Home
Scholarly Works
Axon repulsion from the midline of the Drosophila...
Journal article

Axon repulsion from the midline of the Drosophila CNS requires slit function

Abstract

Guidance of axons towards or away from the midline of the central nervous system during Drosophila embryogenesis reflects a balance of attractive and repulsive cues originating from the midline. Here we demonstrate that Slit, a protein secreted by the midline glial cells provides a repulsive cue for the growth cones of axons and muscle cells. Embryos lacking slit function show a medial collapse of lateral axon tracts and ectopic midline crossing of ventral muscles. Transgene expression of slit in the midline restores axon patterning. Ectopic expression of slit inhibits formation of axon tracts at locations of high Slit production and misdirects axon tracts towards the midline. slit interacts genetically with roundabout, which encodes a putative receptor for growth cone repulsion.

Authors

Battye R; Stevens A; Jacobs JR

Journal

Development, Vol. 126, No. 11, pp. 2475–2481

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Publication Date

June 1, 1999

DOI

10.1242/dev.126.11.2475

ISSN

0950-1991

Contact the Experts team