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Dive into the research topics where Ian Duncan is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian Duncan.


Nature | 2000

Genetic control and evolution of sexually dimorphic characters in Drosophila

Artyom Kopp; Ian Duncan; Sean B. Carroll

Sexually dimorphic abdominal pigmentation and segment morphology evolved recently in the melanogaster species group of the fruitfly Drosophila . Here we show that these traits are controlled by the bric-a-brac (bab) gene, which integrates regulatory inputs from the homeotic and sex-determination pathways. bab expression is modulated segment- and sex-specifically in sexually dimorphic species, but is uniform in sexually monomorphic species. We suggest that bab has an ancestral homeotic function, and that regulatory changes at the bab locus played a key role in the evolution of sexual dimorphism. Pigmentation patterns specified by bab affect mating preferences, suggesting that sexual selection has contributed to the evolution of bab regulation.


Cell | 1985

The Abdominal Region of the Bithorax Complex

François Karch; Barbara Weiffenbach; Mark Peifer; Welcome Bender; Ian Duncan; Susan E. Celniker; Madeline A. Crosby; E. B. Lewis

The homeotic mutations in the right half of the bithorax complex of Drosophila cause segmental transformations in the second through the eighth segments of the fly. A chromosomal walk in the bithorax complex has now been extended 215 kb through the right half of the complex, and lesions for over 40 mutations have been located on the DNA map. The mutations can be grouped in a series of phenotypic classes, one for each abdominal segment, although each mutation typically affects more than one segment. The mutant lesions of each class are clustered, and they are aligned on the chromosome in the order of the body segments that they affect. Complementation tests suggest interactions between widely spaced DNA regions; indeed, the right half cannot be split anywhere without some loss of function.


Nature | 2006

Stochastic spineless expression creates the retinal mosaic for colour vision

Mathias F. Wernet; Esteban O. Mazzoni; Arzu Celik; Dianne M. Duncan; Ian Duncan; Claude Desplan

Drosophila colour vision is achieved by R7 and R8 photoreceptor cells present in every ommatidium. The fly retina contains two types of ommatidia, called ‘pale’ and ‘yellow’, defined by different rhodopsin pairs expressed in R7 and R8 cells. Similar to the human cone photoreceptors, these ommatidial subtypes are distributed stochastically in the retina. The choice between pale versus yellow ommatidia is made in R7 cells, which then impose their fate onto R8. Here we report that the Drosophila dioxin receptor Spineless is both necessary and sufficient for the formation of the ommatidial mosaic. A short burst of spineless expression at mid-pupation in a large subset of R7 cells precedes rhodopsin expression. In spineless mutants, all R7 and most R8 cells adopt the pale fate, whereas overexpression of spineless is sufficient to induce the yellow R7 fate. Therefore, this study suggests that the entire retinal mosaic required for colour vision is defined by the stochastic expression of a single transcription factor, Spineless.


Chromosoma | 1991

Drosophila genome project: One-hit coverage in yeast artificial chromosomes

James W. Ajioka; David A. Smoller; Robert W. Jones; John P. Carulli; Ann Vellek; Dan Garza; Andrew J. Link; Ian Duncan; Daniel L. Hartl

We present a strategy for assembling a physical map of the genome of Drosophila melanogaster based on yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). In this paper we report 500 YACs containing inserts of Drosophila DNA averaging 200 kb that have been assigned positions on the physical map by means of in situ hybridization with salivary gland chromosomes. The cloned DNA fragments have randomly sheared ends (DY clones) or ends generated by partial digestion with either NotI (N clones) or EcoRI (E clones). Relative to the euchromatic portion of the genome, the size distribution and genomic positions of the clones reveal no significant bias in the completeness or randomness of genome coverage. The 500 mapped euchromatic clones contain an aggregate of approximately 100 million base pairs of DNA, which is approximately one genome equivalent of Drosophila euchromatin.


Trends in Genetics | 1992

Towards a Drosophila genome map

Daniel L. Hartl; James W. Ajioka; Haini Cai; Allan R. Lohe; Elena R. Lozovskaya; David A. Smoller; Ian Duncan

A physical map of the genome of Drosophila melanogaster has been created using 965 yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones assigned to locations in the cytogenetic map by in situ hybridization with the polytene salivary gland chromosomes. Clones with insert sizes averaging about 200 kb, totaling 1.7 genome equivalents, have been mapped. More than 80% of the euchromatic genome is included in the mapped clones, and 75% of the euchromatic genome is included in 161 cytological contigs ranging in size up to 2.5 Mb (average size 510 kb). On the other hand, YAC coverage of the one-third of the genome constituting the heterochromatin is incomplete, and clones containing long tracts of highly repetitive simple satellite DNA sequences have not been recovered.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Control of target gene specificity during metamorphosis by the steroid response gene E93

Xiaochun Mou; Dianne M. Duncan; Eric H. Baehrecke; Ian Duncan

Hormonal control of sexual maturation is a common feature in animal development. A particularly dramatic example is the metamorphosis of insects, in which pulses of the steroid hormone ecdysone drive the wholesale transformation of the larva into an adult. The mechanisms responsible for this transformation are not well understood. Work in Drosophila indicates that the larval and adult forms are patterned by the same underlying sets of developmental regulators, but it is not understood how the same regulators pattern two distinct forms. Recent studies indicate that this ability is facilitated by a global change in the responsiveness of target genes during metamorphosis. Here we show that this shift is controlled in part by the ecdysone-induced transcription factor E93. Although long considered a dedicated regulator of larval cell death, we find that E93 is expressed widely in adult cells at the pupal stage and is required for many patterning processes at this time. To understand the role of E93 in adult patterning, we focused on a simple E93-dependent process, the induction of the Dll gene within bract cells of the pupal leg by EGF receptor signaling. In this system, we show that E93 functions to cause Dll to become responsive to EGF receptor signaling. We demonstrate that E93 is both necessary and sufficient for directing this switch. E93 likely controls the responsiveness of many other target genes because it is required broadly for patterning during metamorphosis. The wide conservation of E93 orthologs suggests that similar mechanisms control life-cycle transitions in other organisms, including vertebrates.


Developmental Biology | 2010

Control of the spineless antennal enhancer: Direct repression of antennal target genes by Antennapedia

Dianne M. Duncan; Paula Kiefel; Ian Duncan

It is currently thought that antennal target genes are activated in Drosophila by the combined action of Distal-less, homothorax, and extradenticle, and that the Hox gene Antennapedia prevents activation of antennal genes in the leg by repressing homothorax. To test these ideas, we analyze a 62bp enhancer from the antennal gene spineless that is specific for the third antennal segment. This enhancer is activated by a tripartite complex of Distal-less, Homothorax, and Extradenticle. Surprisingly, Antennapedia represses the enhancer directly, at least in part by competing with Distal-less for binding. We show that Antennapedia is required in the leg only within a proximal ring that coexpresses Distal-less, Homothorax and Extradenticle. We conclude that the function of Antennapedia in the leg is not to repress homothorax, as has been suggested, but to directly repress spineless and other antennal genes that would otherwise be activated within this ring.


Nature | 2001

correction: Genetic control and evolution of sexually dimorphic characters

Artyom Kopp; Ian Duncan; Dorothea Godt; Sean B. Carroll

This corrects the article DOI: 35046017


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2017

Mutants for Drosophila Isocitrate Dehydrogenase 3b Are Defective in Mitochondrial Function and Larval Cell Death

Dianne M. Duncan; Paula Kiefel; Ian Duncan

The death of larval salivary gland cells during metamorphosis in Drosophila melanogaster has been a key system for studying steroid controlled programmed cell death. This death is induced by a pulse of the steroid hormone ecdysone that takes place at the end of the prepupal period. For many years, it has been thought that the ecdysone direct response gene Eip93F (E93) plays a critical role in initiating salivary gland cell death. This conclusion was based largely on the finding that the three “type” alleles of E93 cause a near-complete block in salivary gland cell death. Here, we show that these three mutations are in fact allelic to Idh3b, a nearby gene that encodes the β subunit of isocitrate dehydrogenase 3, a mitochondrial enzyme of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. The strongest of the Idh3b alleles appears to cause a near-complete block in oxidative phosphorylation, as mitochondria are depolarized in mutant larvae, and development arrests early during cleavage in embryos from homozygous-mutant germline mothers. Idh3b-mutant larval salivary gland cells fail to undergo mitochondrial fragmentation, which normally precedes the death of these cells, and do not initiate autophagy, an early step in the cell death program. These observations suggest a close relationship between the TCA cycle and the initiation of larval cell death. In normal development, tagged Idh3b is released from salivary gland mitochondria during their fragmentation, suggesting that Idh3b may be an apoptogenic factor that functions much like released cytochrome c in mammalian cells.


Genes & Development | 1998

Control of distal antennal identity and tarsal development in Drosophila by spineless–aristapedia, a homolog of the mammalian dioxin receptor

Dianne M. Duncan; Elizabeth A. Burgess; Ian Duncan

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Dianne M. Duncan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Artyom Kopp

University of California

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Paula Kiefel

University of Washington

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David A. Smoller

Washington University in St. Louis

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James W. Ajioka

Washington University in St. Louis

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Richard B. Emmons

Washington University in St. Louis

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Sean B. Carroll

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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