Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2988
Title: A Maternal role for Drosophila Casp/dFAF1
Authors: RATNAPARKHI, GIRISH S.
WAGH, NEEL
Dept. of Biology
20141032
Keywords: 2019
dFAF1
Caspar
Maternal Effect Gene
Immune deficiency signalling pathway (IMD)
ubiquitin-proteasomal degradation
Issue Date: Apr-2019
Abstract: Drosophila Caspar (Casp) is an ortholog of mammalian Fas associated factor 1 (FAF1). Analysis of the primary sequence suggests that the protein maintains its function between flies and humans. Casp in flies has been studied in the context of host defence, with Casp negatively regulating the Immune Deficient (IMD) pathway, by modulating activity of Dredd, an endo-protease that cleaves and activates RELISH/NFκB in immune signaling. In Drosophila, casp is expressed ubiquitously throughout development, with females also depositing maternal casp mRNA in the developing oocyte. In our study , we find that casp is a maternal effect gene, with an essential developmental requirement in the 0-3 hour embryo. We prove maternal roles by demonstrating that paternal zygotic expression cannot rescue embryonic lethality due to maternal loss of function (lof) of casp. Maternal casp lof embryos die in stages 8-15, suggesting that Casp in the early embryo performs critical functions that when absent stalls embryogenesis immediately post gastrulation. We are currently using antibodies and in-situ probes to understand cellular roles for Casp. Caspar/FAF1 contains domains for interactions with p97/VCP and poly- ubiquitin suggesting molecular functions in the ubiquitin-proteasomal degradative pathway. We hypothesize that the developmental stalling is a consequence of aberrant degradation of maternal proteins during the maternal to zygotic transition.
URI: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/2988
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