Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 212, Issue 2, 15 August 1999, Pages 440-454
Developmental Biology

Regular Article
bloated tubules (blot) Encodes a Drosophila Member of the Neurotransmitter Transporter Family Required for Organisation of the Apical Cytocortex

https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.1999.9351Get rights and content
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Abstract

We have identified a novel member of the vertebrate sodium- and chloride-dependent neurotransmitter symporter family from Drosophila melanogaster. This gene, named bloated tubules (blot), shows significant sequence similarity to a subgroup of vertebrate orphan transporters. blot transcripts are maternally supplied and during embryogenesis exhibit a complex and dynamic pattern in a subset of ectodermally derived epithelia, notably in the Malpighian tubules, and in the nervous system. Animals mutant for this gene are larval lethals, in which the Malpighian tubule cells are distended with an enlarged and disorganised apical surface. Embryos lacking the maternal component of blot expression die during early stages of development. They show an inability to form actin filaments in the apical cortex, resulting in impaired syncytial nuclear divisions, severe defects in the organisation of the cortical cytoskeleton, and a failure to cellularise. For the first time, a neurotransmitter transporter-like protein has been implicated in a function outside the nervous system. The isolation of blot thus provides the basis for an analysis of the relationship between the function of this putative transporter and epithelial morphogenesis.

Keywords

Drosophila
bloated tubules (blot)
cellularisation
actin cytoskeleton
Malpighian tubules
neurotransmitter transporter

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Sequence data from this article have been deposited with the EMBL/GenBank Data Libraries under Accession No. AJ243264.

1

To whom correspondence should be addressed at current address: Developmental Genetics Programme, Krebs Institute, University of Sheffield, Firth Court, Western Bank, Sheffield S10 2TN, UK. Fax: 0114 222 2788. E-mail: [email protected].