Title: Regulation of Cell Proliferation by a Morphogen Gradient
1Regulation of Cell Proliferation by a Morphogen
Gradient
- Dragana Rogulja and Kenneth D. Irvine
- Cell, Col. 123 449-461
- November 4, 2005
- Presented by
- Jessica Wang Sarah Chan
2This paper is about
- Drosophila development
- Wing growth
- How morphogen gradients influence cell
proliferation - Cell responses
- Autonomous and non-autonomous
3Imaginal Disc
- Patches of cells that will form various body
parts (e.g., antennae, legs, wings). - In the wing imaginal discs, genes such as
engrailed, wingless, hedgehog, and
decapentaplegic (DPP) are important for
patterning
Wolpert et al. 2002
4Decapentaplegic (DPP)
- Morphogen
- Important in Anterior-Posterior patterning in the
wing - Controls wing growth
- Overexpression of DPP (or its active receptor
TKV) causes wing overgrowth
DPP
TKV (Thickveins)
MAD
Brinker
transcription
5So
- We are talking of a morphogen gradient
- MORPHOGEN (Wolpert et al. 1998)
- substance active in pattern formation
- spatial concentration varies
- to which cells respond differently at different
threshold concentrations
6Recall
Different morphogen
Different response
Wolpert et al. 2002
7To Clarify
- Previous example
- Cell response colour
- Determining factor threshold of morphogen
- In the Paper
- Cell response cell proliferation
- Determining factor relative positional value
8Gradient models postulate
- Distinct positional values reflect cells
location within gradient - Cells compare position with their neighbors
- Differences in position stimulate cell divisions
- Daughter cells positional values intermediate
between neighbors - Discrepancies become more shallow until
proliferation ceases
Model used to explain tissue regeneration in
insects and amphibians (French et al. 1976)
9Expectations
- DPP gradient present in imaginal disc
- ? DPP ? growth
- ? DPP ? growth
DPP
BUT
(Day and Lawrence, 2000)
10Wait! A couple of glitches
How do we get even growth?
DPP gradient
growth
?
- Uniform expression of DPP/activated TKV causes
wing overgrowth - Is the level of DPP rather than the slope
important?
11Methods
- Drosophila larvae Mosaic and Wild-Type
- Mosaics
- exhibits mutant and wild-type phenotype
- have transgene AyGal4PR
- Used transgene for temporal control
- Visualized effects of transgene on wing growth
using stains
12The making of the Transgene
(Struhl and Basler, 1993)
Biol 430 Dr. Ian Ching-Sang
Flp-out cassette
Gal4-UAS system
13AyGal4PR
Transgenic larvae RU486 food
0 h
5 h
But no transcription of gene
10 h
14A Technicolor Experiment Stains
- GFP (Green) shows us where TKV is being
expressed - BrdU (red) shows us where DNA is replicating
(I.e., growth and proliferation)
15Two types of Proliferation
- Autonomous
- Only cells that have the mutant genotype show TKV
induced cell proliferation - Non-Autonomous
- Mutant cells cause wild-type cells to show
TKV-induced cell proliferation
16Autonomous Effects I
- Increase in cell proliferation in clones located
in lateral regions - Wild-type levels of DPP/activated TKV are lowest
in the lateral regions
17Autonomous Effects II
- Clones in medial regions showed little autonomous
cell proliferation -
18Autonomous Effects III
- Clones in medial-lateral regions showed
intermediate effects depending on their position
on the disc
19Nonautonomous Induction of Cell proliferation by
activated TKV in medial cells
Lateral ? non-autonomous
Medial ? non-autonomous
20Summary
- Autonomous response
- Uniform TKV activity
- ?Lateral growth
- ?Medial growth
- Non-Autonomous response
- Difference in TKV activity between cells
- Lateral growth unchanged
- ? Medial growth
- Results suggest
- In medial cells, relative TKV activity important
for cell proliferation
21Testing the Hypothesis I
Non-autonomous proliferation is induced by
juxtaposition of cells with different positional
values
- Uniformly activate TKV
- Only cells in lateral regions show proliferation
- Proliferation in medial regions is inhibited
- Therefore, medial proliferation requires a TKV
gradient
22Testing the Hypothesis II
Non-autonomous proliferation is induced by
juxtaposition of cells with different positional
values
- Perhaps the level of TKV is too high?
- Lower the level of TKV in cells (from 20µg/ml to
1µg/ml) - Proliferation is weaker, but the pattern is the
same - Therefore proliferation depends on difference in
TKV levels between neighbour cells
proliferation
23Testing the Hypothesis III
Non-autonomous proliferation is induced by
juxtaposition of cells with different positional
values
- If proliferation depends on differences (not
pathway itself) we should be able to get the same
effects by inhibiting the DPP pathway - GFP attached to a DPP pathway inhibitor
- Cell proliferation greatest at clone borders,
where greatest difference in levels is
No DPP activity
24The Punchline
- Medial cell proliferation depends on slope of
gradient NOT absolute TKV activation (where there
is no slope) - uniform TKV inhibits cell proliferation in medial
wing - Recall Lateral growth autonomous response
- Suggests level of TKV important NOT gradient
25Distinct strategies for growth regulation
- Two distinct mechanisms by which DPP pathway
regulates growth - 1) Depends on gradient of DPP (medial)
- Nonautonomous
- 2) Depends on level of DPP (lateral)
- Autonomous
26Autonomous Gradient responses to TKV activity
27Gradient response equal throughout, but gradient
shallow in lateral, steep in medial
Autonomous response low in medial wing, high in
lateral wing
28Steep DPP gradient
Shallow DPP gradient
Autonomous gradient response Gradient
response Autonomous response
Overall equal growth
High in medial
High in lateral
29Almost NO gradient
Overall, lateral overgrowth
Medial no response Lateral growth spikes
Autonomous gradient response Gradient
response Autonomous response
No gradient, no response
30Clones, cells with high TKV
Very steep gradients
Autonomous gradient response Gradient
response
Autonomous response
spikes in growth in response to extreme gradient
Not affected by gradients
31But how do cells actually do this?
32Mechanism
Cell membrane
Neighbour cell
TKV
Unbound X
x
Transmembrane protein
Bound X
Growth
Localizes X so X goes where it is unbound and is
removed from the side where it is bound
33Mechanism II
Asymmetric distribution of X can be passed on
from cell to cell
Ma et al 2003
34Mechanism II
Asymmetric distribution of X can be passed on
from cell to cell
growth
35Mechanism II
Asymmetric distribution of X can be passed on
from cell to cell
Daughter cell
36Final Thoughts I
- Prior failures due to
- Nonautonomous response transient
- Overgrowth of lateral regions had obscured
inhibition of medial-cell proliferation
associated with uniform TKV activation - Unique methods and protocols used
37Final Thoughts II
- Dual regulation mechanisms could extend to other
parts of the organism (e.g., other discs, or
other areas regulated by DPP) - Candidates for X can be identified and
elucidated is it specific to DPP? - Cytonemes (Hsiung et al., 2005) a possible role
in DPP signaling as presented in this paper?
Your final thoughts Questions?
38References
- Day, S.J., and P.A. Lawrence. 2000. Measuring
dimensions the regulation of size and shape.
Development 127 1257-1264 - French E.V., Bryant, P.J., and S.V. Bryant.
1976. Pattern regulation in epimorphic fields.
Science 193 969-981 - Hsiung, F., Ramirez Weber, F.A., Iwaki, D.D. and
T.B. Kornberg. 2005. Dependence of drosophila
wing imaginal disc cytonemes on Decapentaplegic.
Nature 437 560-563 - Ma, D., Tang, C., McNeill, H., Simon, M.A. and
J.D. Axelrod. 2003. Fidelity in planar cell
polarity signalling. Nature 421 543-547. - Struhl, G., and K. Basler. 1993. Organizing
activity of wingless protein in drosophila. Cell
72 527-540