4.7 Article

The insulator protein BEAF-32 is required for Hippo pathway activity in the terminal differentiation of neuronal subtypes

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 143, Issue 13, Pages 2389-2397

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.134700

Keywords

Color vision; Photoreceptor; Cell fate; Insulator; Drosophila retina; RNAi screen; Hippo pathway; Regulatory networks; Warts tumor suppressor; Rhodopsin

Funding

  1. Pew Scholar Award from Pew Charitable Trusts [00027373]
  2. Basil O'Connor Scholar Award from the March of Dimes Foundation [5-FY15-21]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01EY025598]

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The Hippo pathway is crucial for not only normal growth and apoptosis but also cell fate specification during development. What controls Hippo pathway activity during cell fate specification is incompletely understood. In this article, we identify the insulator protein BEAF-32 as a regulator of Hippo pathway activity in Drosophila photoreceptor differentiation. Though morphologically uniform, the fly eye is composed of two subtypes of R8 photoreceptor neurons defined by expression of light-detecting Rhodopsin proteins. In one R8 subtype, active Hippo signaling induces Rhodopsin 6 (Rh6) and represses Rhodopsin 5 (Rh5), whereas in the other subtype, inactive Hippo signaling induces Rh5 and represses Rh6. The activity state of the Hippo pathway in R8 cells is determined by the expression of warts, a core pathway kinase, which interacts with the growth regulator melted in a double-negative feedback loop. We show that BEAF-32 is required for expression of warts and repression of melted. Furthermore, BEAF-32 plays a second role downstream of Warts to induce Rh6 and prevent Rh5 fate. BEAF-32 is dispensable for Warts feedback, indicating that BEAF-32 differentially regulates warts and Rhodopsins. Loss of BEAF-32 does not noticeably impair the functions of the Hippo pathway in eye growth regulation. Our study identifies a context-specific regulator of Hippo pathway activity in post-mitotic neuronal fate, and reveals a developmentally specific role for a broadly expressed insulator protein.

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