| Literature DB >> 27997825 |
John Vaughen1, Tatsushi Igaki2.
Abstract
Cells dynamically interact throughout animal development to coordinate growth and deter disease. For example, cell-cell competition weeds out aberrant cells to enforce homeostasis. In Drosophila, tumorigenic cells mutant for the cell polarity gene scribble (scrib) are actively eliminated from epithelia when surrounded by wild-type cells. While scrib cell elimination depends critically on JNK signaling, JNK-dependent cell death cannot sufficiently explain scrib cell extirpation. Thus, how JNK executed cell elimination remained elusive. Here, we show that repulsive Slit-Robo2-Ena signaling exerts an extrusive force downstream of JNK to eliminate scrib cells from epithelia by disrupting E-cadherin. While loss of Slit-Robo2-Ena in scrib cells potentiates scrib tumor formation within the epithelium, Robo2-Ena hyperactivation surprisingly triggers luminal scrib tumor growth following excess extrusion. This extrusive signaling is amplified by a positive feedback loop between Slit-Robo2-Ena and JNK. Our observations provide a potential causal mechanism for Slit-Robo dysregulation in numerous human cancers.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila; Ena/VASP; JNK; Slit-Robo; cell competition; cell extrusion; scrib; tumor suppression
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27997825 PMCID: PMC6207184 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2016.11.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270