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Imaginal Pioneers Prefigure the Formation of Adult Thoracic Muscles in Drosophila melanogaster

Authors :
Anne M. Schneiderman
Patricia K. Rivlin
Ronald Booker
Source :
Developmental Biology. (2):450-459
Publisher :
Academic Press.

Abstract

In insects, specialized mesodermal cells serve as templates to organize myoblasts into distinct muscle fibers during embryogenesis. In the grasshopper embryo, large mesodermal cells called muscle pioneers extend between the epidermal attachment points of future muscle fibers and serve as foci for myoblast fusion. In the Drosophila embryo, muscle founder cells serve a similar function, organizing large numbers of myoblasts into larval muscles. During the metamorphosis of Drosophila, nearly all larval muscles degenerate and are replaced by a set of de novo adult muscles. The extent to which specialized mesodermal cells homologous to the founders and pioneers of the insect embryo are involved in the development of adult-specific muscles has yet to be established. In the larval thorax, the majority of imaginal myoblasts are associated with the imaginal discs. We report here the identification of a morphologically distinct class of disc-associated myoblasts, which we call imaginal pioneers, that prefigures the formation of at least three adult-specific muscles, the tergal depressor of the trochanter and dorsoventral muscles I and II. Like the muscle pioneers of the grasshopper, the imaginal pioneers attach to the epidermis at sites where the future muscle insertions will arise and erect a scaffold for developing adult muscles. These findings suggest that a prior segregation of imaginal myoblasts into at least two populations, one of which may act as pioneers or founders, must occur during development.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121606
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e7469d96c8364f8ddd6a94ff5cc62c34
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.2000.9676