Locomotion relies on stable attachment of muscle fibres to their target sites, a process that allows for muscle contraction to generate movement. Here, we show that glide/gcm and glide2/gcm2, the fly glial cell determinants, are expressed in a subpopulation of embryonic tendon cells and required for their terminal differentiation. By using loss-of-function approaches, we show that in the absence of both genes, muscle attachment to tendon cells is altered, even though the molecular cascade induced by stripe, the tendon cell determinant, is normal. Moreover, we show that glide/gcm activates a new tendon cell gene independently of stripe. Finally, we show that segment polarity genes control the epidermal expression of glide/gcm and determine, within the segment,whether it induces glial or tendon cell-specific markers. Thus, under the control of positional cues, glide/gcm triggers a new molecular pathway involved in terminal tendon cell differentiation, which allows the establishment of functional muscle attachment sites and locomotion.
Introduction
In vertebrates, muscles are attached to bones, whereas in arthropods they are attached to cuticle, the insect exoskeleton. In both cases, attachment is performed by tendon cells that establish a physical link between muscles and bones or cuticle. The tension induced by muscle contraction is then transmitted to cuticle or bones, which allows locomotion.
Our knowledge on the formation of junctions between muscles and tendon cells (called attachment sites) derives from fly studies(Volk, 1999). Initially,subsets of epidermal cells within each embryonic segment acquire the competence to form tendon cells. This early muscle-independent step is under the control of the Stripe transcription factor(Frommer et al., 1996; Lee et al., 1995). Competent tendon cells provide guidance cues that direct myopodia to their attachment sites. Once muscles and target tendon cells get in contact with each other,myopodia stop growing (Bate,1990; Swan et al.,2004) and only competent tendon cells that are in contact with muscles maintain tendon cell marker expression(Becker et al., 1997). This late muscle-dependent differentiation step is characterised by the expression of delilah (Armand et al.,1994) and β1tubulin(Buttgereit, 1993; Buttgereit et al., 1991; Yarnitzky et al., 1997) and leads to the formation of hemiadherens junctions (HAJs), cell-specific junctions associated with extracellular matrix components deposited between muscles and tendon cells (Tepass and Hartenstein, 1994). Mutations in HAJ components, as for example in genes encoding the βPS integrin ortholog(Brown, 1994; Leptin et al., 1989; MacKrell et al., 1988; Newman and Wright, 1981) or its ligand Tiggrin (Bunch et al.,1998), lead to complete lack of adhesion at attachment sites,which results in muscle detachment and rounding(Bokel and Brown, 2002; Prokop et al., 1998). Interestingly, although βPS integrin is expressed in muscles and tendon cells, most accumulation occurs in muscles and only the muscular component seems required in the process(Martin-Bermudo and Brown,1996). Thus, establishment of HAJs triggers muscle–tendon cell interactions that are necessary for the formation of functional muscle attachment sites (Clark et al.,2003; Martin-Bermudo,2000; Martin-Bermudo and Brown, 2000). This terminal step of tendon cell differentiation that allows muscle contraction to generate locomotion is still poorly understood.
glial cell deficient/glial cell missing (glide/gcm) and glide2/gcm2, which we will refer to as glide and glide2 throughout the text for the sake of simplicity, form a gene complex on the second chromosome and encode homologous transcription factors(Akiyama et al., 1996; Alfonso and Jones, 2002; Hosoya et al., 1995; Jones et al., 1995; Kammerer and Giangrande, 2001; Miller et al., 1998; Ragone et al., 2001; Schreiber et al., 1997; Van De Bor and Giangrande,2002; Van De Bor et al.,2000; Vincent et al.,1996). When both genes are missing, glial cells transform into neurons, whereas overexpression of either glide or glide2 is sufficient to induce gliogenesis, indicating that the glide complex triggers the glial fate (Akiyama-Oda et al.,1998; Alfonso and Jones,2002; Bernardoni et al.,1999; Bernardoni et al.,1998; Hosoya et al.,1995; Jones et al.,1995; Kammerer and Giangrande,2001; Miller et al.,1999; Vincent et al.,1996).
Here, we reveal a novel role of the glide complex during Drosophila development. We show that both glide and glide2 are expressed in a subpopulation of embryonic tendon cells. In the absence of both genes, muscles are disorganised and HAJs are abnormal,even though all known tendon cell-specific markers, including stripeitself, are still expressed. Our data also show that the glide complex controls a new molecular pathway required in terminal tendon cell differentiation and tendon cell–muscle interactions. Finally, we show that the same transcription factor is used for different purposes during development (fate choice in neurogenic region, terminal differentiation in tendon cells) in response to positional cues that control its expression and its specificity.
Materials and methods
Fly strains and transgenic lines
The wild-type strain was Sevelen. Df(2L)132 (glide-glide2deletion) and glideN7-4 are described in Kammerer and Giangrande and Vincent et al., respectively(Kammerer and Giangrande,2001; Vincent et al.,1996). The rA87 enhancer trap line carries an insertion into the glide promoter (Jones et al., 1995; Vincent et al.,1996). UAS-glide F18A(Bernardoni et al., 1998),UAS-glide2 (Kammerer and Giangrande, 2001) and UAS-stripe b(Becker et al., 1997) lines were used for ectopic expression. UAS-ncGFP (gift of C. Desplan)targets GFP to nucleus and cytoplasm. Rescue experiments were realised using the stripe-gal4 driver (gift of G. Morata). Df(3R)DG4(stripe deletion), wingless(wg1–12), patched(ptc9), patched-gal4 (ptc-gal4) and engrailed-gal4 (en-gal4) flies were obtained from the Bloomington Stock Center. glide-gal4 carries a Gal4 P-element inserted into the glide promoter(Hayashi et al., 2002). The glideDN (glide Dominant Negative) construct was obtained by inserting the Glide DNA binding domain (amino acids 1 to 390)upstream to the Engrailed repressor domain (amino acids 1 to 304) and by cloning the chimeric gene into the CasperUAST vector. The glideN7-4 mutation was inserted into the UAS-glideDN construct by PCR. The UAS-glideDN and UAS-glideN7-4DN lines were obtained by germline transformation of w1118animals.
Immunohistochemistry
Embryos were immunolabelled as in Vincent et al.(1996). The following primary antibodies were used: guinea-pig anti-Stripe (1:300)(Becker et al., 1997), mouse anti-Repo (1:100) (DSHB), rabbit anti-β gal (1:500) (Cappel), rabbit anti-Alien (1:1000) (gift of A. Paululat), rabbit anti-Myosin heavy chain(MHC) (1:1000) (gift of D. P. Kiehart), rabbit anti-GFP (1:500) (Molecular Probes). Secondary antibodies conjugated with FITC, Cy3 (Jackson) were used at 1:400. Phalloidin-TRITC was used (1:100) (Molecular Probes) to label muscle F-actin in late embryos. Embryos were mounted in Vectashield medium (Vector)and analysed using conventional (Axiophot, Zeiss) or confocal (DMRE, Leica)microscopes.
RNA analysis
In-situ hybridisation was as in Bernardoni et al.(Bernardoni et al., 1999) and Kammerer and Giangrande (Kammerer and Giangrande, 2001). stripe a and Ent2 mRNAs were detected using specific probes corresponding to nucleotide 665 to 1583(accession number NM 079671) and 681 to 1851 (accession number NM 135205),respectively. stripe a/b mRNAs were detected using a common probe corresponding to nucleotide 422 to 1140 (accession number NM 169786).
Transmission electron microscopy
Thirty-minute egg lays were kept at 25°C until stage 16. After manual devitellinization, embryos were fixed overnight at 4°C in 0.1 M Na-phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) containing 4% paraformaldehyde and 3%glutaraldehyde, postfixed for 1 hour in 1% osmium tetroxide in 0.1 M Na-phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) and dehydrated in graduated ethanol series ending with propylene oxide treatment. Embedding used an araldite-epon (48-hour polymerization at 60°C). Semi-thin sections were stained with toluidine blue and visualised under light microscope to determine the region of interest. Ultra-thin sections (60-70 nm) were contrasted with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and examined using a Philips EM208 electron microscope. glide-glide2 embryos were genotyped by X-Gal staining.
Larval behaviour and histology
Locomotion was measured on 3.5 cm 2.5% agarose plates marked with a 0.5 cm grid by counting the total number of squares crossed in 10 minutes by each larva [modified from Naimi et al. (Naimi et al., 2001)]. For muscle visualisation, larvae were progressively dehydrated in ethanol series ending with methyl salicylate treatment and examined under polarised light (Axiophot, Zeiss).
Results
glide and glide2 are expressed in Drosophila embryonic tendon cells
In each segment, glide and glide2 are expressed from mid-stage 12 until the end of embryogenesis in a single row of epidermal cells(black arrows in Fig. 1A,B)located at the border, posterior to engrailed-expressing cells (data not shown). Using a glide-gal4; UAS-GFP line(glide::GFP) (Fig. 1C), we showed that glide and stripe are coexpressed (yellow nuclei, Fig. 1E). Tendon cells are subdivided into several subpopulations,depending both on their position and on the muscles to which they attach(Fig. 1F,H)(Volk, 1999). Longitudinal muscles (Fig. 1F,G) attached to tendon cells present along the segment border (yellow nuclei in Fig. 1E) or parallel to it(empty lozenges in Fig. 1D). Lateral transverse muscles (Fig. 1H) attached to intrasegmental tendon cells that are organised in two clusters per hemi-segment (white bracket in Fig. 1D). glide and glide2 are expressed in segment border tendon cells, the anteriormost cells in each segment (yellow nuclei in Fig. 1E and green cells in Fig. 1F-H), providing new molecular markers to identify these cells.
The glide complex is necessary for terminal tendon cell differentiation
As tendon cells are required for muscle attachment and as both glide and glide2 are able to trigger glial differentiation,we analysed muscle organisation in embryos lacking the whole complex(glide-glide2 lof).
Somatic muscles of glide-glide2 embryos did not show any abnormality until stage 16 [11.50-14.50 hours after egg-laying (AEL) stages,according to Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein(Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein,1997)] (data not shown). Moreover, late markers (delilahand β1tubulin) were still expressed (data not shown), indicating that muscles had established contacts with tendon cells(Yarnitzky et al., 1997), a process normally achieved by stage 15 (11.20-11.50 hours AEL)(Bate, 1990; Swan et al., 2004).
By contrast, defects became obvious by early stage 17 (14.50-16.00 hours AEL): ventral longitudinal muscles bypassed their target tendon cells, reached the midline and attached to other muscles(Fig. 2B,D). This highly penetrant phenotype (93% of embryos, n=14), present in one or more segments, affected a muscle that attached to the ventral glide-expressing tendon cell. Midline crossing muscles seemed to be still attached since they did not display the compact round shape of detached muscles observed in βPS integrin embryos(Brown, 1994; Leptin et al., 1989; MacKrell et al., 1988; Newman and Wright, 1981). This was also confirmed by the presence of βPS integrin, a typical marker of attachment sites (Brown,2000), along the ends of crossing muscles (arrow, Fig. 4G). Altogether, our results suggest that terminal tendon cell differentiation is affected,resulting in defective muscle attachment sites. Interestingly, glideembryos carrying one dose of glide2 displayed similar but less severe and less penetrant muscle defects (compare Fig. 2E with Fig. 2D) (one midline crossing per embryo, 44% penetrance, n=16), whereas embryos only lacking glide2 or glide2 embryos carrying one dose of glideshowed no defects (data not shown). Finally, glide embryos, which lack most glial cells, did not show any defect either (data not shown),indicating that muscle phenotypes are not due to nervous system alteration.
Importantly, muscle defects were completely rescued by specifically restoring either glide (Fig. 2F) or glide2 (data not shown) expression in tendon cells. Such conditional rescue, obtained by introducing stripe::glideor stripe::glide2 transgenes into glide-glide2 embryos formally proves that muscles defects are due to absence of glide and glide2 tendon cell expression. It also supports the view that both genes are required, their dosage being crucial in this pathway.
Tissue-specific repression of glide complex activity affects muscle organisation and locomotion
Muscle attachment defects were mostly observed ventrally(Fig. 2), whereas the glide complex is expressed in all segment border tendon cells(Fig. 1). Two lines of evidence suggested that such a confined phenotype was due to the pleiotropic effect of the glide-glide2 deficiency. First, lethality occurred before all attachment sites were fully differentiated and functional. Second,neuromuscular defects indirectly caused by lack of glia probably affected the contractions that normally occur at the end of embryogenesis. As a consequence, mutant tendon cells were not as solicited as wild-type ones.
To assess the role of the glide complex at the attachment site in the absence of nervous system phenotypes, we produced a tissue-specific glide-glide2 loss of function using a dominant negative (DN)approach. For this purpose, we generated a fusion protein between the Glide DNA binding domain and the Engrailed repressor domain. Chimeric genes with this repressor domain have already been successfully used to produce DN mutations (Jaynes and O'Farrell,1991; Vickers and Sharrocks,2002). Since Glide and Glide2 DNA-binding domains are highly homologous and bind to the same site(Kammerer and Giangrande,2001; Miller et al.,1998), the glideDN construct probably inhibits targets of both proteins and, indeed, when expressed in the central nervous system (CNS), it blocks glial differentiation (B.A. and G.M.T.,unpublished).
To specifically repress the glide complex dependent programme in tendon cells, we used two drivers. No muscle phenotype was detected in stripe-gal4; UAS-glideDN flies (data not shown),probably because the driver is expressed too late to efficiently repress glide complex activity. By contrast, the earlier driver ptc-gal4 induced muscle defects similar to those observed in embryos lacking glide-glide2 (see ptc::glideDN in Fig. 2G). To provide further evidence that the muscle defects are specifically due to glideDN, we also generated a point mutation in the DNA binding domain (glideN7-4DN). The glideN7-4 allele corresponds to a null, due to the fact that the mutant protein is not able to bind DNA(Miller et al., 1998; Vincent et al., 1996). Therefore, the glideN7-4DN construct corresponds to an inactive form of glideDN, providing a negative control. The findings that ptc::glideN7-4DN embryos did not show muscle defects (Fig. 2H) and were perfectly viable until the adult stage indeed validate the DN approach. Finally, possible mesodermal contribution to the observed phenotype was excluded in two ways: the ptc-gal4 driver was not expressed in muscles, and mesodermal GlideDN expression using the twi-gal4 driver did not induce attachment defects (data available upon request).
Most ptc::glideDN embryos died just prior to eclosion,later than glide-glide2 embryos, few escapers reaching the second instar larval stage. Such escapers displayed major locomotion defects, such as uncoordinated movements and abnormal muscle contractions (see Movie 1). Moreover, ptc::glideDN animals were sluggish(Fig. 3A and Movie 1) and tended to make turns instead of following the same direction, the stereotyped behaviour shown by wild-type animals (data not shown). Larval muscle organisation was severely altered, indicating that muscle attachment is impaired (Fig. 3C,E) and that the glide pathway is required in tendon cells during larval life as well. Finally, when analysed at the end of stage 17 (17-19 hours AEL), ptc::glideDN embryos displayed severe muscle attachment defects in longitudinal and ventral longitudinal muscles(Fig. 3I-K) that probably account for the late embryonic lethality. By contrast, ptc::glideN7-4DN animals displayed no locomotion defects(see Movie 1 and Fig. 3A) and showed no embryonic and larval muscle defects(Fig. 3B,D,F-H).
Altogether, these results clearly demonstrate a direct role of glide-glide2 during terminal tendon cell differentiation.
Attachment sites are defective in glide-glide2 embryos
glide-glide2 attachment sites were analysed by electron microscopy. Hemiadherens junctions (HAJs), which are normally found at contact sites between muscles and tendon cells(Fig. 4A), contain cell-specific integrins that link the extracellular matrix components to the cytoskeleton of each cell (Prokop et al.,1998; Tepass and Hartenstein,1994). Adhesion of HAJs to the extracellular matrix formed an electron-dense material (arrowhead in Fig. 4B) that was absent in glide-glide2 embryos(Fig. 4C), indicating that the junction was defective. Moreover, the tight interdigitation observed between wild-type muscle and tendon cell was not present in mutant animals, strongly suggesting adhesion defects (Fig. 4C). Finally, βPS integrin accumulation at the position of attachment sites was decreased in glide-glide2 embryos (arrowheads in Fig. 4D,G). The HAJ phenotypes were probably due to the loss of both tendon cell and muscular βPS, since HAJs and muscles are normal in animals lacking only the tendon cell-specific integrin PS1 or its ligand Laminin(Gotwals et al., 1994; Prokop et al., 1998). In conclusion, muscle attachment sites were defective in glide-glide2embryos.
Epistatic interactions between the glide complex and the stripe-induced pathway
stripe is the earliest known gene to be expressed in presumptive tendon cells (Frommer et al.,1996; Lee et al.,1995). It encodes two isoforms (a and b) that differ by their transcription start site but have the same DNA-binding domain(Frommer et al., 1996; Lee et al., 1995). While the role of stripe a is unknown, stripe b ectopic expression induces the expression of tendon cell markers such as shortstop (also called kakapo) (Gregory and Brown, 1998; Strumpf and Volk,1998; Subramanian et al.,2003), alien(Goubeaud et al., 1996), delilah (Armand et al.,1994), β1tubulin(Buttgereit, 1993; Buttgereit et al., 1991) and stripe a (Becker et al.,1997; Vorbruggen and Jackle,1997). In stripe embryos, tendon cell differentiation does not occur and most markers are less, or not at all, expressed(Frommer et al., 1996).
We asked whether stripe exerts its function through glideand found no effect on glide transcription in stripe b gain-and loss-of-function embryos (Fig. 5E,F and Fig. 5G,H,respectively). Thus, glide represents the first identified gene that is expressed independently of stripe. To further clarify the role of the glide complex, we analysed the expression of stripe a and b in embryos either lacking or ectopically expressing glideor glide2. Loss of glide-glide2 had no effect on stripe a or b expression (data not shown). By contrast, ectopic glide expression (en::glide) specifically induced stripe b transcription (Fig. 5A-Dand Fig. 6B). Interestingly,while stripe b ectopic expression (en::stripe b) induced tendon cell marker expression, ectopic glide (en::glide)induced only stripe b and alien (compare Fig. 6D with Fig. 6E). This may depend on the delayed stripe b ectopic expression in glidegain-of-function experiments. These results suggest that glide and stripe act on common targets such as alien.
glide2 did not induce stripe expression (compare Fig. 6A with Fig. 6C), consistent with the observation that glide2 is normally expressed later than glide and stripe. By contrast, alien was ectopically expressed (Fig. 6F), indicating that the glide complex can activate a tendon cell gene independently of stripe.
All stripe-induced tendon cell markers (shortstop,delilah, β1tubulin, how) were still expressed in glide-glide2 embryos (data not shown), implying that the glide complex controls the expression of yet unknown targets. Functional microarray experiments based on glide overexpression in the nervous system, as well as computational analyses based on the presence of Glide binding sites(GBSs), have identified potential glide targets(Egger et al., 2002; Freeman et al., 2003). We analysed several of them for tendon cell expression and identified Ent2 (Equilibrative nucleoside transporter 2)(Fig. 6G), which is also expressed in glial cells and contains eight GBSs(Freeman et al., 2003). glide was necessary (data not shown) and sufficient(Fig. 6H) to induce Ent2 expression. Also glide2, but not stripe b,ectopic expression induced Ent2 expression (data not shown and Fig. 6I, respectively). Thus Ent2 represents a target specific to the glide complex. To summarise,the glide complex did not depend on stripe and controlled a new molecular pathway independently of stripe.
Regulation of glide expression in tendon cells
The glide complex set-up of expression precedes muscle interaction with competent tendon cells and is probably muscle-independent, as confirmed by the observation that glide was still expressed in mesoderm-lacking embryos (data not shown). Segment polarity genes such as hedgehog(hh) and wingless (wg) are involved in the determination of segment border cells(Piepenburg et al., 2000),some of which later become tendon cells(Volk and VijayRaghavan,1994). We therefore tested whether patterning genes control glide expression. patched (ptc) encodes a transmembrane receptor involved in the repression of Hh signal transduction(Alcedo and Noll, 1997). In ptc embryos, the Hh signalling pathway is constitutively activated(Forbes et al., 1993; Ingham and Hidalgo, 1993),leading to ectopic cells with segment border identity (compare Fig. 7A with Fig. 7F)(Nusslein-Volhard and Wieschaus,1980; Piepenburg et al.,2000) that expressed stripe and glide(Fig. 7G-J). In wgembryos, neither glide (compare Fig. 7B,C with Fig. 7L,M) nor stripe(compare Fig. 7D,E with Fig. 7N,O) was expressed in epidermis, in agreement with the loss of segment border cell identity (compare Fig. 7A with Fig. 7K)(Nusslein-Volhard and Wieschaus,1980; Nusslein-Volhard et al.,1984). Consistent results were obtained in other segment polarity mutants (lines, naked) (data not shown). Thus, stripe and glide expression were independently controlled by positional cues.
Glide mode of action in the epidermis
glide and glide2 induce glial differentiation within and outside the nervous system upon ectopic expression(Akiyama-Oda et al., 1998; Alfonso and Jones, 2002; Bernardoni et al., 1998; Hosoya et al., 1995; Jones et al., 1995; Kammerer and Giangrande, 2001; Miller et al., 1999; Vincent et al., 1996). Given our finding that glide was also sufficient to induce stripe b, we asked whether ectopic glide induces tendon cell and glial markers in the same or in different cells, the latter case suggesting that Glide specificity depends on the presence of cell-specific factors. We induced glide expression in the anterior region of the segment by using the ptc-gal4 driver. Co-labelling with anti-Stripe and the anti-Repo glial marker (Halter et al.,1995; Xiong et al.,1994) revealed that only Repo was ectopically present (compare Fig. 8A-C with Fig. 8D-F). By contrast, when glide was ectopically expressed in the posterior region(en::glide), the two markers were ectopically present, very few cells being positive for both of them (Fig. 8G-I). This argues in favour of positional cues dictating Glide target recognition. Interestingly, dorso/ventral patterning genes seem involved as well: most ectopic Repo labelling occurred medio/ventrally,whereas most ectopic Stripe labelling occurred dorsally(Fig. 8G-H). Moreover, glide overexpression in the nervous system, a tissue that arises from the ventralmost ectoderm, did not activate stripe expression (data not shown).
Strikingly, while glide2 did not induce stripe expression(Fig. 6C), it induced Repo labelling by using both drivers (Fig. 8J and data not shown). These results indicate that: (1)cell-specific factors dictated Glide target recognition; (2) such factors provided a coordinate grid along antero/posterior and dorso/ventral axes; and(3) while glide and glide2 had similar gain-of-function phenotypes with respect to the glial cell pathway, glide had a stronger potential than glide2 in tendon cells(Fig. 8K).
Discussion
Our study sets the basis for understanding the pathway leading to the formation of functional attachment sites. glide and glide2represent the fly glial fate determinants and are sufficient to trigger gliogenesis. Here, we show that these two transcription factors are also expressed and required in tendon cells, where they define a new developmental pathway controlling terminal differentiation. We also show that genes patterning the embryonic segment control glide expression as well as the specificity of its target recognition. Thus, positional cues dictate whether a transcription factor acts as a cell fate determinant in the neurogenic region or as a terminal differentiation gene that allows muscle contraction to generate locomotion.
Terminal tendon cell differentiation requires the glide complex to establish functional muscle attachment sites
glide and glide2 are required in segment border tendon cells. By contrast to the nervous system, where these genes are transiently expressed and play a role in fate choice, their transcripts are present in tendon cells until the end of embryogenesis. Moreover, the glide complex is not controlled by the stripe tendon cell fate determinant and is not necessary for the expression of stripe targets. Finally, the glide complex does not trigger tendon cell differentiation. Thus, glide and glide2 do not play a role in fate choice in the epidermis.
Several observations indicate that the glide complex controls terminal tendon cell differentiation and thereby affects attachment site integrity. First, glide-glide2 embryos do express genes (delilah andβ 1tubulin) that are activated by the establishment of muscle-tendon cell contact (Yarnitzky et al., 1997) and only show muscle defects after stage 16, once these contacts have been established. Second, glide-glide2 tendon cells and muscles are unable to form a functional attachment site, as shown by muscle midline crossing and defective HAJs. Third, tendon cell-specific inactivation of glide complex activity results in massive muscle disorganisation and defective locomotion. Interestingly, locomotion defects have also been observed in larvae mutant for flapwing, a gene encoding a phosphatase 1β, known for its role in muscle attachment maintenance(Raghavan et al., 2000). It will be interesting to determine whether glide complex targets represent Flapwing substrates, even though it is clear that Flapwing also affects a glide-independent pathway since it is expressed and required both in tendon cells and muscles (Raghavan et al.,2000).
Although Stripe represents the tendon cell fate determinant(Frommer et al., 1996; Lee et al., 1995), it is expressed until the end of embryogenesis, suggesting an additional, late,role. Indeed, while early inactivation of the stripe pathway (stage 11) by the dominant negative approach and null mutations induce the same phenotype of detached muscles, late inactivation (stage 15) induces a muscle midline crossing phenotype similar to the one we observed in glide-glide2 embryos (Vorbruggen and Jackle, 1997). Thus, the glide complex and stripe are necessary for terminal tendon cell differentiation and probably act on common targets such as alien. Interestingly, the glide complex also controls its own pathway, independently of stripe(Fig. 9). Understanding the relative contribution of the two pathways will require the identification of the stripe and glide targets. Finally, the observation that tendon cell-specific mutations alter muscle organisation highlights the importance of cell–cell interactions throughout muscle and tendon cell development. Identifying mutations affecting either cell type will help us elucidate the bases of such interactions.
Regulation and mode of action of the glide complex in the epidermis
glide expression is controlled along the antero-posterior axis via wingless (wg) and hedgehog (hh) signalling pathways. Hh- and Wg-secreted proteins are expressed anterior to segment border cells (DiNardo et al.,1994; Sanson,2001); therefore, a non-autonomous process controls glideexpression in the epidermis. Hh and Wg act respectively via Cubitus interruptus (Ci) (Alexandre et al.,1996; Von Ohlen et al.,1997) and Pangolin (Pan) transcription factors(Brunner et al., 1997; van de Wetering et al., 1997),which bind to the promoter of stripe and activate its expression(Piepenburg et al., 2000). Since the first 6 kb of the glide promoter that are sufficient to induce epidermal expression (data not shown)(Jones et al., 2004) contain no predicted sites for Pan and Ci, Hh and/or Wg signalling pathways probably act on glide indirectly.
While dorso/ventral (D/V) patterning contribution to stripeexpression and tendon cell differentiation is not yet elucidated, a microarray study has identified glide as a target of Dorsal(Stathopoulos and Levine,2002), the maternally provided D/V patterning factor(Belvin and Anderson, 1996). However, we found no Dorsal binding sites in the glide promoter,suggesting that this regulation is also indirect. Altogether, our results show that stripe and glide expression is mutually independent and associated with segment border cell identity. Therefore, positional cues trigger the expression of Glide and Stripe, which in turn control several aspects of tendon cell differentiation. Detailed analyses of the glide promoter will allow us to identify the transcription factors upstream from glide in tendon cells.
glide is able to induce glial- (ventral and anterior) or tendon cell- (dorsal and posterior) specific markers depending on D/V and A/P cues,indicating that the two fates (glial versus tendon cell) are mutually exclusive and that cell-specific factors depending on patterning genes dictate Glide specificity. In line with this are the data on Abrupt, a BTB-zinc finger transcription factor that is thought to act as a repressor(Hu et al., 1995). Indeed, the loco Glide target is expressed only in glial cells in wild-type embryos (Granderath et al.,1999), but is also expressed in tendon cells in abruptembryos (Granderath et al.,2000). Abrupt seems to be expressed throughout the epidermis(Hu et al., 1995) and does not regulate glide expression(Granderath et al., 2000),indicating that it normally represses the Glide glial pathway in tendon cells. Thus, expression of tendon cell-versus glial-specific markers depends on the balance of positive and negative factors. Whether such factors interact directly with Glide and/or act on glide targets remains to be elucidated.
Vertebrate tendons
Like fly attachment sites, the vertebrate musculoskeletal system requires the coordinated formation of distinct types of tissues. The cellular and molecular bases of vertebrate tendon development are not well understood,mostly due to lack of markers and mutations that specifically affect this process. The identification of Scleraxis, a bHLH transcription factor(Cserjesi et al., 1995)expressed in tendons and their progenitors(Brown et al., 1999; Schweitzer et al., 2001) has opened the way to study vertebrate tendon development(Brent et al., 2003; Dubrulle and Pourquie, 2003; Schweitzer et al., 2001). It will be interesting to determine whether glide orthologs(Akiyama et al., 1996; Altshuller et al., 1996; Kammerer et al., 1999; Kanemura et al., 1999) are expressed and required in vertebrate tendons as well.
Fly HAJs resemble vertebrate myotendinous junctions (MTJs), as, in both cases, muscle attachment to tendon cells requires integrins and extracellular matrix components (Benjamin and Ralphs,1997; Brown,2000). Alterations of vertebrate MTJs result in muscular dystrophy, as shown by the phenotype of mice double mutant for dystrophin and utrophin, two redundant genes encoding proteins that link muscle intracellular cytoskeleton to extracellular matrix at the MTJ (Deconinck et al.,1997; Deconinck et al.,1998; Grady et al.,1997; Tinsley et al.,1998). Moreover, the dystrophin zebrafish ortholog is necessary for attachment site integrity(Bassett et al., 2003).
A single Drosophila gene (dmDLP) displays homology with both dystrophin and utrophin and is characterised by transcripts regulated by different promoters(Greener and Roberts, 2000; Neuman et al., 2001). Interestingly, one transcript is expressed in segment border cells during embryonic development. It will be interesting to analyse the contribution of this protein to fly attachment site integrity and its interaction with the glide pathway.
Movies available online
Acknowledgements
We thank C. Desplan, D. Kalderon, D. P. Kiehart, G. Morata, and A. Paululat for providing antibodies and flies as well as the Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center. We thank M. Boeglin, D. Hentsch and J.L. Vonesh for assistance with imaging. Confocal microscopy facility was financed by MESR (95.V.0015). We thank C. Hindelang for electron microscopy analysis. Thanks to all group members for helpful advice, C. Diebold for excellent technical assistance, N. Arbogast for keeping fly stocks and E. Cler for help with larval locomotion assays. This work was supported by the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, the Hôpital Universitaire de Strasbourg, the Association pour la Recherche contre le Cancer (ARC) and EEC(GRANT QLG3-CT-2000-01224). L.S. was supported by ARC, AFM fellowships. C.J. was supported by an MRT fellowship.