| Literature DB >> 24550912 |
Kim Pham1, Faruk Sacirbegovic2, Sarah M Russell3.
Abstract
It has long been recognized that alterations in cell shape and polarity play important roles in coordinating lymphocyte functions. In the last decade, a new aspect of lymphocyte polarity has attracted much attention, termed asymmetric cell division (ACD). ACD has previously been shown to dictate or influence many aspects of development in model organisms such as the worm and the fly, and to be disrupted in disease. Recent observations that ACD also occurs in lymphocytes led to exciting speculations that ACD might influence lymphocyte differentiation and function, and leukemia. Dissecting the role that ACD might play in these activities has not been straightforward, and the evidence to date for a functional role in lymphocyte fate determination has been controversial. In this review, we discuss the evidence to date for ACD in lymphocytes, and how it might influence lymphocyte fate. We also discuss current gaps in our knowledge, and suggest approaches to definitively test the physiological role of ACD in lymphocytes.Entities:
Keywords: asymmetric cell division; cell fate; cell polarity; immunological synapse; scribble complex
Year: 2014 PMID: 24550912 PMCID: PMC3909886 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Asymmetric cell division in solid tissues of (A) . (A) In Drosophila, selected neuroblasts undergo up to 20 rounds of asymmetric cell division (ACD). The asymmetric distribution of polarity and cell fate determinants causes spindle asymmetry to result in a large self-renewing neuroblast cell and a smaller ganglion mother cell (GMC). The GMC undergoes a subsequent ACD to produce a glial cell and a neuron. (B) ACD during zygotic division in C. elegans. The site of sperm entry serves determines the asymmetric distribution of polarity and cell fate determining proteins as well as spindle asymmetry. During the embryonic stage four rounds of ACD results in the emerging anterior body (AB) and posterior (P) cells. During the larval stage, 53 somatic blasts undergo bursts of ACD and symmetric cell division (SCD), specifying all future posterior or soma fates in various tissues. (C) Neuronal precursor asymmetric division in mammals. The first asymmetric cell division produces a neuron and an intermediate neuronal precursor (INP), which undergoes a symmetric division to produce two neurons.
Figure 2The three requirements of asymmetric cell division. For control of progeny proliferation, death, and differentiation during asymmetric cell division ACD, three requirements must be fulfilled; (1) an anchor to dictate the axis of polarity, in this case another cell; (2) the dividing cell is aligned along the axis of division, usually perpendicular to the anchor (perpendicular orientation shown by the alignment of mitotic spindle, red); and (3) that polarity of the protein (green) is maintained throughout division.
Figure 3Models of asymmetric cell division in (A) . (A) In Drosophila, neuronal precursors delaminate from the neurepithelium to undergo ACD. The polarity cue is the apical crescent, and during early division duplicated centrosomes rotate 90° to create the distinct apical and basal sides that are mediated by the Scribble and Bazooka polarity protein complexes. During late division, the coordination of the spindle length by Gαi signaling and proteins such as Inscuteable and Pins result in asymmetric distribution of cell fate determinants, such as Numb, Notch, Brat, and Prospero. The coordination and maintenance of signaling results in a self-renewing neuroblast cell and a ganglion mother cell (GMC). In cells of the hematopoietic system, multiple polarity cues can dictate asymmetric cell division. (B) Hematopoietic stem cells migrating in a stem cell niche in the bone marrow can receive adhesion, Notch or chemokine cues from surrounding endothelial, osteoblast, or sinusoidal cells, resulting in asymmetric distribution of cell fate determinants such as Notch and Numb (during attachment with the interacting cell or separately) to produce a self-renewing hematopoietic stem cell and a hematopoietic progenitor cell, which will go on to differentiate. In (C) B cells and (D) T cells the polarity cue might be through interaction with macrophages, other T cells and antigen presenting cells such as dendritic cells via adhesion, chemokine, or TCR molecules. This interaction sets an axis of division and asymmetric distribution of several surface molecules, antigen polarity, and cell fate determinants. In B cells daughters proximal to the interacting cells favor memory B cell fate, as well as more potent T cell activators and proliferators. Distal B cell daughters favor antibody secreting cell fate, with moderate T cell activating and proliferative capabilities. In the absence of ICAM-1, B cell fate is altered toward memory B cells at the expense of antibody secreting B cells. T cell daughters will inherit factors that will increase or decrease their propensity to adopt a variety of fates including that of a memory or effector T cell.
Known functions of polarity proteins in. lymphocytes.
| Polarity protein | Known phenotypes | Lymphocyte phenotype | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAR-1 | • | Mutation ( | • | Dominant negative mutation (T cells): loss of Par1b polarization and TCR-induced MTOC polarization ( |
| PAR-1 | • | Mutations ( | • | Loss (B and T cells): normal B and T cell development. CD4+ T cells exhibit higher TCR activation, B cell T-dependent and T-independent responses are altered, suggesting autoimmunity ( |
| Par1b/MARK2/EMK | ||||
| PAR-3 | • | Mutation ( | • | N/A. Par3 is excluded from the T cell uropod, and may localize transiently to the synapse during immunological synapse formation ( |
| Bazooka | ||||
| Par3, ASIP, PARD3 | • | Mutation ( | ||
| • | Loss ( | |||
| • | Removal/ectopic expression (mammalian neocortex): reduction of ACD and transformation of glial progenitor fate ( | |||
| PAR-6 | • | Mutation ( | • | Overexpression of Par6 N-terminal aPKC interacting domain reduces T cell uropod formation ( |
| Par6 | ||||
| Par6 α, β, and γ/PARD6 A, B, and G | ||||
| Pkc-3 | • | Mutation ( | • | Overexpression/dominant negative mutation (T cells): randomizes F-actin distribution, impairs uropod formation, motility, defects in T cell scanning ( |
| Atypical PKC | • | Knockdown ( | ||
| PKCι/λ and ζ | • | Loss ( | • | Drug inhibition of aPKC/Par6 interaction (T cells): defective Numb localization during T cell ACD ( |
| • | Loss: delay in secondary lymphoid organ formation ( | |||
| • | Combined PKCι/λ/ζloss (HSC’s, B and T cells): normal HSC self-renewal, engraftment, differentiation, interaction with the bone marrow microenvironment, polarization, self-renewal. Normal mature B cells and T cells numbers ( | |||
| Crb-1/Crb-like | • | Mutations ( | • | N/A |
| Crumbs | ||||
| Crumbs1-3 | • | Ectopic expression of Crumbs3 (mammalian epithelia): loss of tight junction formation and intracellular polarity ( | ||
| C01B7.4/tag-117 | • | Loss (single and combined with Crumbs loss, | • | Knock down (T cells): suboptimal T cell activation and proliferation. Strongly localized to the Golgi apparatus, and is mislocalized upon Bref A (Golgi disrupting) treatment ( |
| Stardust | ||||
| Pals1/MPP5 | ||||
| • | Knockdown (mammals): loss of MDCK cell polarization in confluent cellular monolayers ( | |||
| Let-413 | • | Mutations ( | • | Knockdown (T cell line): prevention of TCR receptor polarization in response to antigen presentation, reduction in migration due morphological changes resulting in reduction of uropod formation ( |
| Scribble | ||||
| Scribble | ||||
| • | Loss ( | • | Knockdown (thymocyte): defects in cell–cell clustering and maturation ( | |
| • | Loss: (T cells): altered pERK signaling in T cells but responses to influenza infection are intact. (B cells): delayed B cell proliferation, but T dependant and T independent activation are normal ( | |||
| Dlg-1 | • | Mutation ( | • | Overexpression (T cells): attenuates basal and Vav1-induced NFAT reporter activation ( |
| Disks large | ||||
| Dlg 1–4 | • | Knockdown (T cells): enhances both CD3- and superantigen-mediated NFAT activation ( | ||
| • | Loss (thymocytes and T cells): normal T cell development ( | |||
| Lgl-1 | • | Mutation ( | • | Loss (HSC): increase in HSC numbers, cycling, increased HSC repopulation capacity and competitive advantage after transplantation ( |
| Lethal Giant Larvae | ||||
| Lgl1, Lgl2 | • | Loss (mammals): neural progenitor cells fail differentiation, fail to exit cell cycle, then over proliferate and result in neural ectodermal tumors. Mislocalization of Numb in the neuroectoderm of the tumors ( | ||
Homologs:
Figure 4Outstanding questions for ACD.