Abstract
Regeneration of the Drosophila midgut epithelium depends upon differential expression of transcription factors in intestinal stem cells and their progeny. The grainy head locus produces multiple splice forms that result in production of two classes of transcription factor, designated Grh.O and Grh.N. grainy head expression is associated with epithelial tissue and has roles in epidermal development and regeneration but had not been examined for a function in the midgut epithelium. Null mutant clones had a limited effect on intestinal stem cell (ISC) maintenance and proliferation, but specific loss of the Grh.O isoform results in loss of ISCs from the epithelium. This was confirmed by generation of a new Grh.O mutant to control for genetic background effects. Grh.O mutant ISCs were not lost due to cell death but were forced to differentiate. Ectopic expression of the Grh.N isoform also resulted in ISC differentiation suggesting that the two isoforms act in an opposing manner. Grh.O expression must be tightly regulated as high-level ectopic expression in enteroblasts, but not ISCs, resulted in cells with confused identity and promoted excess proliferation in the epithelium. Thus, midgut regeneration is not only dependent upon signalling pathways that regulate transcription factor expression, but also upon regulated mRNA splicing of these genes.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
This version of the manuscript is a condensed manuscript, has revised some clonal data and includes lineage tracing from the grh locus.