Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2039036 Cell Reports 2016 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Common progenitor cells generate Lawf neurons and lamina glia in bifurcating lineages•Common progenitor cells differ from typical Drosophila neuroblasts•Notch regulates the decision between lamina glial precursors and Lawf neuronal precursors•Lawf neurons migrate over long distances to assume their final positions in the medulla

SummaryHow neuronal and glial fates are specified from neural precursor cells is an important question for developmental neurobiologists. We address this question in the Drosophila optic lobe, composed of the lamina, medulla, and lobula complex. We show that two gliogenic regions posterior to the prospective lamina also produce lamina wide-field (Lawf) neurons, which share common progenitors with lamina glia. These progenitors express neither canonical neuroblast nor lamina precursor cell markers. They bifurcate into two sub-lineages in response to Notch signaling, generating lamina glia or Lawf neurons, respectively. The newly born glia and Lawfs then migrate tangentially over substantial distances to reach their target tissue. Thus, Lawf neurogenesis, which includes a common origin with glia, as well as neuronal migration, resembles several aspects of vertebrate neurogenesis.

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