Current Biology
Volume 9, Issue 23, 2 December 1999, Pages 1382-1391
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Research Papers
Drosophila wing melanin patterns form by vein-dependent elaboration of enzymatic prepatterns

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Abstract

Background: Animal melanin patterns are involved in diverse aspects of their ecology, from thermoregulation to mimicry. Many theoretical models have simulated pigment patterning, but little is known about the developmental mechanisms of color pattern formation. In Drosophila melanogaster, several genes are known to be necessary for cuticular melanization, but the involvement of these genes in melanin pattern evolution is unknown. We have taken a genetic approach to elucidate the developmental mechanisms underlying melanin pattern formation in various drosophilids.

Results: We show that, in D. melanogaster, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopa decarboxylase (DDC) are required for melanin synthesis. Ectopic expression of TH, but not DDC, alone was sufficient to cause ectopic melanin patterns in the wing. Thus, changes in the level of expression of a single gene can result in a new level of melanization. The ontogeny of this ectopic melanization resembled that found in Drosophila species bearing wing melanin patterns and in D. melanogaster ebony mutants. Importantly, we discovered that in D. melanogaster and three other Drosophila species these wing melanin patterns are dependent upon and shaped by the circulation patterns of hemolymph in the wing veins.

Conclusions: Complex wing melanin patterns are determined by two distinct developmental mechanisms. Spatial prepatterns of enzymatic activity are established late in wing development. Then, in newly eclosed adults, melanin precursors gradually diffuse out from wing veins and are oxidized into dark brown or black melanin. Both the prepatterning and hemolymph-supplied components of this system can change during evolution to produce color pattern diversity.

Cited by (0)

JR True and SB Carroll, Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of Wisconsin, 1525 Linden Drive, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA.

KA Edwards, Yamamoto Behavior Genes Project at the University of Hawaii, 409 Gilmore Hall, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA. Present address: Department of Biological Sciences, Julian 210, Box 4120 Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois 61790-4120, USA.

D Yamamoto, Yamamoto Behavior Genes Project at the University of Hawaii, 409 Gilmore Hall, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822, USA and ERATO Yamamoto Behavior Genes Project, Waseda University School of Human Sciences, Tokorozawa, Saitama 359-1192, Japan.

E-mail address for SB Carroll (corresponding author): [email protected].