| Literature DB >> 23087835 |
Cindy Lim1, Lama Tarayrah, Xin Chen.
Abstract
Drosophila spermatogenesis has become a paradigmatic system for the study of mechanisms that regulate adult stem cell maintenance, proliferation and differentiation. The dramatic cellular differentiation process from germline stem cell (GSC) to mature sperm is accompanied by dynamic changes in gene expression, which are regulated at transcriptional, post-transcriptional (including translational) and post-translational levels. Post-transcriptional regulation has been proposed as a unique feature of germ cells. However, recent studies have provided new insights into transcriptional regulation during Drosophila spermatogenesis. Both signaling pathways and epigenetic mechanisms act to orchestrate the transcriptional regulation of distinct genes at different germ cell differentiation stages. Many of the regulatory pathways that control male gamete differentiation in Drosophila are conserved in mammals. Therefore, studies using Drosophila spermatogenesis will provide insight into the molecular mechanisms that regulate mammalian germ cell differentiation pathways.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23087835 PMCID: PMC3469439 DOI: 10.4161/spmg.21775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Spermatogenesis ISSN: 2156-5554

Figure 1. Summary of transcriptional regulation in stem cell niche and mitotic germ cells. Hub cells are in green, GSC and transit-amplifying cells are in pink, CySC and cyst cells are in blue. Solid lines denote direct regulation, dashed lines denote indirect regulation or lack of evidence for direct regulation. See text for detailed discussion.
Table 1. Factors required in transcriptional regulation of spermatogenesis
| Cell Types | Stage | Gene product(s) | Function(s) | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Somatic Cells | Hub cells | Gbb/Dpp | Ligand of BMP signaling pathway | Refs. |
| | | Upd | Ligand of JAK-STAT signaling pathway | Refs. |
| | | Magu | Regulates BMP signaling and GSC maintenance | ref. |
| | Cyst Stem Cells | Rac and Rho | Small GTPases, downstream of Egf pathway. Rac promotes Egf signaling while Rho inhibits Egf signaling. Egf pathway inhibits GSC self-renewal and promotes GSC to GB transition. | Refs. |
| | | pSTAT | Downstream transcription factor of JAK-STAT pathway, sufficient for GSC self-renewal | ref. |
| | | Chinmo | Transcription factor, a target gene of JAK-STAT signaling, sufficient for GSC self-renewal | ref. |
| | | Zfh1 | Transcription factor, a target gene of JAK-STAT signaling, sufficient for GSC self-renewal | ref. |
| | | Socs36E | An inhibitor and also a target gene of JAK-STAT signaling, maintains a balanced ratio of CySCs and GSCs in the niche | ref. |
| | Cyst Cells | Rac and Rho | Small GTPases, downstream of Egf pathway. Egf pathway inhibits spermatogonial division and promotes spermatogonia-to-spermatocyte transition. | Refs. |
| Germ Cells | GSCs | Nucleoporin98–86 | Nuclear envelope components, regulate proper GSC-to-GB transition, act upstream of BMP, JAK-STAT and Egfr pathways | ref. |
| | | pMAD | Downstream transcription factor of BMP pathway, important for GSC self-renewal | Refs. |
| | | pSTAT | Downstream transcription factor of JAK-STAT pathway, required for GSC-Hub cell adhesion | ref. |
| | | Scny | A deubiquitinating enzyme targeting mono-ubiquitinated H2B, represses differentiation gene expression in GSCs | ref. |
| | | NCLB | A chromatin factor that has male-specific roles for GSC maintenance through regulating JAK-STAT pathway | ref. |
| | | NURF | A chromatin remodeler that positively regulates JAK-STAT signaling | ref. |
| | | PHF7 | An epigenetic reader that recognizes H3K4me2 and regulates GSC self-renewal | ref. |
| | | A microRNA that binds to | ref. | |
| | | Msi | A RNA binding protein required for GSC maintenance | ref. |
| | | HOW | A RNA binding protein required for GSC maintenance | ref. |
| | | Imp | A RNA binding protein that stabilizes | ref. |
| | Spermatogonia | Bam | A differentiation factor required for spermatogonial differentiation | Refs. |
| | | Mael | A RNA binding protein that represses | ref. |
| | | PHF7 | An epigenetic reader that recognizes H3K4me2 and regulates spermatogonia differentiation | ref. |
| | | HOW | A RNA binding protein required for spermatogonial proliferation | ref. |
| | | Nucleoporin98–86 | A nuclear envelope component, regulates proper spermatogonia-to-spermatocyte transition and act upstream of BMP, JAK-STAT and Egfr pathways | ref. |
| | Spermatocyte | tMAC (Aly,Achi/VisComr, Topi, Tomb,Mip40) | Regulate tTAF proper nuclear localization and binding to target genes, transcription of meiotic cell cycle and spermatid differentiation genes | Refs. |
| | | tTAFs) | Transcriptional activation of spermatid differentiation genes, antagonizes PcG-mediated gene silencing, accumulation of Boule protein | Refs. |
| | | WUC | Maturation of spermatocyte and meiotic divisions | Refs. |
| | | THO-complex | Maturation of spermatocyte and meiotic divisions | ref. |
| | | NURF | Maturation of spermatocyte and meiotic divisions | ref. |
| Spermatid | Unknown | Post-meiotic transcription of cup and comet genes, required for individualization of sperm | Refs. |

Figure 2. Summary of transcriptional regulation in meiotic and post-meiotic germ cells. A schematic diagram outlines potential chromatin state in spermatocyte mutants for tMAC or tTAF (left, analyzed with can or aly mutant testes) compared with mature wt spermatocytes (middle, analyzed with wt testes). K27: H3K27me3, K4:H3K4me3. Adapted from Chen et. al. On the right, a schematic diagram outlines potential chromatin state in spermatids prior to the histone-to-protamine transition. The scotti gene is transcribed in elongating spermatids. Ac, acetylation; P, phosphorylation; Ub, ubiquitylation.