Nature, Vol.379, No.6567, 746-749, 1996
RNA-Binding and Translational Suppression by Bicoid
THE anterior determinant bicoid (bcd) of Drosophila is a homeodomain protein. It forms an anterior-to-posterior gradient in the embryo and activates, in a concentration-dependent manner, several zygotic segmentation genes during blastoderm formation(1-4). Its posterior counterpart, the homeodomain transcription factor caudal (cad)(5-7), forms a concentration gradient in the opposite direction, emanating from evenly distributed messenger RNA in the egg. In embryos lacking bcd activity as a result of mutation, the cad gradient fails to form and cad becomes evenly distributed throughout the embryo(8). This suggests that bcd may act in the region-specific control of cad mRNA translation. Here we report that bcd binds through its homeodomain to cad mRNA in vitro, and exerts translational control through a bcd-binding region of cad mRNA.
Keywords:SEGMENTATION GENE HUNCHBACK;DROSOPHILA EMBRYOS;BODY PATTERN;GRADIENT;PROTEIN;TRANSCRIPTION;EXPRESSION;KRUPPEL;LOCALIZATION;ANTERIOR