Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2173477 Developmental Biology 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Drosophila trachea is a branched tubular epithelia that transports oxygen and other gases. trachealess (trh), which encodes a bHLH-PAS transcription factor, is among the first genes to be expressed in the cells that will form the trachea. In the absence of trh, tracheal cells fail to invaginate to form tubes and remain on the embryo surface. Expression of many tracheal-specific genes depends on trh, but all of the known targets have relatively minor phenotypes compared to loss of trh, suggesting that there are additional targets. To identify uncharacterized transcriptional targets of Trh and to further understand the role of Trh in embryonic tracheal formation, we performed an in situ hybridization screen using a library of ~ 100 tracheal-expressed genes identified by the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project (BDGP). Surprisingly, expression of every tracheal gene we tested was dependent on Trh, suggesting a major role for Trh in activation and maintenance of tracheal gene expression. A re-examination of the interdependence of the known early-expressed transcription factors, including trh, ventral veinless (vvl) and knirps/knirps-related (kni/knrl), suggests a new model for how gene expression is controlled in the trachea, with trh regulating expression of vvl and kni, but not vice versa. A pilot screen for the targets of Vvl and Kni/Knrl revealed that Vvl and Kni have only minor roles compared to Trh. Finally, genome-wide microarray experiments identified additional Trh targets and revealed that a variety of biological processes are affected by the loss of trh.

► trh autoregulates in the trachea, but not in the other tissues. ► trh regulates expression of all tracheal genes based on in situ analysis of ~ 100 genes. ► ventral veinless (vvl) regulates only 35-30% of tracheal genes and knirps (kni) regulates only a single tracheal gene. ► Contrary to published findings, Trh maintains vvl and activates kni, but neither kni nor vvl affect trh. ► Microarray studies reveal that Trh regulates a broad range of biological processes.

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