Summary of ssbd-repos-000375

Name
URL
DOI

Title
Endoplasmic reticulum patterns insect cuticle nanostructure
Description

Original image data of the manuscript by Inagaki and Hayashi

Submited Date
2024-08-05
Release Date
2025-12-29
Updated Date
2025-11-27
License
Funding information
Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (19H05548 and 24K21276 ) from MEXT, the Kakehashi Grants from the RIKEN BDR-Otsuka Pharmaceutical Collaboration Center to SH
File formats
Tiff and .oib files of multi channel confocal images, JPEG image file. Excel file data.
Data size
17.4 GB

Organism
Drosophila melanogaster
Strain
-
Cell Line
-
Genes
-
Proteins
-

GO Molecular Function (MF)
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GO Biological Process (BP)
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GO Cellular Component (CC)
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Study Type
-
Imaging Methods
-

Method Summary
-
Related paper(s)

Sachi Inagaki, Housei Wada, Takeshi Itabashi, Yuki Itakura, Reiko Nakagawa, Lin Chen, Kazuyoshi Murata, Atsuko H Iwane, Shigeo Hayashi (2026) Endoplasmic reticulum patterns insect cuticle nanostructure., The Journal of cell biology, Volume 225, Number 2

Published in 2026 Feb 2 (Electronic publication in Dec. 29, 2025, midnight )

(Abstract) Insect cuticles with nano-level structures exhibit functional surface properties such as the photonic nanocrystal of the butterfly wing scale with structural color and the corneal nipple arrays of superhydrophobic compound eye lens. Despite the enormous influence the cuticle has had on biomimetic industrial applications, cellular mechanisms of cuticular nanopatterning remain poorly understood. Drosophila gore-tex/Osiris23 (gox) controls the formation of nanopores, with a molecular filtering function, on the olfactory organs. Here we used 3D electron microscopy imaging of entire hair structures to show that nanopore is formed through a novel process of bidirectional interaction of the ER and the plasma membrane trafficking. ER-resident protein Gox stimulates ER-phagy through regulation of Ref(2)P, the fly counterpart of the autophagy protein p62/SQSTM1, and initiates endocytosis. Dynamin on the plasma membrane completes endocytosis and sustains ER-phagy. The repurposing of ER-phagy for plasma membrane remodeling and the fabrication of nanoscale ECM structures sheds light on the nanopatterning mechanism of insect cuticles and their genetic control.
(MeSH Terms)

Contact(s)
Shigeo Hayashi
Organization(s)
RIKEN , Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research , Laboratory for Morphogenetic Signaling
Image Data Contributors
Sachi Inagaki
Quantitative Data Contributors

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