Drosophila Toll-2 controls homeotic domain formation and timing of folding
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Tissue compartmentalization is a fundamental feature of animal development, crucial for determining cell fate, growth, and organ morphogenesis. Hox genes play essential and conserved roles in specifying homeotic compartments along the antero-posterior axis of the body. Despite extensive characterization of homeotic gene regulation, the mechanisms underlying the formation, maintenance, and reshaping of homeotic compartments during development remain incompletely understood. Here, we investigate the role of the Toll-2 receptor in the formation and folding of the Deformed (Dfd) homeotic compartment, which produces the neck of adult Drosophila . We show that Toll-2 is essential for properly forming the bilateral Dfd compartment through the fusion of the two eye-antennal imaginal discs. Additionally, we find that Toll-2 regulates the timing of neck morphogenesis by promoting cell apoptosis and cell-cell rearrangements preceding neck folding. Last, we establish that Toll-2 independently and sequentially governs both homeotic compartment formation and the timing of its morphogenesis via PI3K and Src signaling, respectively. Altogether, our findings provide novel insights into the spatiotemporal regulation of homeotic compartment development.