Notch signaling in the development of the inner ear: Lessons from Drosophila

  1. Mark Eddison*,,
  2. Isabelle Le Roux,, and
  3. Julian Lewis*,§
  1. *Vertebrate Development Laboratory and Developmental Genetics Laboratory, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, London WC2A 3PX, United Kingdom

Abstract

The sensory patches in the ear of a vertebrate can be compared with the mechanosensory bristles of a fly. This comparison has led to the discovery that lateral inhibition mediated by the Notch cell–cell signaling pathway, first characterized in Drosophila and crucial for bristle development, also has a key role in controlling the pattern of sensory hair cells and supporting cells in the ear. We review the arguments for considering the sensory patches of the vertebrate ear and bristles of the insect to be homologous structures, evolved from a common ancestral mechanosensory organ, and we examine more closely the role of Notch signaling in each system. Using viral vectors to misexpress components of the Notch pathway in the chick ear, we show that a simple lateral-inhibition model based on feedback regulation of the Notch ligand Delta is inadequate for the ear just as it is for the fly bristle. The Notch ligand Serrate1, expressed in supporting cells in the ear, is regulated by lateral induction, not lateral inhibition; commitment to become a hair cell is not simply controlled by levels of expression of the Notch ligands Delta1, Serrate1, and Serrate2 in the neighbors of the nascent hair cell; and at least one factor, Numb, capable of blocking reception of lateral inhibition is concentrated in hair cells. These findings reinforce the parallels between the vertebrate ear and the fly bristle and show how study of the insect system can help us understand the vertebrate.

Footnotes

  • M.E. and I.L.R. contributed equally to this work.

  • § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: j.lewis{at}icrf.icnet.uk.

  • This paper was presented at the National Academy of Sciences colloquium “Auditory Neuroscience: Development, Transduction, and Integration,” held May 19–21, 2000, at the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Center in Irvine, CA.

  • Abbreviations:
    Dl1,
    Delta1;
    Ser1,
    Serrate1;
    Ser2,
    Serrate2;
    Su(H),
    Suppressor of Hairless;
    En,
    embryonic day n;
    SMC,
    sensory mother cell;
    GFP,
    green fluorescent protein;
    HCA,
    hair cell antigen;
    Lfng,
    Lunatic fringe.
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