Cell culture of individual Drosophila embryos

Development ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-172
Author(s):  
David P. Cross ◽  
James H. Sang

A new procedure is described for the preparation of in vitro cell cultures from individual early gastrulae of Drosophila melanogaster. In these cultures several identifiable cell types differentiate within 24 h (nerve, muscle, fat-body, haemocyte and chitin-secreting): their initial appearance and continuing development over a period of weeks is described. It is proposed that this technique may be used to analyse abnormalities of cellular development in embryonic lethal mutants. Culture in vitro of cells from lethal embryos is seen to have two broad roles: (1) to test the developmental capacity of individual cell types in a situation where they are relatively free from possible deleterious interactions with other cell types and are liberated from the system of the dying embryo, and (2) through the preparation of mixed cultures from normal and mutant embryos, to determine the influence of the presence of wild-type cells on observed abnormalities of a particular cell type.

Development ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 159-175
Author(s):  
Glen Shields ◽  
Andreas Dübendorfer ◽  
James H. Sang

A variety of cell types develop when cells of 6½-8½ h Drosophila embryos are cultured in an improved medium. Nerve, muscle, fat-body, chitin-secreting, and macrophage-like cells (possibly haemocytes) appear in the first 24 h and mature over the next week. Tracheal, imaginal disc, a second stage of the macrophage-like, and a number of unidentified fibroblastic and epithelial cells appear in the 2nd and 3rd week, following a resumption of cell multiplication. There is some organization of some of the cell types into higher structures.


Development ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 173-187
Author(s):  
David P. Cross ◽  
James H. Sang

Results are reported from the culturing in vitro of cells from individual early gastrulae of the following four groups of X-linked embryonic lethal mutants of Drosophila melanogaster. (1) Notch lethals. Five Notch mutants were studied which have been reported to give similar abnormalities in whole embryos: the nervous system displays a three-fold hypertrophy as part of a shift in the pattern of differentiation within ectodermal derivatives, and mesodermal derivatives do not differentiate. An hypertrophy of nerve was found in cell cultures prepared from embryos of all five mutants. In addition, four of the five alleles consistently gave abnormalities of muscle differentiation: when compared to controls, Notch cultures had a reduced frequency of myotubes, and displayed unusual clusters of myocytes which had either failed to fuse or had fused incompletely. Results from mixed cultures prepared from two embryos were consistent with the autonomous expression of nerve and muscle abnormalities by Notch-8 cells in the presence of wild-type cells. It is argued that the Notch locus has a direct role in the differentiation of both nerve and muscle. (2) white deficiencies. Cells carrying either of two deficiencies gave a clear-cut pattern of abnormalities: initial cellular differentiations were normal, but nerve, muscle and fat-body cells progressively deteriorated during the culture period. Mixed cultures showed that wild-type cells could not ‘rescue’ mutant muscle and fat-body cells; however, the status of the autonomy of mutant nerve abnormalities in these cultures was unclear. Both white deficiencies remove cytological band 3C1, and this permits a comparison of results with those from cultures of cells from Notch-8 embryos (also deficient for 3C1). Abnormalities displayed in cultures of the two types of mutant show no overlap. Therefore no consistent cellular abnormality can be attributed to absence of band 3C1. (3) lethal{l)myospheroid. In contrast to earlier observations on in vitro cell cultures (Donady & Seecof, 1972) muscle was seen to differentiate, though its morphology was extremely abnormal. Observations indicated that all cell types within the cultures had poor properties of adhesion to a glass substrate. It is argued that the observed abnormalities are not consistent with a mutant lesion which is restricted to the basement membrane (contra Wright, 1960), and that all cell types carry a basic defect which may reside in the cell membrane. (4) shibirets alleles. Cultures of two temperature-sensitive lethal shibire alleles (shits1, shits3) were normal at the permissive temperature of 22 °C. At the restrictive temperature (29 °C) early cell differentiation was normal but subsequent development was blocked. This blockage could be partially reversed by shifting cultures to the permissive temperature after as much as 10 days exposure to the high temperature. It is suggested that shits cells are mutant in a process which is basic to several cell types.


2007 ◽  
Vol 75 (11) ◽  
pp. 5338-5345 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kee-Jong Hong ◽  
Jason R. Wickstrum ◽  
Hung-Wen Yeh ◽  
Michael J. Parmely

ABSTRACT The production of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) is a key step in the protective innate immune response to Francisella tularensis. Natural killer cells and T cells in the liver are important sources of this cytokine during primary F. tularensis infections, and interleukin-12 (IL-12) appears to be an essential coactivating cytokine for hepatic IFN-γ expression. The present study was undertaken to determine whether or not macrophages (Mφ) or dendritic cells (DC) provide coactivating signals for the liver IFN-γ response in vitro, whether IL-12 mediates these effects, and whether Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling is essential to induce this costimulatory activity. Both bone marrow-derived Mφ and DC significantly augmented the IFN-γ response of F. tularensis-challenged liver lymphocytes in vitro. While both cell types produced IL-12p40 in response to F. tularensis challenge, only DC secreted large quantities of IL-12p70. DC from both IL-12p35-deficient and TLR2-deficient mice failed to produce IL-12p70 and did not costimulate liver lymphocytes for IFN-γ production in response to viable F. tularensis organisms. Conversely, liver lymphocytes from TLR2-deficient mice cocultured with wild-type accessory cells produced IFN-γ at levels comparable to those for wild-type hepatic lymphocytes. These findings indicate that TLR2 controls hepatic lymphocyte IFN-γ responses to F. tularensis by regulating DC IL-12 production. While Mφ also coinduced hepatic IFN-γ production in response to F. tularensis, they did so in a fashion less dependent on TLR2.


2003 ◽  
Vol 71 (11) ◽  
pp. 6213-6221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve D. Swain ◽  
Sena J. Lee ◽  
Michel C. Nussenzweig ◽  
Allen G. Harmsen

ABSTRACT Host defense against the opportunistic pathogen Pneumocystis carinii requires functional interactions of many cell types. Alveolar macrophages are presumed to be a vital host cell in the clearance of P. carinii, and the mechanisms of this interaction have come under scrutiny. The macrophage mannose receptor is believed to play an important role as a receptor involved in the binding and phagocytosis of P. carinii. Although there is in vitro evidence for this interaction, the in vivo role of this receptor in P. carinii clearance in unclear. Using a mouse model in which the mannose receptor has been deleted, we found that the absence of this receptor is not sufficient to allow infection by P. carinii in otherwise immunocompetent mice. Furthermore, when mice were rendered susceptible to P. carinii by CD4+ depletion, mannose receptor knockout mice (MR-KO) had pathogen loads equal to those of wild-type mice. However, the MR-KO mice exhibited a greater influx of phagocytes into the alveoli during infection. This was accompanied by increased pulmonary pathology in the MR-KO mice, as well as greater accumulation of glycoproteins in the alveoli (glycoproteins, including harmful hydrolytic enzymes, are normally cleared by the mannose receptor). We also found that the surface expression of the mannose receptor is not downregulated during P. carinii infection in wild-type mice. Our findings suggest that while the macrophage mannose receptor may be important in the recognition of P. carinii, in vivo, this mechanism may be redundant, and the absence of this receptor may be compensated for.


2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (21) ◽  
pp. 8143-8156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haifeng Yang ◽  
Wei Jiang ◽  
Matthew Gentry ◽  
Richard L. Hallberg

ABSTRACT CDC55 encodes a Saccharomyces cerevisiaeprotein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) regulatory subunit.cdc55-null cells growing at low temperature exhibit a failure of cytokinesis and produce abnormally elongated buds, butcdc55-null cells producing the cyclin-dependent kinase Cdc28-Y19F, which is unable to be inhibited by Y19 phosphorylation, show a loss of the abnormal morphology. Furthermore,cdc55-null cells exhibit a hyperphosphorylation of Y19. For these reasons, we have examined in wild-type and cdc55-null cells the levels and activities of the kinase (Swe1p) and phosphatase (Mih1p) that normally regulate the extent of Cdc28 Y19 phosphorylation. We find that Mih1p levels are comparable in the two strains, and an estimate of the in vivo and in vitro phosphatase activity of this enzyme in the two cell types indicates no marked differences. By contrast, while Swe1p levels are similar in unsynchronized and S-phase-arrested wild-type and cdc55-null cells, Swe1 kinase is found at elevated levels in mitosis-arrestedcdc55-null cells. This excess Swe1p incdc55-null cells is the result of ectopic stabilization of this protein during G2 and M, thereby accounting for the accumulation of Swe1p in mitosis-arrested cells. We also present evidence indicating that, in cdc55-null cells, misregulated PP2A phosphatase activity is the cause of both the ectopic stabilization of Swe1p and the production of the morphologically abnormal phenotype.


2009 ◽  
Vol 21 (06) ◽  
pp. 433-436
Author(s):  
Chi-Chang Lin ◽  
Sheng-Kai Li ◽  
Bor-Shyang Sheu ◽  
Hsien-Chang Chang

A simple, fast, real-time, and nondestructive analysis of protein expression in biological samples, such as membranes, based on dielectrophoresis is described. On the basis of the distinct differences in the dielectrophoretic properties of individual cell types, the wild-type BabA-positive Helicobacter pylori isolates and its BabA-negative isogenic mutant can be identified and separated. The herein-presented approach of using microelectrodes should be an easy-to-use, cheap, and rapid alternative to separate and distinguish the presence or absence of important outer-membrane proteins.


2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 589-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Kain Ching ◽  
Larry D. Spears ◽  
Jennifer L. Armon ◽  
Allyson L. Renth ◽  
Stanley Andrisse ◽  
...  

There are reports that ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) plays a role in insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation, although this is not the case in some cell types. Because Akt plays a key role in insulin signaling, which leads to glucose transport in skeletal muscle, the predominant tissue in insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, we examined whether insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation and (or) glucose transport would be decreased in skeletal muscle of mice lacking functional ATM, compared with muscle from wild-type mice. We found that in vitro insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation was normal in soleus muscle from mice with 1 nonfunctional allele of ATM (ATM+/−) and from mice with 2 nonfunctional alleles (ATM−/−). However, insulin did not stimulate glucose transport or the phosphorylation of AS160 in ATM−/− soleus. ATM protein level was markedly higher in wild-type extensor digitorum longus (EDL) than in wild-type soleus. In EDL from ATM−/− mice, insulin did not stimulate glucose transport. However, in contrast to findings for soleus, insulin-stimulated Akt phosphorylation was blunted in ATM−/− EDL, concomitant with a tendency for insulin-stimulated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity to be decreased. Together, the findings suggest that ATM plays a role in insulin-stimulated glucose transport at the level of AS160 in muscle comprised of slow and fast oxidative-glycolytic fibers (soleus) and at the level of Akt in muscle containing fast glycolytic fibers (EDL).


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 711-711
Author(s):  
Srimoyee Ghosh ◽  
Sergei B Koralov ◽  
Irena Stevanovic ◽  
Mark S Sundrud ◽  
Yoshiteru Sasaki ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 711 Naïve CD4 T cells differentiate into diverse effector and regulatory subsets to coordinate the adaptive immune response. TH1 and TH2 effector subsets produce IFN-γ and IL-4, respectively, whereas proinflammatory TH17 cells are key regulators of autoimmune inflammation, characteristically produce IL-17 and IL-22 and differentiate in the presence of inflammatory cytokines like IL-6 and IL-21 together with TGF-β. Naive T cells can also differentiate into tissue-protective induced T regulatory (iTreg) cells. NFAT proteins are highly phosphorylated and reside in the cytoplasm of resting cells. Upon dephosphorylation by the Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent serine phosphatase calcineurin, NFAT proteins translocate to the nucleus, where they orchestrate developmental and activation programs in diverse cell types. In this study, we investigated the role of the Ca/NFAT signaling pathway in regulating T cell differentiation and the development of autoimmune diseases. We generated transgenic mice conditionally expressing a hyperactivable version of NFAT1 (AV-NFAT1) from the ROSA26 locus. To restrict AV-NFAT1 expression to the T cell compartment, ROSA26-AV-NFAT1 transgenic mice were bred to CD4-Cre transgenic mice. Naïve CD4 T cells freshly isolated from AV mice produced significantly less IL-2 but increased amounts of the inhibitory cytokine IL-10. To investigate the role of NFAT1 in the generation of TH1, TH2, Tregand TH17 cells, the respective cell types were generated from CD4 T cells of AV mice by in vitro differentiation. T cells from AV-NFAT1 mice exhibited a dysregulation of cytokine expression, producing more IFN-γ and less IL-4. While the numbers of CD4+CD25+ “natural” Treg cells in peripheral lymphoid organs and their in vitro suppressive functions were slightly decreased in AV mice, iTreg generation from CD4+CD25- T cells of AV mice as compared to wild type cells was markedly enhanced. Moreover, TH17 cells generated in vitro from CD4 T cells of AV mice in the presence of IL-6, IL-21 and TGF-β exhibited dramatically increased expression of both IL-10 and IL-17 as compared to wild type controls. To investigate putative NFAT binding sites in the IL-10 and IL-17 gene loci, we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments. We show that NFAT1 can bind at the IL-17 locus at 3 out of 9 CNS regions which are accessible specifically during TH17 but not during TH1 and TH2 differentiation. Furthermore, we provide evidence that NFAT1 binds one CNS region in the IL10-locus in TH17 cells. To verify our observations in vivo, we induced experimental autoimmune encephalitis (EAE) in AV mice and wild type controls with the immunodominant myelin antigen MOG33-55 emulsified in complete Freund‘s adjuvant. While wild type animals showed a normal course of disease with development of tail and hind limb paralysis after approximately 10 days, AV mice showed a markedly weaker disease phenotype with less severe degrees of paralysis and accelerated kinetics of remission. Moreover at the peak of the response, there were fewer CD4+CD25- but more CD4+CD25+ T cells in the CNS of AV animals compared to wild type controls. Surprisingly, these cells produced significantly more IL-2, IL-17 and IFN-γ upon restimulation, even though they displayed decreased disease. In summary, our data provide strong evidence that NFAT1 contributes to the regulation of IL-10 and IL-17 expression in TH17 cells and show that increasing NFAT1 activity can ameliorate autoimmune encephalitis. This could occur in part through upregulation of IL-10 expression as observed in vitro, but is also likely to reflect increased infiltration of regulatory T cells into the CNS as well as increased conversion of conventional T cells into Foxp3+ regulatory T cells within the CNS. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Development ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 501-517 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Bejsovec ◽  
E. Wieschaus

Each segment of a Drosophila larva shows a precisely organized pattern of cuticular structures, indicating diverse cellular identities in the underlying epidermis. Mutations in the segment polarity genes alter the cuticle pattern secreted by the epidermal cells; these mutant patterns provide clues about the role that each gene product plays in the development of wild-type epidermal pattern. We have analyzed embryos that are multiply mutant for five key patterning genes: wingless, patched, engrailed, naked and hedgehog. Our results indicate that wild-type activity of these five segment polarity genes can account for most of the ventral pattern elements and that their gene products interact extensively to specify the diverse cellular identities within the epidermis. Two pattern elements can be correlated with individual gene action: wingless is required for formation of naked cuticle and engrailed is required for formation of the first row of denticles in each abdominal denticle belt. The remaining cell types can be produced by different combinations of the five gene activities. wingless activity generates the diversity of cell types within the segment, but each specific cell identity depends on the activity of patched, engrailed, naked and hedgehog. These molecules modulate the distribution and interpretation of wingless signalling activity in the ventral epidermal cells and, in addition, each can contribute to pattern through a pathway independent of the wingless signalling pathway.


Development ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 125 (11) ◽  
pp. 2149-2158 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.S. Britton ◽  
B.A. Edgar

In newly hatched Drosophila larvae, quiescent cells reenter the cell cycle in response to dietary amino acids. To understand this process, we varied larval nutrition and monitored effects on cell cycle initiation and maintenance in the mitotic neuroblasts and imaginal disc cells, as well as the endoreplicating cells in other larval tissues. After cell cycle activation, mitotic and endoreplicating cells respond differently to the withdrawal of nutrition: mitotic cells continue to proliferate in a nutrition-independent manner, while most endoreplicating cells reenter a quiescent state. We also show that ectopic expression of Drosophila Cyclin E or the E2F transcription factor can drive quiescent endoreplicating cells, but not quiescent imaginal neuroblasts, into S-phase. Conversely, we demonstrate that quiescent imaginal neuroblasts, but not quiescent endoreplicating cells, can be induced to enter the cell cycle when co-cultured with larval fat body in vitro. These results demonstrate a fundamental difference in the control of cell cycle activation and maintenance in these two cell types, and imply the existence of a novel mitogen generated by the larval fat body in response to nutrition.


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