4.2 Article

Ostia, the inflow tracts of the Drosophila heart, develop from a genetically distinct subset of cardial cells

Journal

MECHANISMS OF DEVELOPMENT
Volume 109, Issue 1, Pages 51-59

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0925-4773(01)00509-3

Keywords

Drosophila; heart; aorta; dorsal vessel; tinman; seven-up; inflow tract; ostlum; ostia; myocyte enhancer factor-2; cardiac muscle; broad complex; alary muscle; body wall muscle

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The homeobox gene tinmun and the nuclear receptor gene seven-up are expressed in mutually exclusive dorsal vessel cells in Drosophila, however, the physiological reason for this distinction is not known. We demonstrate that tin and svp-lacZ expression persists through the larval stage to the adult stage in the same pattern of cells expressing these genes in the embryo. In the larva, six pairs of Svp-expressing cells form muscular ostia. which permit hemolymph to enter the heart for circulation, however, more anterior Svp-expressing cells form the wall of the dorsal vessel. During pupation, the adult heart forms from a chimera of larval and imaginal muscle fibers. The portion of the dorsal vessel containing the larval ostia is histolyzed and the anterior Svp-expressing cells metamorphose into imaginal ostia. This is the first demonstration that the significant molecular diversity of cardial cells identified in the embryonic heart correlates with the formation of physiologically and functionally distinct muscle cells in the animal. Furthermore, our experiments define the cellular changes that occur as the larval heart is remodeled into an imaginal structure in an important model organism. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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