'De-evolution' of Drosophila toward a more generic mode of axis patterning.
Author(s) -
Jeremy Lynch,
Claude Desplan
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the international journal of developmental biology
Language(s) - English
DOI - 10.1387/ijdb.14756325
The genetics of the establishment of the primary axes of the early embryo have been worked out in great detail Drosophila. However, evidence has accumulated that Drosophila employs a mode of patterning that is not shared with most insects. In particular, the use of the morphogenic gradient of the Bicoid homeoprotein appears to be a novel addition to the fly developmental toolkit. To better understand the ancestral mode of patterning that is probably more widely used by insects, several groups have used Evo-Devo approaches as well as sophisticated genetic manipulations of Drosophila to achieve some form of 'de-evolution' of this derived insect. Genetic manipulations of the beetle Tribolium and the wasp Nasonia have validated most of these results.
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