scholarly journals Headcase is a Repressor of Lamellocyte Fate in Drosophila melanogaster

Genes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gergely I. B. Varga ◽  
Gábor Csordás ◽  
Gyöngyi Cinege ◽  
Ferenc Jankovics ◽  
Rita Sinka ◽  
...  

Due to the evolutionary conservation of the regulation of hematopoiesis, Drosophila provides an excellent model organism to study blood cell differentiation and hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) maintenance. The larvae of Drosophila melanogaster respond to immune induction with the production of special effector blood cells, the lamellocytes, which encapsulate and subsequently kill the invader. Lamellocytes differentiate as a result of a concerted action of all three hematopoietic compartments of the larva: the lymph gland, the circulating hemocytes, and the sessile tissue. Within the lymph gland, the communication of the functional zones, the maintenance of HSC fate, and the differentiation of effector blood cells are regulated by a complex network of signaling pathways. Applying gene conversion, mutational analysis, and a candidate based genetic interaction screen, we investigated the role of Headcase (Hdc), the homolog of the tumor suppressor HECA in the hematopoiesis of Drosophila. We found that naive loss-of-function hdc mutant larvae produce lamellocytes, showing that Hdc has a repressive role in effector blood cell differentiation. We demonstrate that hdc genetically interacts with the Hedgehog and the Decapentaplegic pathways in the hematopoietic niche of the lymph gland. By adding further details to the model of blood cell fate regulation in the lymph gland of the larva, our findings contribute to the better understanding of HSC maintenance.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ismaël Morin-Poulard ◽  
Yushun Tian ◽  
Nathalie Vanzo ◽  
Michèle Crozatier

In adult mammals, blood cells are formed from hematopoietic stem progenitor cells, which are controlled by a complex cellular microenvironment called “niche”. Drosophila melanogaster is a powerful model organism to decipher the mechanisms controlling hematopoiesis, due both to its limited number of blood cell lineages and to the conservation of genes and signaling pathways throughout bilaterian evolution. Insect blood cells or hemocytes are similar to the mammalian myeloid lineage that ensures innate immunity functions. Like in vertebrates, two waves of hematopoiesis occur in Drosophila. The first wave takes place during embryogenesis. The second wave occurs at larval stages, where two distinct hematopoietic sites are identified: subcuticular hematopoietic pockets and a specialized hematopoietic organ called the lymph gland. In both sites, hematopoiesis is regulated by distinct niches. In hematopoietic pockets, sensory neurons of the peripheral nervous system provide a microenvironment that promotes embryonic hemocyte expansion and differentiation. In the lymph gland blood cells are produced from hematopoietic progenitors. A small cluster of cells called Posterior Signaling Centre (PSC) and the vascular system, along which the lymph gland develops, act collectively as a niche, under homeostatic conditions, to control the balance between maintenance and differentiation of lymph gland progenitors. In response to an immune stress such as wasp parasitism, lymph gland hematopoiesis is drastically modified and shifts towards emergency hematopoiesis, leading to increased progenitor proliferation and their differentiation into lamellocyte, a specific blood cell type which will neutralize the parasite. The PSC is essential to control this emergency response. In this review, we summarize Drosophila cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the communication between the niche and hematopoietic progenitors, both under homeostatic and stress conditions. Finally, we discuss similarities between mechanisms by which niches regulate hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells in Drosophila and mammals.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
DM Blanco-Obregon ◽  
MJ Katz ◽  
L Durrieu ◽  
L Gándara ◽  
P Wappner

AbstractDrosophila Larval hematopoiesis takes place at the lymph gland, where myeloid-like progenitors differentiate into Plasmatocytes and Crystal Cells, under regulation of conserved signaling pathways. It has been established that the Notch pathway plays a specific role in Crystal Cell differentiation and maintenance. In mammalian hematopoiesis, the Notch pathway has been proposed to fulfill broader functions, including Hematopoietic Stem Cell maintenance and cell fate decision in progenitors. In this work we describe different roles that Notch plays in the lymph gland. We show that Notch, activated by its ligand Serrate, expressed at the Posterior Signaling Center, is required to restrain Core Progenitor differentiation. We define a novel population of blood cell progenitors that we name Distal Progenitors, where Notch, activated by Serrate expressed in Lineage Specifying Cells at the Medullary Zone/Cortical Zone boundary, regulates a binary decision between Plasmatocyte and Crystal Cell fates. Thus, Notch plays context-specific functions in different blood cell progenitor populations of the Drosophila lymph gland.Graphical Abstract


Development ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 127 (21) ◽  
pp. 4551-4560 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.L. Zheng ◽  
J. Shou ◽  
F. Guillemot ◽  
R. Kageyama ◽  
W.Q. Gao

Hair cell fate determination in the inner ear has been shown to be controlled by specific genes. Recent loss-of-function and gain-of-function experiments have demonstrated that Math1, a mouse homolog of the Drosophila gene atonal, is essential for the production of hair cells. To identify genes that may interact with Math1 and inhibit hair cell differentiation, we have focused on Hes1, a mammalian hairy and enhancer of split homolog, which is a negative regulator of neurogenesis. We report here that targeted deletion of Hes1 leads to formation of supernumerary hair cells in the cochlea and utricle of the inner ear. RT-PCR analysis shows that Hes1 is expressed in inner ear during hair cell differentiation and its expression is maintained in adulthood. In situ hybridization with late embryonic inner ear tissue reveals that Hes1 is expressed in supporting cells, but not hair cells, of the vestibular sensory epithelium. In the cochlea, Hes1 is selectively expressed in the greater epithelial ridge and lesser epithelial ridge regions which are adjacent to inner and outer hair cells. Co-transfection experiments in postnatal rat explant cultures show that overexpression of Hes1 prevents hair cell differentiation induced by Math1. Therefore Hes1 can negatively regulate hair cell differentiation by antagonizing Math1. These results suggest that a balance between Math1 and negative regulators such as Hes1 is crucial for the production of an appropriate number of inner ear hair cells.


eLife ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bama Charan Mondal ◽  
Jiwon Shim ◽  
Cory J Evans ◽  
Utpal Banerjee

Blood progenitors within the lymph gland, a larval organ that supports hematopoiesis in Drosophila melanogaster, are maintained by integrating signals emanating from niche-like cells and those from differentiating blood cells. We term the signal from differentiating cells the ‘equilibrium signal’ in order to distinguish it from the ‘niche signal’. Earlier we showed that equilibrium signaling utilizes Pvr (the Drosophila PDGF/VEGF receptor), STAT92E, and adenosine deaminase-related growth factor A (ADGF-A) (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="bib43">Mondal et al., 2011</xref>). Little is known about how this signal initiates during hematopoietic development. To identify new genes involved in lymph gland blood progenitor maintenance, particularly those involved in equilibrium signaling, we performed a genetic screen that identified bip1 (bric à brac interacting protein 1) and Nucleoporin 98 (Nup98) as additional regulators of the equilibrium signal. We show that the products of these genes along with the Bip1-interacting protein RpS8 (Ribosomal protein S8) are required for the proper expression of Pvr.


Development ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 127 (16) ◽  
pp. 3619-3629 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Weber ◽  
N. Paricio ◽  
M. Mlodzik

Jun acts as a signal-regulated transcription factor in many cellular decisions, ranging from stress response to proliferation control and cell fate induction. Genetic interaction studies have suggested that Jun and JNK signaling are involved in Frizzled (Fz)-mediated planar polarity generation in the Drosophila eye. However, simple loss-of-function analysis of JNK signaling components did not show comparable planar polarity defects. To address the role of Jun and JNK in Fz signaling, we have used a combination of loss- and gain-of-function studies. Like Fz, Jun affects the bias between the R3/R4 photoreceptor pair that is critical for ommatidial polarity establishment. Detailed analysis of jun(−) clones reveals defects in R3 induction and planar polarity determination, whereas gain of Jun function induces the R3 fate and associated polarity phenotypes. We find also that affecting the levels of JNK signaling by either reduction or overexpression leads to planar polarity defects. Similarly, hypomorphic allelic combinations and overexpression of the negative JNK regulator Puckered causes planar polarity eye phenotypes, establishing that JNK acts in planar polarity signaling. The observation that Dl transcription in the early R3/R4 precursor cells is deregulated by Jun or Hep/JNKK activation, reminiscent of the effects seen with Fz overexpression, suggests that Jun is one of the transcription factors that mediates the effects of fz in planar polarity generation.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 818-818
Author(s):  
Rachid Lahlil ◽  
Richard Martin ◽  
Peter D. Aplan ◽  
C. Glenn Begley ◽  
Jacqueline E. Damen ◽  
...  

Abstract Erythroid cell development critically depends on the SCL/Tal1 transcription factor and on erythropoietin signalling. In the present study, we have taken several approaches to show that the two genes operate within the same pathway to consolidate the erythroid lineage. Signaling through the erythropoietin receptor (EpoR) upregulates SCL protein levels in a clonal cell line (TF-1) in vitro, and in murine fetal liver cells in vivo, when Epor−/− cells were compared to those of wild type littermates at E12.5. In addition, we provide functional evidence for a linear pathway from EpoR to SCL that regulates erythropoiesis. Interfering with SCL induction or SCL function prevents the anti-apoptotic effect of Epo in TF-1 cells and conversely, ectopic SCL expression is sufficient to substitute for Epo to transiently maintain cell survival. In vivo, SCL gain of function complements the cellular defects in Epor−/− embryos to support cell survival and maturation during primitive and definitive erythropoiesis, as assessed by cellular and histological analyses of Epor−/− SCLtg embryos. Moreover, several erythroid specific genes that are decreased in Epor−/− embryos are rescued by the SCL transgene including glycophorinA, bH1 and bmaj globin, providing molecular confirmation of the functional and genetic interaction between Epor and SCL. Conversely, erythropoiesis becomes deficient in compound Epor+/−SCL+/− heterozygote mice, indicating that the genetic interaction between EpoR and SCL is synthetic. Finally, using EpoR mutants that harbour well defined signalling deficiencies, combined with gain and loss of function approaches for specific kinases, we identify MAPK as the major signal transduction pathway downstream of EpoR that upregulates SCL function, necessary for erythroid cell survival and differentiation. Taken together, our observations are consistent with the view that cytokines can influence cell fate by altering the dosage of lineage transcriptional regulators.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 2643-2643
Author(s):  
Jason Xu ◽  
Samson J. Koelle ◽  
Peter Guttorp ◽  
Chuanfeng Wu ◽  
Cynthia E. Dunbar ◽  
...  

Abstract The classical model of hematopoiesis states that differentiation proceeds from hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) to mature blood cells via specified multipotent and bipotent progenitors, such as the common myeloid progenitor (CMP), common lymphoid progenitor (CLP), erythrocyte-megakaryoctye progenitor and granulocyte-monocyte progenitor. However, recent studies question this assumption and suggest that these intermediates are neither required nor prevalent. As an example, analyses of binarized data from murine barcoding experiments (Perie et al, Cell Reports, 2014) raise the possibility that hematopoiesis progresses via a random loss of potentials rather than discrete steps. Additionally, Notta et al (Science, 2015) showed that oligopotent progenitor cells form only a negligible component in the hierarchy by studying the distribution of progenitors in human marrow, leading them to infer that HSC and earliest multipotent progenitors differentiate directly into unipotent cells. Although these data challenge fundamental beliefs, the quantitative contributions of HSC and progenitors to cell lineages could not be tracked in individual mice or persons over time. We developed a statistical method to infer the rates and probabilities of cell fate decisions in a class of stochastic branching models and used this to analyze sequence data from a rhesus macaque transplanted with lentivirally barcoded CD34+ HSC and progenitor cells. The macaque's blood granulocytes (Gr), monocytes (Mo), B cells, T cells, and NK cells were tracked over 30 months. Our quantitative framework is based on computing correlations between pairs of observable mature blood cell types across all independently barcoded lineages. The method also accounts for experimental uncertainties intrinsic to blood sampling, cell purification and PCR amplification. Specifically, our approach relies on a loss function estimator that minimizes residuals between empirical pairwise correlations across barcode lineages and analytical model-based correlations derived generally for continuous-time multi-type branching processes. We integrate over sampling distributions accounting for noise in experimental protocol and CBC counts. Candidate models represent possible hematopoietic structures and allow an arbitrary number of progenitor and mature cell types descended from each HSC. We identify best-fitting fate decision rates and initial marking levels with corresponding confidence intervals via nonlinear least squares and can assess whether a given model is statistically consistent with the data. This is the first statistical method to our knowledge for fitting stochastic models of hematopoiesis to lineage barcoding time-series, and together with the rhesus macaque data, enables quantitative analysis of in vivo dynamics in a large animal model. Using this new approach, we confirmed the major finding in Wu et al. (Cell Stem Cell, 2014) of a distinct NK cell ontogeny, i.e., that CD16+ blood NK cells do not overlap in origin with T and B cell lineages. We estimate that 13.9% of HSC and 86.1% of progenitors were initially barcoded, which is consistent with the finding by Wu that the percentage of blood cells expressing GFP stabilized at 13% after 6 months. Additionally, we estimate that HSC self-renew approximately once every 12 weeks, which is consistent with the range estimated in previous primate studies based on telomere studies (Shepherd, Blood, 2007). These initial analyses help validate our method. We then showed that Gr and Mo cells derive from a common precursor in vivo (correlation ρ ≈.9 across time). We also estimated progenitor differentiation rates and showed that Gr and Mo cells are produced up to 10- to 100-fold more rapidly than T, B and NK cells, and that each progenitor committed to the Gr/Mo lineage (i.e., CFUGM) produces thousands of mature cells per day. Importantly, we tested models requiring an ordered differentiation through defined intermediaries and found that they did not suitably fit the data compared to models allowing for non-restricted pathways. Together these analyses challenge the classic model of blood cell differentiation and provide new insights into the structure of hematopoiesis. Disclosures Dunbar: GSK/Novartis: Research Funding.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 4161-4161
Author(s):  
Caroline Erter Burns ◽  
Leonard I. Zon

Abstract Vertebrate hematopoiesis can be divided into two embryonic phases: a short primitive wave predominantly generating erythrocytes and a definitive (fetal/adult) wave producing long-term hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). The definitive wave occurs in the embryonic aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) region through the asymmetric induction of HSCs from the ventral, but not dorsal, aortic endothelial wall. Since Notch signaling is critical for orchestrating a variety of developmental cell fate choices from invertebrates to humans and has been implicated in affecting the differentiation of some hematopoietic lineages, we analyzed whether the Notch pathway regulates definitive HSC induction in vivo. The zebrafish mutant mindbomb harbors a mutation in an essential E3 ligase that ubiquitylates Delta, which in turn allows the Notch intercellular domain to be released and activate downstream target gene transcription. Thus, in the absence of Mindbomb function Notch signaling does not occur. We found that although mindbomb mutants show normal primitive hematopoiesis, definitive c-myb and runx1 HSC expression is lacking. Since embryos injected with synthetic morpholinos designed to inhibit proper splicing of runx1 RNA ( runx morphants) show the same hematopoietic phenotype as mindbomb mutants, we next addressed the epistatic relationship between notch and runx1 using classic gain-of-function and loss-of-function analyses. In runx1 morphants expression of a notch receptor, notch3, and a delta ligand, deltaC, in the developing dorsal aorta was normal. Moreover, injection of runx1 RNA rescued HSCs in the AGM of mindbomb mutants. Together, these results suggest that Runx1 functions downstream of Notch in promoting HSC fate. We next analyzed whether a constitutively activated form of Notch (NICD) is sufficient for HSC specification in the AGM using an inducible binary transgenic system. Zebrafish carrying the heat-shock promoter driving the activator gal4 were mated to animals carrying 6 gal4 -responsive tandem upstream activating sequences (UAS) driving NICD. At the 10 somite-stage the embryos were heat-shocked at 37°C for 1 hour to activate NICD throughout the double transgenic animals. Surprisingly, expression of both HSC markers, c-myb and runx1, were expanded from their normal restricted domain in the ventral endothelium to the entire circumference of the dorsal aorta. Most interestingly, the presence of ectopic c-myb and runx1 transcripts were observed in the developing post-cardinal vein, a vessel that normally does not produce HSCs. These data imply that activation of the Notch pathway generates increased numbers of HSCs in vivo. When runx1 RNA is injected into wild-type embryos a similar expansion of c-myb transcripts is seen throughout the entire dorsal aorta and post-cardinal vein, further indicating that Runx1 functions downstream of Notch in HSC induction. In summary, discovery of the molecular programs essential and sufficient for fetal/adult hematopoietic ontogeny will lead to a further understanding of the physiologic and pathologic processes regulating stem cell homeostasis and translate into more effective therapies for blood disorders.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2373-2373
Author(s):  
Erica Bresciani ◽  
Blake Carrington ◽  
Erika Mijin Kwon ◽  
Marypat Jones ◽  
Stephen Wincovitch ◽  
...  

Abstract Long term hematopoietic stem cells are essential for the life-long maintenance of the hematopoietic system of an organism. The transcription factor RUNX1 is required for the emergence of definitive hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) from the hemogenic endothelium during the embryo development. Runx1 knockout mouse embryos lack all definitive blood lineages and cannot survive past embryonic day 13. However, we previously showed that zebrafish homozygous for an ENU-induced nonsense mutation in runx1 (runx1W84X/W84X) were able to recover from a larval "bloodless" phase and develop to fertile adults with multi-lineage hematopoiesis, suggesting the formation of runx1-independent adult HSCs. However, our finding was based on a single zebrafish model, which requires verification in additional, independent models. In order to further investigate if a RUNX1-independent pathway exists for the formation of adult HSCs, we generated two new runx1 mutants, a deletion of 8 bp (runx1del8/del8) and a deletion of 25 bp (runx1del25/del25) within exon 4 of runx1, respectively, using the Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) technology. These mutations cause frameshifts and premature terminations within the runt-homology domain,, resulting in loss of function of runx1 (runx1-/-). Both runx1del8/del8 and runx1del25/del25 mutant embryos had normal primitive hematopoiesis but failed to develop definitive hematopoiesis. Time-lapse recordings with confocal microscopy revealed that, indeed, there was no emergence of HSCs from the ventral wall of dorsal aorta in the runx1-/- embryos. The runx1-/- larvae gradually lost circulating primitive blood cells and became bloodless between 8 and 14 days post fertilization (dpf). However they gradually regained circulating blood cells between 15 and 20 dpf. Eventually, about 40% of runx1del8/del8 and runx1del25/del25 mutants developed to fertile adults with circulating blood cells of multi-lineages. Taken together, our data is consistent with the previously described runx1W84X/W84X phenotype and supports the possibility of a runx1-independent mechanism for HSC formation and definitive hematopoiesis. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2009 ◽  
Vol 29 (22) ◽  
pp. 6086-6096 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongjuan Gao ◽  
Xiaorong Wu ◽  
Nancy Fossett

ABSTRACT Studies using Drosophila melanogaster have contributed significantly to our understanding of the interaction between stem cells and their protective microenvironments or stem cell niches. During lymph gland hematopoiesis, the Drosophila posterior signaling center functions as a stem cell niche to maintain prohemocyte multipotency through Hedgehog and JAK/STAT signaling. In this study, we provide evidence that the Friend of GATA protein U-shaped is an important regulator of lymph gland prohemocyte potency and differentiation. U-shaped expression was determined to be upregulated in third-instar lymph gland prohemocytes and downregulated in a subpopulation of differentiating blood cells. Genetic analyses indicated that U-shaped maintains the prohemocyte population by blocking differentiation. In addition, activated STAT directly regulated ush expression as evidenced by results from loss- and gain-of-function studies and from analyses of the u-shaped hematopoietic cis-regulatory module. Collectively, these findings identify U-shaped as a downstream effector of the posterior signaling center, establishing a novel link between the stem cell niche and the intrinsic regulation of potency and differentiation. Given the functional conservation of Friend of GATA proteins and the role that GATA factors play during cell fate choice, these factors may regulate essential functions of vertebrate hematopoietic stem cells, including processing signals from the stem cell niche.


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