furrow formation. Together, these data suggest that in cleavage-stage Drosophila embryos, dFMRP affects protein expression by controlling the availability and/or competency of specific transcripts to be translated. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved) (journal abstract).
Keywords: drosophila; cleavage furrow formation; fragile x mental retardation protein; trailer hitch; animal development
Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 103
Issue: 48
ISSN: 0027-8424
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences  
Date Published: 2006-11-28
Start Page: 18160
End Page: 18165
Language: English
PROVIDER: Ovid Technologies
ACCESSION: Peer Reviewed Journal: 2006-23432-001
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0606508103
PROVIDER: psycinfo
PMCID: PMC1838723
PUBMED: 17110444
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - References - "Source: PsycINFO"
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  1. Kathryn Anderson
    148 Anderson