Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 418, Issue 1, 1 October 2016, Pages 98-107
Developmental Biology

Increased avidity for Dpp/BMP2 maintains the proliferation of progenitors-like cells in the Drosophila eye

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.08.004Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Tissue overgrowths driven by co-expression of progenitor transcription factors hth+tsh depend on Dpp/BMP2 signaling.

  • The hth+tsh cells, instead of producing Dpp, augment their avidity for this molecule produced from local sources.

  • Mechanistically, hth+tsh cells increase proteoglycan expression, which may concentrate Dpp on their extracellular matrix.

Abstract

During organ development, the progenitor state is transient, and depends on specific combinations of transcription factors and extracellular signals. Not surprisingly, abnormal maintenance of progenitor transcription factors may lead to tissue overgrowth, and the concurrence of signals from the local environment is often critical to trigger this overgrowth. Therefore, identifying specific combinations of transcription factors/signals promoting -or opposing- proliferation in progenitors is essential to understand normal development and disease. We have investigated this issue using the Drosophila eye as model. Transcription factors hth and tsh are transiently expressed in eye progenitors causing the expansion of the progenitor pool. However, if their co-expression is maintained experimentally, cell proliferation continues and differentiation is halted. Here we show that Hth+Tsh-induced tissue overgrowth requires the BMP2 Dpp and the abnormal hyperactivation of its pathway. Rather than using autocrine Dpp expression, Hth+Tsh cells increase their avidity for Dpp, produced locally, by upregulating extracellular matrix components. During normal development, Dpp represses hth and tsh ensuring that the progenitor state is transient. However, cells in which Hth+Tsh expression is forcibly maintained use Dpp to enhance their proliferation.

Keywords

Drosophila eye
Progenitors
Growth
Dpp/BMP2
Homothorax
Proteoglycans

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