Signalling and morphogenesis during Drosophila dorsal closure

2016 
Drosophila dorsal closure is a key embryonic process during which the dorsal-most epidermal cells called leading edge cells differentiate and act in a coordinated manner to close a transient dorsal hole covered by the amnioserosa in a process reminiscent of wound healing. I showed that JNK and DPP are wired in a network motif called ‘feed-forward loop’ (FFL) that controls leading edge cell specification and differentiation. The DPP branch of the FFL filters unwanted JNK activity that occurs during thermal stress. Next, I focused on the actin cable, a supra-cellular structure produced by the leading edge cells during dorsal closure or wound healing from fly to humans. My data suggest that the actin cable does not provide a major contractile force. Rather, the actin cable balances forces and stabilizes cell geometry so that closure resolves in a perfectly structured and scar-free tissue. The absence of the cable leads to cell shape irregularities as well as patterning and planar cell polarity defects that are reminiscent of scarring. We propose that the cable prevents scaring by acting as a mechanical freeze field that protects fine cellular structures from the major closure forces that operate at tissue level.Altogether, my work brings new insights on the signalling and morphogenesis during dorsal closure.
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