Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 384, Issue 2, 15 December 2013, Pages 228-257
Developmental Biology

Postembryonic lineages of the Drosophila brain: I. Development of the lineage-associated fiber tracts

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2013.07.008Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The fly brain is formed by lineages whose fiber tracts (SATs) have been mapped for the larval stage.

  • We reconstructed the pattern of antibody-labeled lineage SATs from larva to adult.

  • We identified tracts of the adult brain with their corresponding larval lineages/SATs.

  • MARCM clones assigned to lineages based on association with specific SATs.

Abstract

Neurons of the Drosophila central brain fall into approximately 100 paired groups, termed lineages. Each lineage is derived from a single asymmetrically-dividing neuroblast. Embryonic neuroblasts produce 1,500 primary neurons (per hemisphere) that make up the larval CNS followed by a second mitotic period in the larva that generates approximately 10,000 secondary, adult-specific neurons. Clonal analyses based on previous works using lineage-specific Gal4 drivers have established that such lineages form highly invariant morphological units. All neurons of a lineage project as one or a few axon tracts (secondary axon tracts, SATs) with characteristic trajectories, thereby representing unique hallmarks. In the neuropil, SATs assemble into larger fiber bundles (fascicles) which interconnect different neuropil compartments. We have analyzed the SATs and fascicles formed by lineages during larval, pupal, and adult stages using antibodies against membrane molecules (Neurotactin/Neuroglian) and synaptic proteins (Bruchpilot/N-Cadherin). The use of these markers allows one to identify fiber bundles of the adult brain and associate them with SATs and fascicles of the larval brain. This work lays the foundation for assigning the lineage identity of GFP-labeled MARCM clones on the basis of their close association with specific SATs and neuropil fascicles, as described in the accompanying paper (Wong et al., 2013. Postembryonic lineages of the Drosophila brain: II. Identification of lineage projection patterns based on MARCM clones. Submitted.).

Keywords

Brain
Lineage
Circuitry
Drosophila
Mapping
Metamorphosis

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