pokkuri, a Drosophila gene encoding an E-26-specific (Ets) domain protein, prevents overproduction of the R7 photoreceptor

  1. H Tei,
  2. I Nihonmatsu,
  3. T Yokokura,
  4. R Ueda,
  5. Y Sano,
  6. T Okuda,
  7. K Sato,
  8. K Hirata,
  9. S C Fujita, and
  10. D Yamamoto
  1. Mitsubishi Kasei Institute of Life Sciences, Tokyo, Japan.

Abstract

Studies on sevenless and bride of sevenless genes have revealed that the R8 cell plays a key role in the fate of the R7 photoreceptor cell, presenting on its surface an inductive cue to which R7 responds. sev-independent induction of R7 cells has been reported in the seven-up mutation, which appears to transform R1 and R6 cells to R7 cells. We have induced recessive mutations in a gene pokkuri (pok; pokkuri is a Japanese word that means "dropping dead") that lead to overproduction of R7 cells with rather minor effects on outer photoreceptors and R8 cells. Pok protein may function as a transcription factor, as the predicted amino acid sequence contains a region similar to the consensus established for the E-26-specific (Ets) domain.

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