Developmental control of E-cadherin junctions by mechanical contractility in Drosophila embryos

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Abstract

Adherens junctions are very plastic structures that change their composition and structure depending on the state of the epithelial tissue, involving mechanical stress and tissue dynamics. In Drosophila embryos, adherens junctions mature only during gastrulation following their formation a few minutes before during cellularization. Although the developmental maturation is obvious during gastrulation, the factors and conditions controlling it have remained unclear. Here, we assay the levels, distribution pattern, and mobility of E-cadherin during Drosophila gastrulation. Indicating a maturation, we find an increase in total levels at junctions and a drop in the mobile fraction of E-cadherin molecules. Both developmental changes depend on Myo-II contractility. Consistent with stereotypic Myo-II regulation, we find that interference with Rho signaling leads to corresponding changes in E-cadherin levels and mobility, at least in part. Besides Rho signaling, Src42A contributes to junction maturation, as tested by both loss-function and gain-of-function situations. Together, we demonstrate developmental maturation of adherens junctions and identify Rho signaling and Src42A as upstream regulatory pathways.

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