An RNA binding regulatory cascade controls the switch from proliferation to differentiation in the Drosophila male germ line stem cell lineage.
Devon E HarrisJongmin J KimSarah R SternHannah M VicarsNeuza R MatiasLorenzo GallicchioCatherine C BakerMargaret T FullerPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
The switch from precursor cell proliferation to onset of differentiation in adult stem cell lineages must be carefully regulated to produce sufficient progeny to maintain and repair tissues, yet prevent overproliferation that may enable oncogenesis. In the Drosophila male germ cell lineage, spermatogonia produced by germ line stem cells undergo a limited number of transit amplifying mitotic divisions before switching to the spermatocyte program that sets up meiosis and eventual spermatid differentiation. The number of transit amplifying divisions is set by accumulation of the bag-of-marbles (Bam) protein to a critical threshold. In bam mutants, spermatogonia proliferate through several extra rounds of mitosis then die without becoming spermatocytes. Here we show that the key role of Bam for the mitosis to differentiation switch is repressing expression of Held Out Wings ( how ), homolog of mammalian Quaking. Knock down of how in germ cells was sufficient to allow spermatogonia mutant for bam or its partner benign gonial cell neoplasm ( bgcn ) to differentiate, while forced expression of nuclear-targeted How protein in spermatogonia wild-type for bam resulted in continued proliferation at the expense of differentiation. Our findings suggest that Bam targets how RNA for degradation by acting as an adapter to recruit the CCR4-NOT deadenylation complex via binding its subunit, Caf40. As How is itself an RNA binding protein with roles in RNA processing, our findings reveal that the switch from proliferation to meiosis and differentiation in the Drosophila male germ line adult stem cell lineage is regulated by a cascade of RNA-binding proteins.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- binding protein
- single cell
- wild type
- cell proliferation
- poor prognosis
- signaling pathway
- cell therapy
- induced apoptosis
- germ cell
- oxidative stress
- human immunodeficiency virus
- long non coding rna
- immune response
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- hepatitis c virus
- quality improvement
- genome wide
- dna binding
- antiretroviral therapy