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First published online March 9, 2006


Development 133, 701e (2006)
© The Company of Biologists Limited
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In this issue

Polyhomeotic: a neuronal memory aid?


Figure 1

Cells `remember' their identity by maintaining patterns of transcriptional repression that are established as they differentiate. The Polycomb-group (PcG) proteins are important players in this cellular memory system and their role in Hox gene regulation during embryogenesis has been extensively studied. Now, on p. 1231, Wang and co-workers report that the PcG protein Polyhomeotic (Ph) is required to maintain neuronal diversity during metamorphosis in the Drosophila brain and that other PcG proteins also function in neuronal development. The researchers used a genetic mosaic screen in adult fly brains to isolate a new ph mutation. In normal fly brains, different neuronal subtypes have characteristic projection patterns and gene expression profiles, but in the absence of ph, neurons acquire aberrant - but apparently uniform - morphologies and cellular identities. This transformation requires a pulse of ecdysone, leading the researchers to speculate that normal steroid hormone signalling (which drives metamorphosis) may have detrimental side effects on neuronal identity when PcG functions are compromised.


Related articles in Development:

Steroid hormone-dependent transformation of polyhomeotic mutant neurons in the Drosophila brain
Jian Wang, Ching-Hsien J. Lee, Suewei Lin, and Tzumin Lee
Development 2006 133: 1231-1240. [Abstract] [Full Text]  




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