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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Molnar is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Molnar.


Development | 2009

Drosophila laminins act as key regulators of basement membrane assembly and morphogenesis

Jose M. Urbano; Catherine N. Torgler; Cristina Molnar; Ulrich Tepass; Ana López-Varea; Nicholas H. Brown; Jose F. de Celis; María D. Martín-Bermudo

Laminins are heterotrimeric molecules found in all basement membranes. In mammals, they have been involved in diverse developmental processes, from gastrulation to tissue maintenance. The Drosophila genome encodes two laminin α chains, one β and one Γ, which form two distinct laminin trimers. So far, only mutations affecting one or other trimer have been analysed. In order to study embryonic development in the complete absence of laminins, we mutated the gene encoding the sole laminin β chain in Drosophila, LanB1, so that no trimers can be made. We show that LanB1 mutant embryos develop until the end of embryogenesis. Electron microscopy analysis of mutant embryos reveals that the basement membranes are absent and the remaining extracellular material appears disorganised and diffuse. Accordingly, abnormal accumulation of major basement membrane components, such as Collagen IV and Perlecan, is observed in mutant tissues. In addition, we show that elimination of LanB1 prevents the normal morphogenesis of most organs and tissues, including the gut, trachea, muscles and nervous system. In spite of the above structural roles for laminins, our results unravel novel functions in cell adhesion, migration and rearrangement. We propose that while an early function of laminins in gastrulation is not conserved in Drosophila and mammals, their function in basement membrane assembly and organogenesis seems to be maintained throughout evolution.


Development | 2010

The leading edge during dorsal closure as a model for epithelial plasticity: Pak is required for recruitment of the Scribble complex and septate junction formation

Sami M. Bahri; Simon Wang; Ryan Conder; Juliana M. Choy; Stephanie Vlachos; Kevin Dong; Carlos Merino; Stephan J. Sigrist; Cristina Molnar; Xiaohang Yang; Ed Manser; Nicholas Harden

Dorsal closure (DC) of the Drosophila embryo is a model for the study of wound healing and developmental epithelial fusions, and involves the sealing of a hole in the epidermis through the migration of the epidermal flanks over the tissue occupying the hole, the amnioserosa. During DC, the cells at the edge of the migrating epidermis extend Rac- and Cdc42-dependent actin-based lamellipodia and filopodia from their leading edge (LE), which exhibits a breakdown in apicobasal polarity as adhesions are severed with the neighbouring amnioserosa cells. Studies using mammalian cells have demonstrated that Scribble (Scrib), an important determinant of apicobasal polarity that functions in a protein complex, controls polarized cell migration through recruitment of Rac, Cdc42 and the serine/threonine kinase Pak, an effector for Rac and Cdc42, to the LE. We have used DC and the follicular epithelium to study the relationship between Pak and the Scrib complex at epithelial membranes undergoing changes in apicobasal polarity and adhesion during development. We propose that, during DC, the LE membrane undergoes an epithelial-to-mesenchymal-like transition to initiate epithelial sheet migration, followed by a mesenchymal-to-epithelial-like transition as the epithelial sheets meet up and restore cell-cell adhesion. This latter event requires integrin-localized Pak, which recruits the Scrib complex in septate junction formation. We conclude that there are bidirectional interactions between Pak and the Scrib complex modulating epithelial plasticity. Scrib can recruit Pak to the LE for polarized cell migration but, as migratory cells meet up, Pak can recruit the Scrib complex to restore apicobasal polarity and cell-cell adhesion.


Developmental Dynamics | 2005

Conserved cross-interactions in Drosophila and Xenopus between Ras/MAPK signaling and the dual-specificity phosphatase MKP3

Ana Ruiz Gómez; Ana López-Varea; Cristina Molnar; Elisa de la Calle-Mustienes; Mar Ruiz-Gómez; José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta; Jose F. de Celis

The extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK) is a key transducer of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR) signaling pathways, and its function is required in multiple processes during animal development. The activity of ERK depends on the phosphorylation state of conserved threonine and tyrosine residues, and this state is regulated by different kinases and phosphatases. A family of phosphatases with specificity toward both threonine and tyrosine residues in ERK (dual‐specificity phosphatases) play a conserved role in its dephosphorylation and consequent inactivation. Here, we characterize the function of the dual‐specificity phosphatase MKP3 in Drosophila EGFR and Xenopus FGFR signaling. The function of MKP3 is required during Drosophila wing vein formation and Xenopus anteroposterior neural patterning. We find that the expression of the MKP3 gene is localized in places of high EGFR and FGFR signaling. Furthermore, this restricted expression depends on ERK function both in Drosophila and Xenopus, suggesting that MKP3 constitutes a conserved negative feedback loop on the activity of the Ras/ERK signaling pathway. Developmental Dynamics 232:695–708, 2005.


Genetics | 2006

A Gain-of-Function Screen Identifying Genes Required for Vein Formation in the Drosophila melanogaster Wing

Cristina Molnar; Ana López-Varea; Rosario Hernández; Jose F. de Celis

The formation of the Drosophila wing involves developmental processes such as cell proliferation, pattern formation, and cell differentiation that are common to all multicellular organisms. The genes controlling these cellular behaviors are conserved throughout the animal kingdom, and the genetic analysis of wing development has been instrumental in their identification and functional characterization. The wing is a postembryonic structure, and most loss-of-function mutations are lethal in homozygous flies before metamorphosis. In this manner, loss-of-function genetic screens aiming to identify genes affecting wing formation have not been systematically utilized. As an alternative, a number of genetic searches have utilized the phenotypic consequences of gene gain-of-expression, as a method more efficient to search for genes required during imaginal development. Here we present the results of a gain-of-function screen designed to identify genes involved in the formation of the wing veins. We generated 13,000 P-GS insertions of a P element containing UAS sequences (P-GS) and combined them with a Gal4 driver expressed mainly in the developing pupal veins. We selected 500 P-GSs that, in combination with the Gal4 driver, result in modifications of the veins, changes in the morphology of the wing, or defects in the differentiation of the trichomes. The P-element insertion sites were mapped to the genomic sequence, identifying 373 gene candidates to participate in wing morphogenesis and vein formation.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Role of the Drosophila Non-Visual ß-Arrestin Kurtz in Hedgehog Signalling

Cristina Molnar; Ana Ruiz-Gómez; Mercedes Martín; Susana Rojo-Berciano; Federico Mayor; Jose F. de Celis

The non-visual ß-arrestins are cytosolic proteins highly conserved across species that participate in a variety of signalling events, including plasma membrane receptor degradation, recycling, and signalling, and that can also act as scaffolding for kinases such as MAPK and Akt/PI3K. In Drosophila melanogaster, there is only a single non-visual ß-arrestin, encoded by kurtz, whose function is essential for neuronal activity. We have addressed the participation of Kurtz in signalling during the development of the imaginal discs, epithelial tissues requiring the activity of the Hedgehog, Wingless, EGFR, Notch, Insulin, and TGFβ pathways. Surprisingly, we found that the complete elimination of kurtz by genetic techniques has no major consequences in imaginal cells. In contrast, the over-expression of Kurtz in the wing disc causes a phenotype identical to the loss of Hedgehog signalling and prevents the expression of Hedgehog targets in the corresponding wing discs. The mechanism by which Kurtz antagonises Hedgehog signalling is to promote Smoothened internalization and degradation in a clathrin- and proteosomal-dependent manner. Intriguingly, the effects of Kurtz on Smoothened are independent of Gprk2 activity and of the activation state of the receptor. Our results suggest fundamental differences in the molecular mechanisms regulating receptor turnover and signalling in vertebrates and invertebrates, and they could provide important insights into divergent evolution of Hedgehog signalling in these organisms.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

Drosophila Axud1 is involved in the control of proliferation and displays pro-apoptotic activity

Alvaro Glavic; Cristina Molnar; Darko Cotoras; Jose F. de Celis

Cell division rates and apoptosis sculpt the growing organs, and its regulation implements the developmental programmes that define organ size and shape. The balance between oncogenes and tumour suppressors modulate the cell cycle and the apoptotic machinery to achieve this goal, promoting and restricting proliferation or, in certain conditions, inducing the apoptotic programme. Analysis of human cancer cells with mutation in AXIN gene has uncovered the potential function of AXUD1 as a tumour suppressor. It has been described that Human AXUD1 is a nuclear protein. We find that a DAxud1-GFP fusion protein is localised to the nucleus during interphase, where it accumulates associated to the nuclear envelope, but becomes distributed in a diffused pattern in the nucleus of mitotic cells. We have analysed the function of the Drosophila AXUD1 homologue, and find that DAxud1 behaves as a tumour suppressor that regulates the proliferation rhythm of imaginal cells. Knocking down the activity of DAxud1 enhances the proliferation of these cells, causing in addition a reduction in cell size. Conversely, the increase in DAxud1 expression impedes cell cycle progression at mitosis through disturbance of Cdk1 activity, and induces the apoptosis of these cells in a JNK-dependent manner.


Mechanisms of Development | 2006

Independent roles of Drosophila Moesin in imaginal disc morphogenesis and hedgehog signalling.

Cristina Molnar; Jose F. de Celis

The three ERM proteins (Ezrin, Radixin and Moesin) form a conserved family required in many developmental processes involving regulation of the cytoskeleton. In general, the molecular function of ERM proteins is to link specific membrane proteins to the actin cytoskeleton. In Drosophila, loss of moesin (moe) activity causes incorrect localisation of maternal determinants during oogenesis, failures in rhabdomere differentiation in the eye and alterations of epithelial integrity in the wing imaginal disc. Some aspects of Drosophila Moe are related to the activity of the small GTPase RhoA, because the reduction of RhoA activity corrects many phenotypes of moe mutant embryos and imaginal discs. We have analysed the phenotype of moesin loss-of-function alleles in the wing disc and adult wing, and studied the effects of reduced Moesin activity on signalling mediated by the Notch, Decapentaplegic, Wingless and Hedgehog pathways. We found that reductions in Moesin levels in the wing disc cause the formation of wing-tissue vesicles and large thickenings of the vein L3, corresponding to breakdowns of epithelial continuity in the wing base and modifications of Hedgehog signalling in the wing blade, respectively. We did not observe any effect on signalling pathways other than Hedgehog, indicating that the moe defects in epithelial integrity have not generalised effects on cell signalling. The effects of moe mutants on Hedgehog signalling depend on the correct gene-dose of rhoA, suggesting that the requirements for Moesin in disc morphogenesis and Hh signalling in the wing disc are mediated by its regulation of RhoA activity. The mechanism linking Moesin activity with RhoA function and Hedgehog signalling remains to be elucidated.


Developmental Biology | 2011

A conserved function of the chromatin ATPase Kismet in the regulation of hedgehog expression.

Ana Terriente-Félix; Cristina Molnar; José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta; Jose F. de Celis

The development of the Drosophila melanogaster wing depends on its subdivision into anterior and posterior compartments, which constitute two independent cell lineages since their origin in the embryonic ectoderm. The anterior-posterior compartment boundary is the place where signaling by the Hedgehog pathway takes place, and this requires pathway activation in anterior cells by ligand expressed exclusively in posterior cells. Several mechanisms ensure the confinement of hedgehog expression to posterior cells, including repression by Cubitus interruptus, the co-repressor Groucho and Master of thick veins. In this work we identified Kismet, a chromodomain-containing protein of the SNF2-like family of ATPases, as a novel component of the hedgehog transcriptional repression mechanism in anterior compartment cells. In kismet mutants, hedgehog is ectopically expressed in a domain of anterior cells close to the anterior-posterior compartment boundary, causing inappropriate activation of the pathway and changes in the development of the central region of the wing. The contribution of Kismet to the silencing of hedgehog expression is limited to anterior cells with low levels of the repressor form of Cubitus interruptus. We also show that knockdown of CHD8, the kismet homolog in Xenopus tropicalis, is also associated with ectopic sonic hedgehog expression and up-regulation of one of its target genes in the eye, Pax2, indicating the evolutionary conservation of Kismet/CHD8 function in negatively controlling hedgehog expression.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

Tay Bridge Is a Negative Regulator of EGFR Signalling and Interacts with Erk and Mkp3 in the Drosophila melanogaster Wing

Cristina Molnar; Jose F. de Celis

The regulation of Extracellular regulated kinase (Erk) activity is a key aspect of signalling by pathways activated by extracellular ligands acting through tyrosine kinase transmembrane receptors. In this process, participate proteins with kinase activity that phosphorylate and activate Erk, as well as different phosphatases that inactivate Erk by de-phosphorylation. The state of Erk phosphorylation affects not only its activity, but also its subcellular localization, defining the repertoire of Erk target proteins, and consequently, the cellular response to Erk. In this work, we characterise Tay bridge as a novel component of the EGFR/Erk signalling pathway. Tay bridge is a large nuclear protein with a domain of homology with human AUTS2, and was previously identified due to the neuronal phenotypes displayed by loss-of-function mutations. We show that Tay bridge antagonizes EGFR signalling in the Drosophila melanogaster wing disc and other tissues, and that the protein interacts with both Erk and Mkp3. We suggest that Tay bridge constitutes a novel element involved in the regulation of Erk activity, acting as a nuclear docking for Erk that retains this protein in an inactive form in the nucleus.


Archive | 2011

Signalling Pathways in Development and Human Disease: A Drosophila Wing Perspective

Cristina Molnar; Martín Resnik-Docampo; María F. Organista; Mercedes Martín; Covadonga F. Hevia; Jose F. de Celis

The proteins involved in signalling are organised in several signalling pathways, and both these proteins and their molecular interactions are conserved during evolution. In this chapter we describe the genetic structure of the main conserved signalling pathways identified in multicellular organisms, focusing in those signalling pathways in which the activation of cell receptors by proteins with ligand activity is linked to transcriptional responses. These pathways play key roles during normal development, and their deregulation has been implicated in a variety of human diseases. We will emphasize the conservation of the proteins and mechanisms involved in each of these pathways, and describe the Drosophila wing imaginal disc as an experimental system to dissect cell signalling in vivo. Finally, we will discuss some of the strategies that are been used to identify additional components of signalling pathways in Drosophila. Our main aim is to underline the general structure of signalling pathways, the relevance of signalling for normal development and for the appearance of multitude of human diseases, and describe several strategies that Drosophila genetics offers in biomedical research.

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Jose F. de Celis

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana López-Varea

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Ana Terriente-Félix

Spanish National Research Council

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Cristina Cruz

Spanish National Research Council

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Federico Mayor

Autonomous University of Madrid

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José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta

Spanish National Research Council

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Mercedes Martín

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana Ruiz Gómez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Ana Ruiz-Gomez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Ana Ruiz-Gómez

Spanish National Research Council

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