Exocyst-mediated apical Wg secretion activates signaling in the Drosophila wing epithelium
Authors:
Varun Chaudhary aff001; Michael Boutros aff001
Authors place of work:
German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Division Signaling and Functional Genomics and Heidelberg University, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Im Neuenheimer Feld, Heidelberg, Germany
aff001
Published in the journal:
Exocyst-mediated apical Wg secretion activates signaling in the Drosophila wing epithelium. PLoS Genet 15(9): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1008351
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008351
Summary
Wnt proteins are secreted signaling factors that regulate cell fate specification and patterning decisions throughout the animal kingdom. In the Drosophila wing epithelium, Wingless (Wg, the homolog of Wnt1) is secreted from a narrow strip of cells at the dorsal-ventral boundary. However, the route of Wg secretion in polarized epithelial cells remains poorly understood and key proteins involved in this process are still unknown. Here, we performed an in vivo RNAi screen and identified members of the exocyst complex to be required for apical but not basolateral Wg secretion. Specifically blocking the apical Wg secretion leads to reduced downstream signaling. Using an in vivo ‘temporal-rescue’ assay, our results further indicate that apically secreted Wg activates target genes that require high signaling activity. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that the exocyst is required for an apical route of Wg secretion from polarized wing epithelial cells.
Keywords:
Biology and life sciences – Cell biology – Genetics – Epigenetics – Gene expression – Biochemistry – Nucleic acids – Organisms – Eukaryota – Research and analysis methods – Animal studies – Experimental organism systems – Model organisms – proteins – Cell processes – Molecular biology – Animals – Invertebrates – Arthropoda – Insects – Drosophila – Drosophila melanogaster – Animal models – Molecular biology techniques – Cellular types – Animal cells – Anatomy – Medicine and health sciences – Cloning – RNA – RNA interference – Genetic interference – Physiology – Physiological processes – Biological tissue – Epithelial cells – Epithelium – signal transduction – Cell signaling – Signaling cascades – Wnt signaling cascade – Secretion – Protein transport – Protein secretion
Introduction
Wnts are secreted lipid-modified proteins conserved in all animals and play a pivotal role in development and many human diseases such as cancer [1–3]. Initially identified to be important for wing and haltere development in Drosophila [4,5], Wnt ligands and their downstream signaling cascades have been subsequently studied in different organisms and many evolutionarily conserved genes required for signaling upstream and downstream of the receptors have been identified [6,7]. Subsequent genetic screens, performed in vivo and in cultured Drosophila cells, have led to the discovery of components of the Wnt secretion pathway, including the ER membrane protein Porcupine [8], the Wnt cargo receptor Evenness interrupted (Evi; also known as Wntless) [9–11], p24 proteins [12,13] and the retromer complex [14–19]. These factors are required during early steps of Wnt secretion. For example, Evi binds and guides Wnt proteins through the ER and Golgi and loss of Evi leads to block of Wnts in the early secretory compartments [20,21]. In contrast, proteins which may specifically regulate apical or basolateral routes of Wnt secretion in polarized epithelium such as the wing imaginal disc have remained largely unknown.
Drosophila wing imaginal discs, which give rise to the adult wing and thorax, are made up of tightly packed columnar epithelial cells (disc proper cells) and a squamous epithelial sheet towards the apical side of disc proper cells called the peripodial membrane [22]. In the wing epithelium, Wg is secreted from two rows of cells at the dorsal-ventral (DV) boundary. Intracellular Wg has been shown to be localized mainly apical [23–25], while extracellular Wg has been reported to be either basolateral [25] or apical [26,27], depending on the method of Wg detection. Recently, it was reported that an E3 ubiquitin ligase called Godzilla mediates apical to basolateral transcytosis of Wg in the producing cells which facilitates signaling from the basolateral side [28]. In contrast, it was also recently reported that Wg is internalized by the receiving cells mainly from the apical surface [29], which raises questions on whether the apical pool of Wg is essential for signaling.
So far, the route of Wg secretion from polarized epithelia has mostly been traced by either following a fluorescently tagged exogenous Wg protein [28,30] or by analyzing the effect of blocking cellular functions like endocytosis on the localization of extracellular Wg [26,27]. These approaches have led to contradictory models of polarized Wg secretion and the route of an untagged endogenous Wg protein remains unknown. Here, we have performed an in vivo RNA interference (RNAi) screen to identify regulators of Wg secretion from polarized epithelial cells. The screen identified components of the exocyst complex to be required for polarized Wg secretion. The exocyst complex has been implicated in different cellular trafficking processes, including polarized secretion, ciliogenesis and cell migration [31–33]. Molecularly, the exocyst complex has been described to be required for the fusion of vesicles with a target membrane where it is mostly localized at the site of fusion [31]. We find that the exocyst complex is required for apical secretion of Wg and that specifically blocking the apical route of Wg secretion caused impaired signaling. We further demonstrate that the untagged endogenous Wg is mainly secreted apically and this represents functionally a high-activity pool of Wg proteins.
Results
In vivo RNAi screening identifies exocyst components as regulators of Wg secretion
We first set out to identify factors involved in the secretion of Wg from polarized cells in vivo. We assembled a library of 394 RNAi lines targeting genes with a putative role in protein transport (Fig 1A). Transgenic UAS RNAi lines were expressed under the control of wg-GAL4 to deplete gene products in Wg producing cells. We then scored adult wing notch phenotypes indicative of loss of Wg activity. In total, we identified 86 genes leading to wing notch phenotypes (Fig 1A’ and S1 Table). Among these candidate genes were six (out of eight) components of the exocyst complex (Sec3, Sec5, Sec6, Sec8, Sec15 and Exo84; see S1 Table).
Exocyst proteins form a complex that has an evolutionarily conserved and general role in polarized exocytosis [31]. While its mechanistic functions are not fully understood, it appears to be important for tethering vesicles to the target membrane and for the regulation of SNARE proteins. Here, we used the exocyst complex as a tool to investigate polarized Wg secretion and further focused our experiments on Sec3, Sec6 and Sec15. Validation experiments showed that knockdown of Sec6 in the wg expression domain showed a wing notch phenotype similar to the evi RNAi control (Fig 1B–1B”). Furthermore, sec6, sec3 and sec15 RNAi in the posterior compartment showed accumulation of total Wg inside the producing cells (Fig 1C–1C”, Fig 1D–1D” and S1A and S1B Fig).
To exclude that wg transcription is dependent on Sec6, we tested the expression of a wg-lacZ reporter in Sec6 depleted cells. As shown in S1C–S1C” Fig, wg-lacZ expression was unaffected by sec6 RNAi, while Wg accumulation was observed, demonstrating that wg transcription is not changed upon Sec6 knockdown. Furthermore, to exclude potential artefacts due to the antibody staining procedures, we assessed whether secretion of GFP-Wg expressed under the control of Gal4/UAS system is dependent on Sec6. GFP-Wg protein secretion, as measured by quantification of puncta outside the producing cells, was significantly reduced in sec6 RNAi, similar to evi RNAi positive controls (S1D and S1E Fig). These experiments confirmed that the effect of Sec6 depletion on Wg secretion is neither caused by changes in wg transcription nor influenced by the mode of Wg protein detection. Furthermore, we analyzed the phenotype of sec6 RNAi in a previously described sec6ex15 null allele [34]. sec6ex15 mutant clones showed an intracellular accumulation of Wg (Fig 1E–1E’), which was also visible in transverse sections (Fig 1F–1F’). Taken together, these data suggest that Sec6 and possibly other components of the exocyst complex are required for the secretion of Wg.
The exocyst is required for apical secretion of Wg
Next, we investigated the effect of the exocyst in polarized Wg secretion and extracellular Wg distribution in the wing epithelium. To this end, we depleted Sec6 in the posterior compartment of imaginal discs and stained for extracellular Wg. Discs were imaged by confocal sections to visualize Wg protein distribution from the apical to the basolateral side of the epithelium. As shown in Fig 2A–2A”, we observed a significant decrease of extracellular Wg levels at the apical side, as compared to control tissue in the anterior compartment. Furthermore, extracellular Wg levels were increased at the basolateral side (Fig 2B–2B”). Reduced levels of extracellular apical Wg protein were also clearly visible in the transverse sections (Fig 2C–2C’). Quantification of apical Wg (blue box in Fig 2C) showed reduced levels in the Sec6 depleted compartment (Fig 2C”). Moreover, a second, sequence-independent RNAi targeting Sec6 showed similar apical secretion defects (S2A and S2B Fig).
We further aimed to confirm these results with a sec6 mutant allele. While sec6ex15 clones were small, as also previously described [35], which could allow Wg from neighboring unaffected tissue to spread over the mutant clone, in some sec6ex15 clones we observed reduced levels of apical extracellular Wg while basolateral Wg was increased (Fig 2D–2F). We then assessed the localization of Sec6 protein in the wing discs cells by antibody staining. Sec6 was localized on the apical side (Fig 3A–3A’), similar to the previously known apical localization of Sec5 and Sec6 seen in other epithelial cells [35,36]. The localization is consistent with a role of the exocyst complex in mediating exocytosis of Wg at the apical side. Taken together, these experiments showed that Sec6 is required for apical but not basolateral secretion of Wg in wing disc epithelia.
We also analyzed the function of other exocyst complex components in Wg secretion. Extracellular Wg staining on discs with Sec3 knockdown showed reduced apical secretion of Wg (S3A–S3A” Fig) and increased basolateral Wg levels (S3C–S3C” Fig), similar to Sec6 depletion. Expression of en-Gal4, UAS-GFP was occasionally patchy, leading to mosaic tissue in the posterior compartment with some cells not expressing the transgenes. Consistently, these GFP negative cells showed normal levels of apical extracellular Wg (S3B–S3B’ Fig). In addition, depletion of Sec15 showed reduced apical and increased basolateral Wg levels (S3D and S3E Fig). This further supports our conclusion that the exocyst complex is involved in the apical secretion of Wg.
Sec6 mediated secretion of Wg is required for high-level of signaling
Wg activates the expression of high-threshold target genes, including the proneural genes senseless (sens) and achaete [37–40] and the low-threshold target gene Distal-less (Dll) [41–43]. To analyze how loss of Sec6-mediated apical Wg secretion influences downstream signaling, we examined the expression of Sens and Dll upon depletion of Sec6. We observed a loss of Sens expression (Fig 3B–3B’) and a significant reduction of Dll levels (Fig 3C–3C”), indicating a loss of Wg signaling. In order to exclude the possibility that Sec6 is required for Wg signal transduction in the receiving cell, we expressed sec6 or evi RNAi constructs under the control of apterous-Gal4. Apterous (ap) is expressed in the dorsal compartment of the imaginal disc and its expression overlaps with only one out of two rows of Wg producing cells. Previous studies have demonstrated that Evi is not required in the receiving cells for signal transduction [9,10]. Consistently, we observed that ap-Gal4>evi RNAi led to an accumulation of Wg in the dorsal row of producing cells whereas Sens–due to cell non-autonomous rescue by Wg protein secreted from the ventral row of Wg producing cells–remained expressed (S4A and S4B Fig). Similarly, depletion of Sec6 showed retention of Wg only in the dorsal row of producing cells. Sens expression was unaffected on both sides of the DV boundary (S4C Fig). This demonstrates that Sec6 is not required for Wg signal transduction in the receiving cells. We further confirmed these phenotypes by clonal analysis of sec6ex15 mutant alleles. The sec6ex15 clones found in Wg producing cells showed a reduced amount of Sens expression in the nearby Wg receiving cells (S4D and S4D’ Fig, arrows). In contrast, sec6ex15 clones in the Wg receiving cells showed normal expression of Sens (S4E and S4E’ Fig, arrow) and Dll (S4F and S4F’ Fig). Taken together, our data shows that blocking Sec6-mediated apical Wg secretion leads to reduced signaling in the receiving cells, suggesting that the apical pool of extracellular Wg contains high activity.
Wg is secreted apically from polarized wing epithelial cells
The polarized secretory route of endogenous Wg from the wing epithelial cells has been controversially discussed and remains largely unclear. To determine the secretion route of untagged endogenous Wg protein, we designed an in vivo ‘temporal-rescue’ experiment whereby we block Wg secretion in evi2 homozygous null mutants and then relieve this block by expressing an Evi-mCherry rescue construct under the control of a temperature sensitive Gal4/Gal80ts expression system (Fig 4A). Using this method, we measured the secretion of Wg protein in a time-resolved manner. Homozygous evi2 mutant larvae expressing GFP and Evi-mCherry specifically in the posterior compartment under the control of en-Gal4; tub-Gal80ts driver were reared at 18°C (the restrictive temperature for expression) until the third instar stage and then shifted to 29°C (the permissive temperature for expression) for 7, 16 and 25 hours (h) (Fig 4A). Expression of Evi-mCherry was absent at the starting point of the induction (0h) (S6A Fig) and initiated from 7h (S5A Fig and S6B Fig). Concurrently, we detected Wg secretion by extracellular Wg staining from 7h (S5A Fig) with peak secretion at 16h (Fig 4B–4E and S5B Fig), which was also observed until at least 25h (S5C Fig). Analysis of apical and basolateral sections showed higher levels of extracellular Wg present at the apical (Fig 4B–4B’) as compared to the basolateral side of the epithelium (Fig 4C–4C’, Fig 4D and Fig 4E). Taken together these data demonstrate that endogenous Wg is predominantly secreted from the apical surface of the producing cells.
Apically secreted Wg activates downstream signaling
Next, to investigate whether the apically secreted Wg can induce signaling in the receiving cells, we analyzed the expression of Wg target genes sens and Dll in a ‘temporal-rescue’ experiment. We observed that at 0h of Evi-mCherry expression, as expected Wg accumulated in the producing cells (Fig 5A and 5A’). Concurrently, at the 0h time point, Sens expression was not detected (S6A–S6A”” Fig) while low-levels of Dll were found in both anterior and posterior compartments (Fig 5A” and 5A”’), as previously reported to be due to perdurance of maternally provided Evi [9,10] or other ligand-independent mechanisms [44]. After 7-8h of Evi-mCherry expression, when only a small amount of Wg was released (Fig 5B’ open arrowheads and inset), Sens expression remained absent (S6B–S6B”” Fig) and Dll expression was unchanged in the posterior compared to the anterior compartment (Fig 5B” and 5B”’). Subsequently after 16h of Evi-mCherry expression, Sens expression was induced (S6C–S6C”” Fig) and Dll expression increased (Fig 5C” and 5C”’), concurrent with the expression of Evi-mCherry (Fig 5C) and the release of the Wg protein (Fig 5C’ open arrowheads and inset). These results suggest that the strong apical Wg secretion observed at 16h led to the activation of Wg signaling in the receiving cells. Similar results were obtained 25h after the temperature shift (Fig 5D–5D”’ and S6D–S6D”” Fig).
Taken together, these experiments indicate that an apical pool of Wg protein secreted from the DV boundary activates Wnt signaling in the receiving cells, leading to the expression of both high-threshold and low-threshold Wg target genes. Furthermore, these results support the loss of Wg signaling phenotype observed upon blocking apical Wg secretion by Sec6 depletion.
Discussion
The Drosophila wing imaginal disc has been a powerful model to study tissue patterning by secreted signaling molecules, such as Wnt/Wg proteins. Past studies have shown that extracellular Wg protein can be detected at a distance of ten cells or further and this has been proposed to activate the expression of short-range and long-range target genes in a concentration dependent manner [41,45–47]. In contrast, a recent study using membrane-tethered Wg proposed a juxtacrine signaling trafficking of Wg ligands and argued against the requirement of a Wg gradient [48].
While we have learned much about Wnt/Wg secretion in general, the mechanism of polarized Wg secretion has remained unclear. In particular, from which side of the polarized wing epithelial cells the active pool of Wg is secreted has been long debated, and both apical as well as basolateral routes have been suggested. In this study, we demonstrate that a highly active pool of Wg is secreted from the apical side of polarized wing epithelial cells, a process that requires the function of members of the exocyst complex.
Basolateral and apical mode of Wg secretion in polarized epithelia
At steady-state, extracellular Wg is detected mainly at the basolateral surface of wing epithelial cells [25]. Recently, using a tagged Wg protein expressed via the endogenous Wg enhancer, it was shown that Wg initially reaches the apical surface of the polarized epithelial cells before getting transcytosed to the basolateral side with the help of Godzilla [28]. Loss of Godzilla activity or expression in both Wg producing and receiving cells simultaneously caused an increase of the apical extracellular Wg and loss of signaling. However, as Godzilla is shown to regulate endosomal trafficking in the entire wing pouch region [49], an alternative explanation of the observed results could be that signaling defects observed upon loss of Godzilla are due to its effect on receptor trafficking in the signal receiving cells.
Our experiments provide evidence for the secretion of endogenous untagged Wg from the apical surface. The efficient block of Wg secretion in homozygous evi mutants allowed us to perform in vivo ‘temporal-rescue’ experiments to visualize Wg secretion in a time-resolved manner, using a staining method to detect extracellular Wg. With these experiments, we found that high amounts of Wg is secreted apically, while only low levels are observed at the basolateral side. This apical secretion observed in our study is also in agreement with previous observations of apical Wg [26] and with earlier studies which show that Wg is internalized from the apical surface of the receiving cells, as visualized by direct endocytic assays [29] or by its apical stabilization upon blocking endocytosis [27]. We further show that apically secreted Wg is functional and is able to activate expression of both low-threshold (Dll) and high-threshold (sens) target genes in the receiving cells, supporting the importance of this apical Wg pool. However, these experiments do not rule out that a small amount of Wg observed at the basolateral side can also activate low-level signaling.
The role of the exocyst complex in apical Wg secretion
In an in vivo RNAi screen, we first screened for an overall wing margin phenotype. While this phenotype could arise from defects in processes not directly related to Wg secretion, it allowed us to shortlist genes important for wing margin formation. From further analysis, we showed that the exocyst complex is required for apical Wg secretion. The exocyst is believed to act in tethering of secretory vesicles to the plasma membrane and is localized at the sites of exocytosis in several cellular contexts [31]. Consistent with this, we find that Sec6 is localized at the apical side of the wing epithelial cells, supporting a role in regulating fusion of Wg containing vesicles at the apical side. This is also in accordance with its apical localization in polarized pancreatic exocrine cells [50]. Interestingly, the exocyst complex was not identified in cell-based screens for Wnt secretion [10,12,13], which may suggest that it regulates secretion only in polarized cells.
We found that depletion of exocyst complex proteins led to the loss of extracellular Wg at the apical side of the epithelium, with a concomitant increase in basolateral secretion. This basolateral increase in Wg is not observed in the absence of Evi, where Wg remains trapped in the early secretory pathway [20,21], thereby blocking both apical and basolateral Wg secretion. Therefore, our results suggest that Sec6 depletion affects Wg secretion downstream of Evi, specifically blocking vesicle fusion at the apical membrane (our data) [35,36], while allowing the accumulated Wg to be released via the unaffected basolateral route. However, it is also possible that upon Sec6 depletion Wg proteins are channeled more towards the Godzilla-dependent basolateral transcytosis [28]. Nevertheless and more importantly, this exocyst-dependent increase in basolateral Wg did not completely rescue the loss-of apically secreted Wg protein for target gene expression, thus arguing against the basolateral pool of Wg leading to high-level signaling, which is required for the expression of the target gene sens. These results also support the previous observation that the apical localization of wg transcript is required for proper Wg signaling activity. It was shown that mis-localizing wg mRNA to the basolateral side slightly enhanced basolateral distribution, however it led to reduced Wg signaling activity [24].
Moveover, in support to our model, a recent study showed that the exocyst complex regulates apical secretion of Wnt1 in polarized Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) epithelial cells [51], indicating that this function of the exocyst complex might be well-conserved. Our data suggest that the apically secreted Wg, which is difficult to detect at steady-state most likely due to its rapid internalization, is an active pool of Wg. In contrast, the extracellular Wg visible strongly at the basolateral side at steady-state may give an ‘illusion’ of being the only functional pool.
Mechanisms of polarized Wg signaling
An important question is why apical and basolateral Wg show differential signaling strengths. Several models could explain this differential signaling activities in the polarized wing epithelium: (i) in wing discs, the repertoire of Wnt receptors and co-receptors show polarized localization. A previous study suggested that the basolateral Wg may signal via the Wnt receptor Frizzled2 (Fz2), which is found basolaterally at steady-state [52]. However, Fz2 along with the co-receptor Arrow and Wnt-binding glypican Dally-like are shown to be trafficked and internalized apically [26,27]. Frizzled1, which is redundant with Fz2 for canonical Wnt signaling, is also localized at the apical side [52,53]. (ii) It has been suggested that internalization of Wg is required for proper signaling [27,29,54]. A recent study showed that Wg is internalized from the apical surface of the receiving cells and that these apically derived Wg-containing vesicles fuse with Fz2-containing vesicles inside the cells [29]. Therefore, internalization of Wg from the apical surface of the receiving cells, which will be perturbed upon Sec6 depletion, is needed for its high signaling activity. It is also likely that higher levels of basolateral Wg observed upon depletion of Sec6 is unable to interact with Fz2 in the endosomal compartments and can only activate low-level signaling via Fz2 receptors present at the cell surface. (iii) Different biochemical carriers can influence signaling strengths. Wnt proteins can be secreted on extracellular vesicles [55–59] and bind to extracellular carriers such as lipoprotein particles and Swim [60–62]. This raises the possibility that different signaling abilities are bestowed on Wnt proteins by various carriers and that their different secretion routes in polarized cells can create an activity difference between apical and basolateral Wg.
Taken together, our study provides a mechanism for the secretion of endogenous Wg from polarized epithelial cells and identifies exocyst members required for apical secretion. It will be of further interest to analyze the role of the exocyst in secretion of Wnt proteins in other developmental and niche/stem cell contexts.
Materials and methods
Drosophila genetics
The following Drosophila stocks were used: wg-GAL4 (2nd chr., a gift from S. Cohen), ap-GAL4 2nd chr., [63], en-GAL4, UAS-GFP 2nd chr. [64], CyO-wg-LacZ [65], UAS-evi-PB-mCherry [57], UAS-GFP-wg [30], evi2 [10], FRTG13 sec6ex15/CyO-act-GFP [34], y,w, hs-flp; FRTG13 Ubi-GFP M(2)58F/CyO (a gift from X. Lin), y,w, hs-flp; FRTG13 ubi-GFP.nls/CyO (a gift from Y. Bellaiche), dpp-Gal4/TM6b (Bloomington stock center stock # 7007), ubi-GFP FRT2A (A. Gould). UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK-ID 105836 and GD-ID 22077), UAS-evi-RNAi (KK-ID 103812), UAS-sec15-RNAi (KK-ID 105126), UAS-sec3-RNAi (KK-ID 108085), UAS-Rel-RNAi (KK-ID 108469) and UAS-wg-RNAi (GD-ID 13352) lines were obtained from the Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center [66]. All crosses were reared at 25°C except where specifically mentioned.
In vivo RNAi screen
Genes involved in intracellular transport were selected as previously described in [12]. The in vivo RNAi screen was performed using the wg-GAL4 driver to express RNAi transgenes (mostly KK library, some GD library lines, see also S1 Table) in the Wg producing cells. RNAi lines that gave visible wing notches in adult animals were further analyzed. Selected candidates were further studied for defects in Wg secretion by crossing to en-GAL4, UAS-GFP flies followed by labelling for total and extracellular Wg (data shown only for the components of the exocyst complex). Crosses were reared at 25°C.
In vivo ‘temporal-rescue’ experiments
The in vivo ‘temporal-rescue’ experiments of evi2 mutants shown in Figs 4 and 5 and S5 and S6 Figs was performed by keeping larvae of genotype en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-evi-mCherry; evi2, tub-Gal80ts/evi2 at 18°C to prevent Evi expression (permissive temperature for Gal80ts) until third instar stage and then shifted to 29°C (restrictive temperature for Gal80ts), to induce GFP and Evi-mCherry expression. Larvae were shifted to 29°C for 7, 8, 16 or 25 hours before dissection.
Heat shock induction of mutant clones
Sec6 loss of function clones were generated by heat shocking larvae of either y,w, hs-flp; FRTG13 ubi-nlsGFP/FRTG13 sec6ex15 or y,w, hs-flp; FRTG13 Ubi-GFP M(2)58F/ FRTG13 sec6ex15 genotype, for one hour at 37°C during first- and second-instar larval stages. Wing imaginal discs from wandering third-instar larvae were dissected for antibody staining.
Drosophila genotypes
The following genotypes were used in this study:
Fig 1B: wg-Gal4/UAS-Rel-RNAi (KK)
Fig 1B’: wg-Gal4/UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK)
Fig 1B”: wg-Gal4/UAS-evi-RNAi (KK)
Fig 1C, Fig 2A–2C, Fig 3B and 3C: en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK)
Fig 1D: en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-evi-RNAi (KK)
Fig 1E and 1F, Fig 2D–2F, S4E Fig: y w hs-FLP/+; FRTG13 sec6ex15/FRTG13 Ubi-nlsGFP
Fig 3A: w1118
Fig 4B–4E, Fig 5A–5D, S5 Fig and S6 Fig: en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-evi-mCherry; evi2, tub-Gal80ts/evi2
S1A Fig, S3A–S3C Fig: en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-sec3-RNAi (KK)
S1B Fig, S3D and S3E Fig: en-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-sec15-RNAi (KK)
S1C Fig: UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK)/ CyO-wg-LacZ; dpp-Gal4/+
S1D Fig: wg-Gal4, UAS-GFP-wg/UAS-Rel-RNAi (KK); tub-Gal80ts/+
S1D’ Fig: wg-Gal4, UAS-GFP-wg/UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK); tub-Gal80ts/+
S1D” Fig: wg-Gal4, UAS-GFP-wg/UAS-evi-RNAi (KK); tub-Gal80ts/+
S2A and S2B Fig: en-Gal4/UAS-sec6-RNAi (GD)
S4A Fig: ap-Gal4/+; UAS-GFP/+
S4B Fig: ap-Gal4/UAS-evi-RNAi (KK); UAS-GFP/+
S4C Fig: ap-Gal4/UAS-sec6-RNAi (KK); UAS-GFP/+
S4D and S4F Fig: y w hs-FLP/+; FRTG13 sec6ex15/ FRTG13 Ubi-GFP M(2)58F
Antibodies
The following antibodies were used: Mouse Anti-Wg (4D4s, obtained from Developmental System Hybridoma Bank) 1:5 for extracellular and 1:50 for total staining, Rabbit-anti-Dll 1:200 (a gift from S. Carroll), Guinea Pig anti-Sens 1:300 [57], Guinea Pig anti-Sec6 1:100 (a gift from U. Tepass). Fluorescent secondary antibodies used were Alexa-405, Alexa-488, Alexa-594 and Alexa-647 (Invitrogen) at 1:300 dilutions.
Immunostainings, microscopy and image analysis
Extracellular Wg staining was performed as described previously [25]. Wing discs were mounted in Vectashield. Staining and microscopy conditions for discs used for comparisons were identical. Images were taken with a Leica SP5 confocal and were analyzed using ImageJ software [67]. Plot analysis and intensity measurements were performed on raw data processed with ImageJ and statistical analysis was done using Microsoft Excel. Separate channel images were assembled using Adobe Photoshop CS5.1.
Quantification of GFP-Wg secretion
wg-GAL4, UAS-GFP-wg; tub-Gal80ts flies were crossed to flies containing either UAS-Rel-RNAi or UAS-evi-RNAi or UAS-sec6-RNAi. Crosses were reared at 18°C until early larval stages and were then shifted for 72 hours at 29°C for expression. Wing imaginal discs were imaged using a Leica SP5 confocal and images were generated using ImageJ software [67]. Secreted GFP-Wg punta observed outside the producing cells were separated and quantified by CellProfiler 2.0 software [68].
Supporting information
S1 Fig [rel]
Exocyst complex members are required for Wg secretion.
S2 Fig [gd]
Sec6 is required for apical Wg secretion.
S3 Fig [a]
Exocyst complex members are required for apical Wg secretion.
S4 Fig [arrow]
Sec6 is not required in the receiving cells for transducing Wg signaling.
S5 Fig [h]
Temporal-Rescue shows apical secretion of Wg.
S6 Fig [red]
Temporal-Rescue of Wg secretion activates sens expression.
S1 Table [sec10]
RNAi screening results.
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Genetika Reprodukčná medicínaČlánok vyšiel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2019 Číslo 9
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