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Jak-Stat pathway induces Drosophila follicle elongation by a gradient of apical contractility

Herve Alegot, Pierre Pouchin, Olivier Bardot, Vincent Mirouse
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/205187
Herve Alegot
GReD Laboratory
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Pierre Pouchin
GReD Laboratory
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Olivier Bardot
GReD Laboratory
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Vincent Mirouse
GReD Laboratory
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  • For correspondence: vincent.mirouse@uca.fr
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Abstract

Tissue elongation and its control by spatiotemporal signals is a major developmental question. Currently, it is thought that Drosophila ovarian follicular epithelium elongation requires the planar polarization of the basal domain cytoskeleton and of the extra-cellular matrix, associated with a dynamic process of rotation around the anteroposterior axis. Here we show, by careful kinetic analysis of fat2 mutants, that neither basal planar polarization nor rotation is required during a first phase of follicle elongation. Conversely, a JAK-STAT signaling gradient from each follicle pole orients early elongation. JAK-STAT controls apical pulsatile contractions, and Myosin II activity inhibition affects both pulses and early elongation. Early elongation is associated with apical constriction at the poles and oriented cell rearrangements, but without any visible planar cell polarization of the apical domain. Thus, a morphogen gradient can trigger tissue elongation via a control of cell pulsing and without planar cell polarity requirement.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted October 19, 2017.

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Jak-Stat pathway induces Drosophila follicle elongation by a gradient of apical contractility
Herve Alegot, Pierre Pouchin, Olivier Bardot, Vincent Mirouse
bioRxiv 205187; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/205187
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Jak-Stat pathway induces Drosophila follicle elongation by a gradient of apical contractility
Herve Alegot, Pierre Pouchin, Olivier Bardot, Vincent Mirouse
bioRxiv 205187; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/205187

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