Glass encodes a site-specific DNA-binding protein that is regulated in response to positional signals in the developing Drosophila eye.

  1. K Moses and
  2. G M Rubin
  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of California, Berkeley 94720.

Abstract

The glass gene encodes a zinc finger protein required for normal photoreceptor cell development in Drosophila. We show that glass transcripts are present in the third-instar eye-imaginal disc starting in the morphogenetic furrow and extending to the posterior margin of the disc; glass protein is detected in the nuclei of all cells in this region. We also show that glass encodes a site-specific DNA-binding protein. A 27-bp glass-binding site can confer glass-dependent expression on a reporter gene in developing photoreceptor cells, the particular subset of glass-expressing cells known to require glass function. This specificity may represent a regulation of glass protein activity after cells are recruited to the photoreceptor cell fate.

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