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A Switch in Tissue Stem Cell Identity Causes Neuroendocrine Tumors in Drosophila Gut
Author(s) -
Zhaohui Li,
Xingting Guo,
Huanwei Huang,
Chenhui Wang,
Fu Yang,
Yongchao Zhang,
Jiawen Wang,
Lu Han,
Zhen Jin,
Tao Cai,
Rongwen Xi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.01.041
Subject(s) - biology , stem cell , neuroblast , microbiology and biotechnology , neural stem cell , carcinogenesis , phenotype , lineage (genetic) , notch signaling pathway , enteroendocrine cell , cellular differentiation , neurogenesis , genetics , gene , signal transduction , endocrine system , biochemistry , hormone
Intestinal stem cells (ISCs) are able to generate gut-specific enterocytes, as well as neural-like enteroendocrine cells. It is unclear how the tissue identity of the ISC lineage is regulated to confer cell-lineage fidelity. Here, we show that, in adult Drosophila midgut, loss of the transcriptional repressor Tramtrack in ISCs causes a self-renewal program switch to neural stem cell (NSC)-like, and that switch drives neuroendocrine tumor development. In Tramtrack-depleted ISCs, the ectopically expressed Deadpan acts as a major self-renewal factor for cell propagation, and Sequoia acts as a differentiation factor for the neuroendocrine phenotype. In addition, the expression of Sequoia renders NSC-specific self-renewal genes responsive to Notch in ISCs, thus inverting the differentiation-promoting function of Notch into a self-renewal role as in normal NSCs. These results suggest an active maintenance mechanism for the gut identity of ISCs, whose disruption may lead to an improper acquisition of NSC-like traits and tumorigenesis.

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