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The Torso Pathway in Drosophila: A Model System to Study Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Signal Transduction

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1993-12-01

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The Company of Biologists
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Lu, Xiangyi, Lizabeth A. Perkins, Norbert Perrimon. "The Torso Pathway in Drosophila: A Model System to Study Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Signal Transduction." Development 119, no. Supplement (1993): 47-56. DOI: 10.1242/dev.119.supplement.47

Abstract

In the Drosophila embryo, specification of terminal cell fates that result in the formation of both the head (acron) and tail (telson) regions is under the control of the torso (tor) receptor tyrosine kinase. The current knowledge suggests that activation of tor at the egg pole initiates a signal transduction pathway that is mediated sequentially by the guanine nucleotide releasing factor son of sevenless (Sos), the p21Ras1 GTPase, the serine/threonine kinase D-raf and the tyrosine/threonine kinase MAPKK (Dsor1). Subsequently, it is postulated that activation, possibly by phosphorylation, of a transcription factor at the egg poles activates the transcription of the terminal gap genes tailless and huckebein. These gap genes, which encode putative transcription factors, then control the expression of more downstream factors that ultimately result in head and tail differentiation. Also involved in tor signaling is the non-receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase corkscrew (csw). Here, we review the current model and discuss future research directions in this field.

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