4.5 Article

Decoding Calcium Signaling Dynamics during Drosophila Wing Disc Development

Journal

BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 116, Issue 4, Pages 725-740

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2019.01.007

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R35GM124935]
  2. National Science Foundation [CBET-1403887, CBET-1553826, CNS-1629914, CCF-1217906, CCF-1617735]
  3. Harper Cancer Research Institute Research like a Champion awards
  4. Walther Cancer Foundation Interdisciplinary Interface Training Project
  5. Notre Dame Advanced Diagnostics & Therapeutics Berry Fellowship

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The robust specification of organ development depends on coordinated cell-cell communication. This process requires signal integration among multiple pathways, relying on second messengers such as calcium ions. Calcium signaling encodes a significant portion of the cellular state by regulating transcription factors, enzymes, and cytoskeletal proteins. However, the relationships between the inputs specifying cell and organ development, calcium signaling dynamics, and final organ morphology are poorly understood. Here, we have designed a quantitative image-analysis pipeline for decoding organ-level calcium signaling. With this pipeline, we extracted spatiotemporal features of calcium signaling dynamics during the development of the Drosophila larval wing disc, a genetic model for organogenesis. We identified specific classes of wing phenotypes that resulted from calcium signaling pathway perturbations, including defects in gross morphology, vein differentiation, and overall size. We found four qualitative classes of calcium signaling activity. These classes can be ordered based on agonist stimulation strength G alpha q-mediated signaling. In vivo calcium signaling dynamics depend on both receptor tyrosine kinase/phospholipase C gamma and G protein-coupled receptor/phospholipase C beta activities. We found that spatially patterned calcium dynamics correlate with known differential growth rates between anterior and posterior compartments. Integrated calcium signaling activity decreases with increasing tissue size, and it responds to morphogenetic perturbations that impact organ growth. Together, these findings define how calcium signaling dynamics integrate upstream inputs to mediate multiple response outputs in developing epithelial organs.

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