Hemilineage-specific expression of the RHG genes Grim and Reaper sculpt neural network composition during Drosophila neurogenesis

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Abstract

During development, nervous systems generate an incredible diversity of different cell types. One mechanism that appears critical for controlling whether a specific subtype is present or absent, and ensuring that neuronal numbers are appropriate for specific regions, is programmed cell death.

Here we show that the precisely patterned hemilineage-based cell death found in the ventral nerve cord of Drosophila melanogaster is controlled by the transcription of the pro-apoptotic RHG genes reaper and grim .

Using smFISH we show that reaper and grim , but not hid , are expressed in postembryonic lineages during neurogenesis. By generating novel T2A-GAL4 knock-in tools we have been able to map reaper and grim expression on a lineage-by-lineage basis and show diverse expression patterns within different hemilineage populations. Analysis of null mutants for both genes reveal a ‘division of labour’ with distinct combinations being important in sculpting the nervous system.

Investigation of a specific sexually dimorphic lineage reveals temporal patterning of hemilineage-specific programmed cell death through Grim and Reaper function underpins the development of sex-specific circuitry in the VNC.

Our findings suggest that the precisely patterned expression of these pro-apoptotic genes is a critical fate determinant that generates segmental-specific circuity and instructs the appropriate assembly of sexually dimorphic neural circuits in the VNC.

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