Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Celeste A. Berg is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Celeste A. Berg.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Drosophila as a Model Host for Pseudomonas aeruginosa Infection

David A. D'Argenio; Larry A. Gallagher; Celeste A. Berg; Colin Manoil

Using the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster as model host, we have identified mutants of the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa with reduced virulence. Strikingly, all strains strongly impaired in fly killing also lacked twitching motility; most such strains had a mutation in pilGHIJKL chpABCDE, a gene cluster known to be required for twitching motility and potentially encoding a signal transduction system. The pil chp genes appear to control the expression of additional virulence factors, however, since the wild-type fly-killing phenotype of a subset of mutants isolated on the basis of their compact colony morphology indicated that twitching motility itself was not required for full virulence in the fly.


Developmental Biology | 2010

Division of labor: Subsets of dorsal-appendage-forming cells control the shape of the entire tube

Michael J. Boyle; Rachael L. French; K. Amber Cosand; Jennie B. Dorman; Daniel P. Kiehart; Celeste A. Berg

The function of an organ relies on its form, which in turn depends on the individual shapes of the cells that create it and the interactions between them. Despite remarkable progress in the field of developmental biology, how cells collaborate to make a tissue remains an unsolved mystery. To investigate the mechanisms that determine organ structure, we are studying the cells that form the dorsal appendages (DAs) of the Drosophila melanogaster eggshell. These cells consist of two differentially patterned subtypes: roof cells, which form the outward-facing roof of the lumen, and floor cells, which dive underneath the roof cells to seal off the floor of the tube. In this paper, we present three lines of evidence that reveal a further stratification of the DA-forming epithelium. Laser ablation of only a few cells in the anterior of the region causes a disproportionately severe shortening of the appendage. Genetic alteration through the twin peaks allele of tramtrack69 (ttk(twk)), a female-sterile mutation that leads to severely shortened DAs, causes no such shortening when removed from a majority of the DA-forming cells, but rather, produces short appendages only when removed from cells in the very anterior of the tube-forming tissue. Additionally we show that heterotrimeric G-protein function is required for DA morphogenesis. Like TTK69, Gbeta 13F is not required in all DA-forming follicle cells but only in the floor and leading roof cells. The different phenotypes that result from removal of Gbeta 13F from each region demonstrate a striking division of function between different DA-forming cells. Gbeta mutant floor cells are unable to control the width of the appendage while Gbeta mutant leading roof cells fail to direct the elongation of the appendage and the convergent-extension of the roof-cell population.


Chromosoma | 1987

The lampbrush chromosomes of Xenopus laevis: preparation, identification, and distribution of 5S DNA sequences.

Harold G. Callan; Joseph G. Gall; Celeste A. Berg

Details are given of a technique for making permanent preparations of the lampbrush chromosomes of Xenopus laevis. Stained preparations allow all 18 bivalent chromosomes to be identified, and a working map showing the major features has been constructed. Fifteen of the Xenopus chromosomes have one telomere conspicuously larger than the other; the two smallest chromosomes, and one other, lack large telomeres. Similar preparations, extracted with RNase and denatured, have been hybridized in situ with a 3H-labelled 5S cRNA probe. Chromosomes can be identified in the resulting autoradiographs. 5S DNA sequences are present at all the larger telomeres and at three of the smaller ones, but are absent from the telomeres at both ends of the two smallest chromosomes. There are also five interstitial sites of hybridization. At one of these, label is on the chromosome axis; at the other four, label extends well away from the axis.


Mechanisms of Development | 2005

Juxtaposition between two cell types is necessary for dorsal appendage tube formation

Ellen J. Ward; Celeste A. Berg

The Drosophila egg chamber provides an excellent model for studying the link between patterning and morphogenesis. Late in oogenesis, a portion of the flat follicular epithelium remodels to form two tubes; secretion of eggshell proteins into the tube lumens creates the dorsal appendages. Two distinct cell types contribute to dorsal appendage formation: cells expressing the rhomboid-lacZ (rho-lacZ) marker form the ventral floor of the tube and cells expressing high levels of the transcription factor Broad form a roof over the rho-lacZ cells. In mutants that produce defective dorsal appendages (K10, Ras and ectopic decapentaplegic) both cell types are specified and reorganize to occupy their stereotypical locations within the otherwise defective tubes. Although the rho-lacZ and Broad cells rearrange to form a tube in wild type and mutant egg chambers, they never intermingle, suggesting that a boundary exists that prevents mixing between these two cell types. Consistent with this hypothesis, the Broad and rho-lacZ cells express different levels of the homophilic adhesion molecule Fasciclin 3. Furthermore, in the anterior of the egg, ectopic rhomboid is sufficient to induce both cell types, which reorganize appropriately to form an ectopic tube. We propose that signaling across a boundary separating the rho-lacZ and Broad cells choreographs the cell shape-changes and rearrangements necessary to transform an initially flat epithelium into a tube.


Trends in Genetics | 1988

Controlling P element insertional mutagenesis

Lynn Cooley; Celeste A. Berg; Allan C. Spradling

Abstract Two new methods for insertional mutagenesis in Drosophila are now available. They are based on the ability to control experimentally the number of stable P element insertions per mutagenized strain. One method produces about 10 insertions per genome and has the potential to replace hybrid dysgenesis as a means for cloning genes by transposon tagging. The other mobilizes elements less frequently, producing strains containing a single P element that can be correlated with any resulting mutant phenotype. A library of single-element strains is currently being assembled and will be a valuable resource for Drosophila molecular genetics.


Developmental Cell | 2011

Gene Regulation by MAPK Substrate Competition

Yoosik Kim; María José Andreu; Bomyi Lim; Kwanghun Chung; Mark Terayama; Gerardo Jiménez; Celeste A. Berg; Hang Lu; Stanislav Y. Shvartsman

Developing tissues are patterned by coordinated activities of signaling systems, which can be integrated by a regulatory region of a gene that binds multiple transcription factors or by a transcription factor that is modified by multiple enzymes. Based on a combination of genetic and imaging experiments in the early Drosophila embryo, we describe a signal integration mechanism that cannot be reduced to a single gene regulatory element or a single transcription factor. This mechanism relies on an enzymatic network formed by mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and its substrates. Specifically, anteriorly localized MAPK substrates, such as Bicoid, antagonize MAPK-dependent downregulation of Capicua, a repressor that is involved in gene regulation along the dorsoventral axis of the embryo. MAPK substrate competition provides a basis for ternary interaction of the anterior, dorsoventral, and terminal patterning systems. A mathematical model of this interaction can explain gene expression patterns with both anteroposterior and dorsoventral polarities.


Nature Protocols | 2013

Optimized RNA ISH, RNA FISH and protein-RNA double labeling (IF/FISH) in Drosophila ovaries

Sandra Zimmerman; Nathaniel C. Peters; Ariel E Altaras; Celeste A. Berg

In situ hybridization (ISH) is a powerful technique for detecting nucleic acids in cells and tissues. Here we describe three ISH procedures that are optimized for Drosophila ovaries: whole-mount, digoxigenin-labeled RNA ISH; RNA fluorescent ISH (FISH); and protein immunofluorescence (IF)–RNA FISH double labeling (IF/FISH). Each procedure balances conflicting requirements for permeabilization, fixation and preservation of antigenicity to detect RNA and protein expression with high resolution and sensitivity. The ISH protocol uses alkaline phosphatase–conjugated digoxigenin antibodies followed by a color reaction, whereas FISH detection involves tyramide signal amplification (TSA). To simultaneously preserve antigens for protein detection and enable RNA probe penetration for IF/FISH, we perform IF before FISH and use xylenes and detergents to permeabilize the tissue rather than proteinase K, which can damage the antigens. ISH and FISH take 3 d to perform, whereas IF/FISH takes 5 d. Probe generation takes 1 or 2 d to perform.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

A Metalloprotease Secreted by the Insect Pathogen Photorhabdus luminescens Induces Melanization

Kiara G. Held; Christopher N. LaRock; David A. D'Argenio; Celeste A. Berg; Carleen M. Collins

ABSTRACT Photorhabdus luminescens is a gram-negative insect pathogen that enters the hemocoel of infected hosts and produces a number of secreted proteins that promote colonization and subsequent death of the insect. In initial studies to determine the exact role of individual secreted proteins in insect pathogenesis, concentrated culture supernatants from various P. luminescens strains were injected into the tobacco hornworm Manduca sexta. Culture supernatants from P. luminescens TT01, the genome-sequenced strain, stimulated a rapid melanization reaction in M. sexta. Comparison of the profiles of secreted proteins from the various Photorhabdus strains revealed a single protein of approximately 37 kDa that was significantly overrepresented in the TT01 culture supernatant. This protein was purified by DEAE ion-exchange and Superdex 75 gel filtration chromatography and identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight analysis as the product of the TT01 gene plu1382 (NCBI accession number NC_005126); we refer to it here as PrtS. PrtS is a member of the M4 metalloprotease family. Injection of PrtS into larvae of M. sexta and Galleria mellonella and into adult Drosophila melanogaster and D. melanogaster melanization mutants (Bc) confirmed that the purified protein induced the melanization reaction. The prtS gene was transcribed by P. luminescens injected into M. sexta before death of the insect, suggesting that the protein was produced during infection. The exact function of this protease during infection is not clear. The bacteria might survive inside the insect despite the melanization process, or it might be that the bacterium is specifically activating melanization in an attempt to circumvent this innate immune response.


Development | 2003

Bullwinkle and shark regulate dorsal-appendage morphogenesis in Drosophila oogenesis

David H. Tran; Celeste A. Berg

bullwinkle (bwk) regulates embryonic anteroposterior patterning and, through a novel germline-to-soma signal, morphogenesis of the eggshell dorsal appendages. We screened for dominant modifiers of the bullwinkle mooseantler eggshell phenotype and identified shark, which encodes an SH2-domain, ankyrin-repeat tyrosine kinase. At the onset of dorsal-appendage formation, shark is expressed in a punctate pattern in the squamous stretch cells overlying the nurse cells. Confocal microscopy with cell-type-specific markers demonstrates that the stretch cells act as a substrate for the migrating dorsal-appendage-forming cells and extend cellular projections towards them. Mosaic analyses reveal that shark is required in follicle cells for cell migration and chorion deposition. Proper shark RNA expression in the stretch cells requires bwk activity, while restoration of shark expression in the stretch cells suppresses the bwk dorsal-appendage phenotype. These results suggest that shark plays an important downstream role in the bwk-signaling pathway. Candidate testing implicates Src42A in a similar role, suggesting conservation with a vertebrate signaling pathway involving non-receptor tyrosine kinases.


Development | 2009

Control in time and space: Tramtrack69 cooperates with Notch and Ecdysone to repress ectopic fate and shape changes during Drosophila egg chamber maturation

Michael J. Boyle; Celeste A. Berg

Organ morphogenesis requires cooperation between cells, which determine their course of action based upon location within a tissue. Just as important, cells must synchronize their activities, which requires awareness of developmental time. To understand how cells coordinate behaviors in time and space, we analyzed Drosophila egg chamber development. We found that the transcription factor Tramtrack69 (TTK69) controls the fates and shapes of all columnar follicle cells by integrating temporal and spatial information, restricting characteristic changes in morphology and expression that occur at stage 10B to appropriate domains. TTK69 is required again later in oogenesis: it controls the volume of the dorsal-appendage (DA) tubes by promoting apical re-expansion and lateral shortening of DA-forming follicle cells. We show that TTK69 and Notch compete to repress each others expression and that a local Ecdysone signal is required to shift the balance in favor of TTK69. We hypothesize that TTK69 then cooperates with spatially restricted co-factors to define appropriate responses to a globally available (but as yet unidentified) temporal signal that initiates the S10B transformations.

Collaboration


Dive into the Celeste A. Berg's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Allan C. Spradling

Carnegie Institution for Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ellen J. Ward

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heidi Horowitz

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jon D. Schnorr

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Karen E. James

University of Washington

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge