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Dive into the research topics where Peter K. Dearden is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter K. Dearden.


Genome Biology | 2006

Large-scale gene discovery in the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum (Hemiptera)

Beatriz Sabater-Muñoz; Fabrice Legeai; Claude Rispe; Joël Bonhomme; Peter K. Dearden; Carole Dossat; Aymeric Duclert; Jean Pierre Gauthier; Danièle Giblot Ducray; Wayne B. Hunter; Phat M. Dang; Srini Kambhampati; David Martínez-Torres; Teresa Cortes; Andrés Moya; Atsushi Nakabachi; Cathy Philippe; Nathalie Prunier-Leterme; Yvan Rahbé; Jean Simon; David L. Stern; Patrick Wincker; Denis Tagu

Aphids are the leading pests in agricultural crops. A large-scale sequencing of 40,904 ESTs from the pea aphid Acyrthosiphon pisum was carried out to define a catalog of 12,082 unique transcripts. A strong AT bias was found, indicating a compositional shift between Drosophila melanogaster and A. pisum. An in silico profiling analysis characterized 135 transcripts specific to pea-aphid tissues (relating to bacteriocytes and parthenogenetic embryos). This project is the first to address the genetics of the Hemiptera and of a hemimetabolous insect.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009

Effects of presynaptic mutations on a postsynaptic Cacna1s calcium channel colocalized with mGluR6 at mouse photoreceptor ribbon synapses.

Dana Specht; Shu-Biao Wu; Paul R. Turner; Peter K. Dearden; Frank Koentgen; Uwe Wolfrum; Marion A. Maw; Johann Helmut Brandstätter; Susanne tom Dieck

PURPOSE Photoreceptor ribbon synapses translate light-dependent changes of membrane potential into graded transmitter release via L-type voltage-dependent calcium channel (VDCC) activity. Functional abnormalities (e.g., a reduced electroretinogram b-wave), arising from mutations of presynaptic proteins, such as Bassoon and the VDCCalpha1 subunit Cacna1f, have been shown to altered transmitter release. L-type VDCCalpha1 subtype expression in wild-type and mutant mice was examined, to investigate the underlying pathologic mechanism. METHODS Two antisera against Cacna1f, and a Cacna1f mouse mutant (Cacna1fDeltaEx14-17) were generated. Immunocytochemistry for L-type VDCCalpha1 subunits and additional synaptic marker proteins was performed in wild-type, BassoonDeltaEx4-5 and Cacna1fDeltaEx14-17 mice. RESULTS Active zone staining at photoreceptor ribbon synapses with a panalpha1 antibody colocalized with staining for Cacna1f in wild-type mouse retina. Similarly, in the BassoonDeltaEx4-5 mouse, residual mislocalized staining for panalpha1 and Cacna1f showed colocalization. Unlike the presynaptic location of Cacna1f and panalpha1 antibody staining, the skeletal muscle VDCCalpha1 subunit Cacna1s was present postsynaptically at ON-bipolar cell dendrites, where it colocalized with metabotropic glutamate receptor 6 (mGluR6). Surprisingly, Cacna1s labeling was severely downregulated in the BassoonDeltaEx4-5 and Cacna1fDeltaEx14-17 mutants. Subsequent analyses revealed severely reduced ON-bipolar cell dendritic expression of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) ATPase Serca2 in both mouse mutants and of mGluR6 in the Cacna1fDeltaEx14-17 mutant. CONCLUSIONS Presynaptic mutations leading to reduced photoreceptor-to-bipolar cell signaling are associated with disturbances in protein expression within postsynaptic dendrites. Moreover, detection of Cacna1s and Serca2 in ON-bipolar cell dendrites in wild-type animals suggests a putative role in regulation of postsynaptic Ca(2+) flux.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2014

Epigenetics, plasticity, and evolution: How do we link epigenetic change to phenotype?

Elizabeth J. Duncan; Peter D. Gluckman; Peter K. Dearden

Epigenetic mechanisms are proposed as an important way in which the genome responds to the environment. Epigenetic marks, including DNA methylation and Histone modifications, can be triggered by environmental effects, and lead to permanent changes in gene expression, affecting the phenotype of an organism. Epigenetic mechanisms have been proposed as key in plasticity, allowing environmental exposure to shape future gene expression. While we are beginning to understand how these mechanisms have roles in human biology and disease, we have little understanding of their roles and impacts on ecology and evolution. In this review, we discuss different types of epigenetic marks, their roles in gene expression and plasticity, methods for assaying epigenetic changes, and point out the future advances we require to understand fully the impact of this field.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2006

Germ cell development in the Honeybee ( Apis mellifera ); Vasa and Nanos expression

Peter K. Dearden

BackgroundStudies of specification of germ-cells in insect embryos has indicated that in many taxa the germ cells form early in development, and their formation is associated with pole plasm, germ plasm or an organelle called the oosome. None of these morphological features associated with germ cell formation have been identified in the Honeybee Apis mellifera. In this study I report the cloning and expression analysis of Honeybee homologues of vasa and nanos, germ cell markers in insects and other animals.ResultsApis vasa and nanos RNAs are present in early honeybee embryos, but the RNAs clear rapidly, without any cells expressing these germ cell markers past stage 2. These genes are then only expressed in a line of cells in the abdomen from stage 9 onwards. These cells are the developing germ cells that are moved dorsally by dorsal closure and are placed in the genital ridge.ConclusionThis study of the expression of germ cell markers in the honeybee implies that in this species either germ cells are formed by an inductive event, late in embryogenesis, or they are formed early in development in the absence of vasa and nanos expression. This contrasts with germ cell development in other members of the Hymenoptera, Diptera and Lepidoptera.


Insect Molecular Biology | 2010

Comprehensive survey of developmental genes in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum: frequent lineage‐specific duplications and losses of developmental genes

Shuji Shigenobu; Ryan D. Bickel; Jennifer A. Brisson; Thomas Butts; C. C. Chang; Olivier Christiaens; Gregory K. Davis; Elizabeth J. Duncan; David E. K. Ferrier; Masatoshi Iga; Ralf Janssen; G. W Lin; Hsiao ling Lu; Alistair P. McGregor; Toru Miura; Guy Smagghe; James M Smith; M. van der Zee; Rodrigo A. Velarde; Megan J. Wilson; Peter K. Dearden; David L. Stern

Aphids exhibit unique attributes, such as polyphenisms and specialized cells to house endosymbionts, that make them an interesting system for studies at the interface of ecology, evolution and development. Here we present a comprehensive characterization of the developmental genes in the pea aphid, Acyrthosiphon pisum, and compare our results to other sequenced insects. We investigated genes involved in fundamental developmental processes such as establishment of the body plan and organogenesis, focusing on transcription factors and components of signalling pathways. We found that most developmental genes were well conserved in the pea aphid, although many lineage‐specific gene duplications and gene losses have occurred in several gene families. In particular, genetic components of transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) Wnt, JAK/STAT (Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription) and EGF (Epidermal Growth Factor) pathways appear to have been significantly modified in the pea aphid.


Developmental Biology | 2010

Giant, Krüppel, and caudal act as gap genes with extensive roles in patterning the honeybee embryo

Megan J. Wilson; Melanie Havler; Peter K. Dearden

In Drosophila, gap genes translate positional information from gradients of maternal coordinate activity and act to position the periodic patterns of pair-rule gene stripes across broad domains of the embryo. In holometabolous insects, maternal coordinate genes are fast-evolving, the domains that gap genes specify often differ from their orthologues in Drosophila while the expression of pair-rule genes is more conserved. This implies that gap genes may buffer the fast-evolving maternal coordinate genes to give a more conserved pair-rule output. To test this idea, we have examined the function and expression of three honeybee orthologues of gap genes, Krüppel, caudal, and giant. In honeybees, where many Drosophila maternal coordinate genes are missing, these three gap genes have more extensive domains of expression and activity than in other insects. Unusually, honeybee caudal mRNA is initially localized to the anterior of the oocyte and embryo, yet it has no discernible function in that domain. We have also examined the influence of these three genes on the expression of honeybee even-skipped and a honeybee orthologue of engrailed and show that the way that these genes influence segmental patterning differs from Drosophila. We conclude that while the fundamental function of these gap genes is conserved in the honeybee, shifts in their expression and function have occurred, perhaps due to the apparently different maternal patterning systems in this insect.


Current Biology | 1999

Developmental evolution: Axial patterning in insects

Peter K. Dearden; Michael Akam

The Drosophila bicoid gene is well known for encoding a protein that forms a morphogenetic gradient with a key role in anterior patterning of the fruitfly embryo. Recent results suggest the evolution of bicoid might have involved dramatic changes in function - essentially the invention of a new regulatory protein.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Tailless patterning functions are conserved in the honeybee even in the absence of Torso signaling.

Megan J. Wilson; Peter K. Dearden

In Drosophila, the maternal Torso terminal signaling pathway activates expression of the gene tailless (tll), which is required for the patterning of anterior and posterior termini. We cloned the honeybee orthologue of tll (Am-tll) and found that embryonic expression of Am-tll resembles that of Drosophila, with expression in triangular anterior dorsal-lateral domains and a posterior cap. Functional studies revealed that Am-tll has an essential role in patterning the posterior terminal segments and the brain, similar to the activity of tll in other insects. As the honeybee genome lacks many of the components of the Torso pathway required for terminal patterning, we investigated the regulation of honeybee tailless (Am-tll). Am-tll is expressed maternally and, in the honeybee ovary, Am-tll mRNA becomes localized to the dorsal side of the oocyte, a process requiring the actin cytoskeleton. This RNA becomes redistributed in early embryos to a posterior domain. We also show that the activation of the anterior domain of Am-tll is dependent on honeybee orthodenticle-1. Together these findings indicate major differences in post-transcriptional regulation of tailless in the honeybee compared to other insects but that this regulation leads to a conserved expression pattern. These results provide an example of an early event in development evolving and yet still producing a conserved output for the rest of development to build upon.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008

Evolution of the insect Sox genes

Megan J. Wilson; Peter K. Dearden

BackgroundThe Sox gene family of transcriptional regulators have essential roles during development and have been extensively studied in vertebrates. The mouse, human and fugu genomes contain at least 20 Sox genes, which are subdivided into groups based on sequence similarity of the highly conserved HMG domain. In the well-studied insect Drosophila melanogaster, eight Sox genes have been identified and are involved in processes such as neurogenesis, dorsal-ventral patterning and segmentation.ResultsWe examined the available genome sequences of Apis mellifera, Nasonia vitripennis, Tribolium castaneum, Anopheles gambiae and identified Sox family members which were classified by phylogenetics using the HMG domains. Using in situ hybridisation we determined the expression patterns of eight honeybee Sox genes in honeybee embryo, adult brain and queen ovary. AmSoxB group genes were expressed in the nervous system, brain and Malphigian tubules. The restricted localization of AmSox21b and AmSoxB1 mRNAs within the oocyte, suggested a role in, or that they are regulated by, dorsal-ventral patterning. AmSoxC, D and F were expressed ubiquitously in late embryos and in the follicle cells of the queen ovary. Expression of AmSoxF and two AmSoxE genes was detected in the drone testis.ConclusionInsect genomes contain between eight and nine Sox genes, with at least four members belonging to Sox group B and other Sox subgroups each being represented by a single Sox gene. Hymenopteran insects have an additional SoxE gene, which may have arisen by gene duplication. Expression analyses of honeybee SoxB genes implies that this group of genes may be able to rapidly evolve new functions and expression domains, while the combined expression pattern of all the SoxB genes is maintained.


Development Genes and Evolution | 2000

A role for Fringe in segment morphogenesis but not segment formation in the grasshopper, Schistocerca gregaria

Peter K. Dearden; Michael Akam

Abstract Studies of somitogenesis in vertebrates have identified a number of genes that are regulated by a periodic oscillator that patterns the pre-somitic mesoderm. One of these genes, hairy, is homologous to a Drosophila segmentation gene that also shows periodic spatial expression. This, and the periodic expression of a zebrafish homologue of hairy during somitogenesis, has suggested that insect segmentation and vertebrate somitogenesis may use similar molecular mechanisms and possibly share a common origin. In chicks and mice expression of the lunatic fringe gene also oscillates in the presomitic mesoderm. Fringe encodes an extracellular protein that regulates Notch signalling. This, and the finding that mutations in Notch or its ligands disrupt somite patterning, suggests that Notch signalling plays an important role in vertebrate somitogenesis. Although Notch signalling is not known to play a role in the formation of segments in Drosophila, we reasoned that it might do so in other insects such as the grasshopper, where segment boundaries form between cells, not between syncytial nuclei as they do in Drosophila. Here we report the cloning of a single fringe gene from the grasshopper Schistocerca. We show that it is not detectably expressed in the forming trunk segments of the embryo until after segment boundaries have formed. We conclude that fringe is not part of the mechanism that makes segments in Schistocerca. Thereafter it is expressed in a pattern which shows that it is a downstream target of the segmentation machinery and suggests that it may play a role in segment morphogenesis. Like its Drosophila counterpart, Schistocerca fringe is also expressed in the eye, in rings in the legs, and during oogenesis, in follicle cells.

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Michael Akam

University of Cambridge

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