Development of sense organs Flashcards
what are three sensory neuron origins? give examples for each.
neural crest - DRG
neural tube - Retina
placodes - olfactory epithelium and some cranial nerves e.g V
in c.elegans what do the mechonoreceptors respond to?
ranges from gentle body touch to harsh body touch.
what happens to the Q-cell?
- Q-cell divides to produce Q1a and Q1p
- these then divide and one of the daughter cells disappear
what does Q1p give rise to? what does Q1a give rise to?
Q1p gives rise to gentle body touch cell and an interneuron
g1a gives rise to another sensory cell
where is UNC-86 turned on in? what does loss of UNC-86 lead to?
UNC-86 turned on only in Q1p
loss of UNC-86 gives loss of touch cell
the cell that should have been Q1p just turns into the mother cell again, this repeats.
what happens when the MEC-3 protein is lost?
the touch cell is transformed
what induces MEC-3 what does this lead to?
UNC-86 protein induces MEC-3, these then combine to induce a touch cell specific genes that are involved
what kind of differentiation does this UNC-86 and MEC-3 form?
lineage-dependant differentiation, like an intrinsic blueprint
where are drosophila mechonoreceptors derived from?
sensory organ precursers
what gene does SOPs for chordotonal organs express?
atonal
what gene does SOPs for external receptors express?
ct
what happens to numb distribution?
it is asymettrically distributed between sp11b and sp11a which are the first division daughter cells.
what does numb do? what is this required for?
inhibits the Notch pathway, low NOTCH activity is required for neural fate.
what does one daughter cell that’s going down the neural fate do to the other daughter cell?
it inhibits the other daughter cell from going down the neural fate.
what kind of development is the pathway that includes notch and numb?
to some extent is can be seen as lineage independant however not completely as there’s ability for plasticity due to cell-cell interactions