P element insertion-dependent gene activation in the Drosophila eye

  1. Bruce A. Hay*,
  2. Randy Maile, and
  3. Gerald M. Rubin
  1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3200

Abstract

Insights into the function of a gene can be gained in multiple ways, including loss-of-function phenotype, sequence similarity, expression pattern, and by the consequences of its misexpression. Analysis of the phenotypes produced by expression of a gene at an abnormal time, place, or level may provide clues to a gene’s function when other approaches are not illuminating. Here we report that an eye-specific, enhancer–promoter present in the P element expression vector pGMR is able to drive high level expression in the eye of genes near the site of P element insertion. Cell fate determination, differentiation, proliferation, and death are essential for normal eye development. Thus the ability to carry out eye-specific misexpression of a significant fraction of genes in the genome, given the dispensability of the eye for viability and fertility of the adult, should provide a powerful approach for identifying regulators of these processes. To test this idea we carried out two overexpression screens for genes that function to regulate cell death. We screened for insertion-dependent dominant phenotypes in a wild-type background, and for dominant modifiers of a reaper overexpression-induced small eye phenotype. Multiple chromosomal loci were identified, including an insertion 5′ to hid, a potent inducer of apoptosis, and insertions 5′ to DIAP1, a cell death suppressor. To facilitate the cloning of genes near the P element insertion new misexpression vectors were created. A screen with one of these vectors identified eagle as a suppressor of a rough eye phenotype associated with overexpression of an activated Ras1 gene.

Footnotes

  • * Present address: Division of Biology, 156-29 California Institute of Technology, Pasadena CA 91125.

  • e-mail: gerry{at}fruitfly.berkeley.edu.

  • Gerald M. Rubin

  • ABBREVIATION:
    HA,
    hemagglutinin
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