Looking for the appropriate size: genetics under control Crazy about Biomedicine– May 2013 Ana Ferreira Development and Growth Control Lab Summary I. Genetics Definition Mendelian Genetics Drosophila melanogaster: The Fruit Fly Historical view of the fly Drosophila as a model organism II. Developmental Biology Definition Historial view III. Growth Control: The different parameters Our system: the fly wing Systemic vs Organ-autonomous Growth Control Size Control and Human Disease I. Genetics Genetics is a discipline of biology, is the science of genes, heredity, and variation in living organisms Genetics deals with the molecular structure and function of genes, gene behavior in the context of a cell or organism, patterns of inheritance from parent to offspring, and gene distribution, variation and change in populations GENETICS + ORGANISM EXPERIENCES = FINAL OUTCOME Mendelian and Classic Genetics Gregor Mendel (1822 - 1884) studied the nature of inheritance in plants observed that organisms inherit traits by way of discrete units of inheritance, which are now called genes traced the inheritance patterns of certain traits in plants and described them mathematically Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws studied the segregation of heritable traits in pea plants 29,000 pea plants Grow easily, develop pure-bred strains, and control their pollination Pisum sativum Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Dominant trait Alleles: is one of a number of alternative forms of the same gene Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws 3:1 ratio diploid species: each individual has two copies of each gene, one inherited from each parent organisms with two copies of the same allele of a given gene are called homozygous organisms with two different alleles of a given gene are called heterozygous Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws homozygous heterozygous homozygous (WW) (Ww) (ww) Purple Purple White Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws homozygous heterozygous homozygous Genotype (set of alleles) Phenotype (observable traits) (WW) (Ww) (ww) Purple Purple White W W one allele is called other allele is called dominant recessive Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws 3:1 ratio Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws 1 The Law of Dominance: In a cross between contrasting homozygous individuals, only one form of the trait will appear in the F1 generation this trait is the dominant trait Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws 1 The Law of Dominance: In a cross between contrasting homozygous individuals, only one form of the trait will appear in the F1 generation this trait is the dominant trait 2 The Law of Segregation: when any individual produces gametes, the copies of a gene separate so that each gamete receives only one copy (allele) - a gamete will receive one allele or the other Discrete Inheritance and Mendel’s Laws 1 The Law of Dominance: In a cross between contrasting homozygous individuals, only one form of the trait will appear in the F1 generation this trait is the dominant trait 2 The Law of Segregation: when any individual produces gametes, the copies of a gene separate so that each gamete receives only one copy (allele) - a gamete will receive one allele or the other 3 The Law of Independent Assortment: alleles responsible for different traits are distributed to gametes (and thus the offspring) independently of each other Drosophila melanogaster Drosophila melanogaster: the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster: the fruit fly Historical view of Drosophila Charles W. Woodworth (1865 - 1940) 1900 – First to breed Drosophila in the Lab Historical view of Drosophila Thomas Hunt Morgan (1866 - 1945) 1900 – Started to work with Drosophila (study of mutation) 1910 – First mutation was found (white) 1911 – Genes are on chromosomes 1933 – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the role played by chromosomes in heredity Historical view of Drosophila Historical view of Drosophila Hermann Joseph Müller (1890 - 1967) 1946 – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery of the genetics effects of Radiation (X-ray mutagenesis) Historical view of Drosophila Eric Wieschaus (1947 - ) Janni Nusslein-Volhard Edward B. Lewis (1942 - ) (1918 - 2004) 1995 – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for revealing the genetic control of embryonic development Historical view of Drosophila Jules A. Hoffmann (1941 - ) Bruce A. Beutler (1957 - ) Ralph M. Steinman (1943 – 2011) 2011 – Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for the discovery of the dendritic cell and its role in adaptive immunity Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain and manipulate in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain and manipulate in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain and manipulate in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain and manipulate in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of large chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Short Life Cycle (Temperature Dependent – 10 days @ 25ºC) Each Female lays 400-500 eggs Easy to maintain and manipulate in the Lab (low cost) Suitable of Genetic Manipulation Extensive set of genetic tools available Simple karyotype: 4 pairs of large chromosomes (3 autosomes + sexual chromosomes) Gene Sequence Conservation with humans: 60% Functional conservation of regulatory and biochemical pathways with humans Why Drosophila melanogaster is such a good model organism ? Drosophila melanogaster Life Cycle Growth Phase Drosophila melanogaster: why is such a potent genetic organism ? Genome fully sequenced Mutant animals are readily obtainable Huge amount of transgenic lines available Targeting gene expression in a temporal and spatial fashion Targeting gene expression: Gal4-UAS System Driver line Responder line Big collection of both Driver and Responder Lines available Temperature Dependence of the Driver Line Targeting gene expression: Gal4-UAS System Targeting gene expression: Gal4-UAS System II. Developmental Biology Developmental Biology Historical Perspective – The first steps Aristotle (384 – 322 AC) Study of the Development of the chick The semen of the male provides the “form” or soul and the female the unorganized matter (menstrual blood) allowing the embryo to grow: EPIGENESIS Theory of Preformationism: organs with their own shape expand Theory of Spontaneous Generation: life of invertebrates emerges from non-living matter (“nothing”) Historical Perspective - Renaissance Leonardo da Vinci (1452 - 1519) Dissection of human corpses Drawings of the vascular and system First drawing of the human fetus in the utero Views of a Fetus in the Womb Leonardo da Vinci, ca. 1510-1512 Historical Perspective - Renaissance Historical Perspective - Renaissance Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632 - 1723) Discovered the microorganisms: animacules Discovered the spermatozoa “…now that I have discovered that the animalcules also occur in the male seed of quadrupeds, birds and fishes…, I assume with even greater certainty than before that a human being originates not from an egg but from an animalcule that is found in the male semen” Historical Perspective - Renaissance PREFORMATIONISM organisms develop from miniature versions of themselves Nicolaas Hartsoeker in 1695 Historical Perspective - Renaissance Reiner de Graaf (1641 - 1673) Discovered the follicles of the ovary (known as Graafian follicles), in which the individual egg cells are formed Rejecting the preformationism Historical Perspective "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny” Ernst Haeckel (1834 - 1919) Recapitulation Theory / Embryological Parallelism developing from embryo to adult, animals go through stages resembling representing or successive stages in the evolution of their remote ancestors Historical Perspective Karl Ernst von Baer (1792 - 1876) Opposing view that the early general forms diverged into four major groups of specialized forms without ever resembling the adult of another species Historical Perspective August Weismann (1834 - 1914) Germ plasm theory inheritance only takes place by means of the germ cells—the gametes Other cells of the body—somatic cells—do not function as agents of heredity Historical Perspective Experimental Embryology Wilhelm Roux 1888 – Experiment destroying the frog embryo (in the two cells stage) Hans Driesch 1892 – Separates de early 4 cells stage embryo of the sea urchin Hans Spemann and Hilde Mangold 1918-1924 – Transplants of cells from one embryo to another induced particular tissues or organs – embryonic induction. Nobel Prize in 1935 Are Developmental Biology and Genetic Linked ? III. Growth Control How are differences in size achieved ? What determines differences in size ? Size of an organ/animal = number of cells + size of the cells + space between cells Size of an organ/animal = number of cells + size of the cells Cell Number Cell Number + Cell Size Cell Size similar Cell Division + Cell Death Cell Growth What determines differences in size ? Cell Division / Proliferation: increase in cell number by one cell (the "mother cell") dividing to produce two "daughter cells" Cell Death / Apoptosis: is death of a cell in any form, mediated by an intracellular program (DNA fragmentation and protein degradation) Cell Growth: increase in cell mass (protein synthesis and organelle biogenesis) Cell Cycle How organs achieve a particular size and pattern ? Drosophila imaginal discs: proliferative tissues Drosophila wing imaginal disc 20-30 cells Embryo Larvae wing Adult notum 50,000 cells Drosophila wing imaginal disc development Body Size Regulation Systemic vs organ-autonomous growth control Long range signaling molecules (hormones…) Cell autonomous growth promoters Environmental factors (nutrition…) Morphogens, signaling molecules Systemic growth control SYSTEMIC GROWTH CONTROL GROWTH RATE DEVELOPMENTAL TIMING (moults+pupariation) Systemic growth control DEVELOPMENTAL TIMING Ecdysone Ring gland Fat body Insulin Brain nutrients Hemolymph (fly ‘blood’) FEEDING GROWTH Gut Organ-autonomous growth control Transplants Experiments: when a small organ is transplanted into an adult organism it grows to its normal final size (even in between different species) Regeneration Experiments Size Control and Human Disease Cancer: tumor initiation, metastasis Organ hypertrophy or atrophy Growth Pathways Insulin pathway dMyc oncogene Hippo pathway TGFb signaling (Dpp) Wnt signaling (Wg) Diabetes and Obesity Regeneration and Stem Cell Biology Drosophila was, is and will be important for Human Biology Thank you Development and Growth Control Lab Crazy about B omedicine Transformation in flies