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Published December 1989 | public
Journal Article

Monoclonal antibody probes discriminate early and late mutant defects in development of the Drosophila retina

Abstract

Many mutations in Drosophila melanogaster affect the morphology of the adult compound eye. However, the times at which the phenotypes first become manifest in development are, in most cases, unknown; they can occur at any of a series of stages. Among mutants in which the adult eyes appear externally similar, the developmental stage of onset of each defect may be quite different. Pattern formation in the compound eye begins during the late third larval instar in the eye imaginal disc, when a wave of morphogenesis crosses the disc from posterior to anterior. As this wave crosses the disc, there appears in its wake an array of photoreceptor neuron clusters and accessory cells that will comprise the adult ommatidia. Eye discs from 20 abnormal-eye mutants were analyzed using monoclonal antibodies that highlight various aspects of the developing array, to observe the stage at which each anomaly becomes evident. Some mutations apparently affect precursor cells, others the setting up of the pattern, others maintenance of the pattern, and still others later morphogenetic events.

Additional Information

© 1989 Academic Press, Inc. Accepted 8 August 1989. This work was supported by a grant to S.B. (DCB-8409366) from the National Science Foundation. We thank E. Eichenberger and R. Young for expert technical assistance; W. Leiserson for help with the scanning electron microscopy; R. Hackett, W. Leiserson, and N. Bonini for allowing us to include some of their eya data; and our colleagues for comments on the manuscript. This work was supported by a grant to S.B. (DCB-8409366) from the National Science Foundation. P.J.R. was supported in part by a National Research Service Award (1 T32GM07616) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and by the Lawrence A. Hanson Foundation. It is based in part on the thesis by Patricia Renfranz (1989) in satisfaction of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023