The proximal half of the Drosophila E-cadherin extracellular region is dispensable for many cadherin-dependent events but required for ventral furrow formation

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Abstract

The formation of the ventral furrow during Drosophila gastrulation is driven by coordinated apical constriction. Cell-cell adhesion is thought to regulate apical constriction, but the mechanisms are poorly understood. DE-cadherin, an epithelial classic cadherin, has in its membrane-proximal extracellular region a suite of domains absent from vertebrate/urochordate classic cadherins. We constructed DEΔP, a DE-cadherin derivative that lacks the membrane-proximal half of the extracellular region but retains the entire cytoplasmic domain and still exhibits strong cell-cell binding ability. The extracellular region of DEΔP consists of only cadherin repeats, mimicking vertebrate/urochordate classic cadherins. In animals lacking DE-cadherin, DEΔP organized adherens junction assembly and functioned fully in many cadherin-dependent processes, including oogenesis. Embryos in which DE-cadherin was entirely replaced by DEΔP established the blastoderm epithelium but failed to form a ventral furrow. Apical constrictions were initiated relatively normally but subsequently decelerated. These were then followed by catastrophic disruption of the junctional network. Our results suggest that although the membrane-proximal half of the DE-cadherin extracellular region is dispensable for many developmental events, it is essential for efficient and robust apical constriction during ventral furrow formation. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 by the Molecular Biology Society of Japan/Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Haruta, T., Warrior, R., Yonemura, S., & Oda, H. (2010). The proximal half of the Drosophila E-cadherin extracellular region is dispensable for many cadherin-dependent events but required for ventral furrow formation. Genes to Cells, 15(3), 193–208. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2443.2010.01389.x

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