Functional analysis of Drosophila and mammalian cut proteins in flies

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Abstract

The cut locus acts as a bimodal switch controlling cell fate in the peripheral nervous system of Drosophila and is also required for the development of the wing margin. It encodes a protein, Cut, that contains an atypical homeodomain and three copies of a new motif which can bind DNA in vitro. The human protein CDP and the murine protein Cux have recently been isolated as DNA-binding activities and they are structurally related to Cut. We show that ectopic expression of Cut, CDP, or Cux similarly affects embryonic sensory organ development and can rescue a wing scalloping mutant phenotype associated with loss of cut expression along the prospective wing margins. This suggests that the function of Cut is evolutionarily conserved.

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Ludlow, C., Choy, R., & Blochlinger, K. (1996). Functional analysis of Drosophila and mammalian cut proteins in flies. Developmental Biology, 178(1), 149–159. https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1996.0205

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