1. A corset function of exoskeletal ECM promotes body elongation in Drosophila
- Author
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Reiko Tajiri, Haruhiko Fujiwara, and Tetsuya Kojima
- Subjects
QH301-705.5 ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Embryonic Development ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animal Shells ,Developmental biology ,Morphogenesis ,Animals ,Body Size ,Biology (General) ,Drosophila ,030304 developmental biology ,Cuticle (hair) ,0303 health sciences ,Mechanical property ,biology ,Chemistry ,fungi ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Exoskeleton ,Extracellular Matrix ,Larva ,Elongation ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Function (biology) - Abstract
Body elongation is a general feature of development. Postembryonically, the body needs to be framed and protected by extracellular materials, such as the skeleton, the skin and the shell, which have greater strength than cells. Thus, body elongation after embryogenesis must be reconciled with those rigid extracellular materials. Here we show that the exoskeleton (cuticle) coating the Drosophila larval body has a mechanical property to expand less efficiently along the body circumference than along the anteroposterior axis. This “corset” property of the cuticle directs a change in body shape during body growth from a relatively round shape to an elongated one. Furthermore, the corset property depends on the functions of Cuticular protein 11 A and Tubby, protein components of a sub-surface layer of the larval cuticle. Thus, constructing a stretchable cuticle and supplying it with components that confer circumferential stiffness is the fly’s strategy for executing postembryonic body elongation., Tajiri et al. describe how the cuticle coating the Drosophila larval body expands less efficiently along the body circumference than along the anteroposterior axis to drive body elongation. This “corset” property depends on cuticular proteins Cpr11A and Tubby, which may work together to change larval body shape.
- Published
- 2021