Animal tissues have diverse architectures and cell behaviors across the epithelial-mesenchymal spectrum. Cell adhesion mediated by classical cadherins is foundational. Cadherins nucleate complexes of dozens of proteins connecting junctions to the cytoskeleton and signaling downstream. Many junctional proteins are well-studied in epithelia, but less is known about roles during mesenchymal migration. The nascent myotubes of the pupal Drosophila testis provide an excellent model for N-cadherin mediated mesenchymal migration. We combined a proximity proteomics dataset of adherens junction proteins in mammalian epithelial cells with genome-wide shRNA libraries knocking down Drosophila genes to begin to define the subset of junctional proteins important in mesenchymal migration. While N-cadherin is predominant, E-cadherin plays a supporting role. Surprisingly, several proteins with key roles in epithelial morphogenesis, including Afadins homolog Canoe, ZO-1s homolog Polychaetoid, and Par3s homolog Bazooka play at most modest roles. Twenty-two genes with diverse cell biological roles had strong to moderate defects in testis morphogenesis. These will provide a community resource. We followed up two. The kinase Par-1 is important for migration and gap closure, with knockdown phenotypes paralleling those of myosin. The Rab GAP RN-tre does not have roles until after migration and works in parallel with N-cadherin during testis spiralization.
Crisis support teams’ technological openness and learning attitudes toward the AI based virtual patient system crisis support VR
BackgroundAgainst the backdrop of escalating global humanitarian crises, innovative didactic simulations are becoming increasingly important. A promising alternative to traditional classroom-based didactics for learning psychological