Abstract
Some animals respond to injury by inducing new growth to regenerate the lost structures. This regenerative growth must be carefully controlled and constrained to prevent overgrowth and to allow correct organization of the regenerating tissue. However, the factors that restrict regenerative growth have not been identified. Using a genetic ablation system in the Drosophila wing imaginal disc, we have identified one mechanism that constrains regenerative growth, impairment of which leads to erroneous patterning of the final appendage. Regenerating discs with reduced levels of the RNA-regulator Brain tumor (Brat) exhibit enhanced regeneration, but produce adult wings with disrupted margins that are missing extensive tracts of sensory bristles. In these mutants, aberrantly high expression of the pro-growth factor Myc and its downstream targets leads to loss of cell-fate specification. Thus, Brat ensures that the regenerating tissue forms the proper final structure by constraining expression of pro-regeneration genes.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
This version of the manuscript has been revised to include additional data and includes minor changes to the text.