Kruppel-homolog, a stage-specific modulator of the prepupal ecdysone response, is essential for drosophila metamorphosis

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Abstract

We have characterised a P-element-induced prepupal mutant of Drosophila melanogaster which after an apparently normal embryonic and larval development fails to complete head eversion, an essential step in metamorphosis. The P-element insertion disrupts an ecdysone-regulated transcript which, although expressed during embryonic and larval stages, appears critical for preparing the late prepupal response to ecdysone. By a combination of molecular and genetic studies, in which we recovered new alleles, we show that the locus is complex, containing at least two distinct promoters. Its transcripts contain a short region described previously by R. Schuh et al. (1986, Cell 47, 1025-1032), who screened for homologues of the Kruppel gene. Our studies on the corresponding gene, named Kruppel-homolog (Kr-h), add to a growing body of evidence that specific isoforms of a number of key genes are implicated in both embryogenesis and metamorphosis. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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APA

Pecasse, F., Beck, Y., Ruiz, C., & Richards, G. (2000). Kruppel-homolog, a stage-specific modulator of the prepupal ecdysone response, is essential for drosophila metamorphosis. Developmental Biology, 221(1), 53–67. https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.2000.9687

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