| Literature DB >> 29693007 |
Helena E Richardson1, Marta Portela2.
Abstract
The development of human metastatic cancer is a multistep process, involving the acquisition of several genetic mutations, tumour heterogeneity, and interactions with the surrounding microenvironment. Due to the complexity of cancer development in mammals, simpler model organisms, such as the vinegar fly, Drosophila melanogaster, are being utilized to provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms involved. In this review, we highlight recent advances in modelling tumorigenesis using the Drosophila model, focusing on the cooperation of oncogenes or tumour suppressors, and the interaction of mutant cells with the surrounding tissue in epithelial tumour initiation and progression.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29693007 PMCID: PMC5859872 DOI: 10.1155/2018/4258387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Cell competition mechanisms. The three main types of cell competition are shown. Mutant cells are in pink, wild-type cells are in blue, hemocytes are in grey, and the basement membrane (basal lamina) is in purple. (a) Classical cell competition: within an epithelium, cells with reduced levels of dMyc, ribosomal subunits mutants (minutes), Jak-Stat or Wg signalling, or high levels of Hippo signalling (losers) are eliminated by apoptosis, induced by the surrounding wild-type cells (winners). The loser cells express on their cell surface the Flower-Lose (FweLose) isoform (red dots), which marks them for elimination when in contact with the surrounding wild-type cells that express the Flower-Ubi (FweUbi) isoform (green dots). Additionally, signalling via the Spätzle ligand and Toll-Like Receptors (TLRs) in the loser cells triggers cell death via upregulation of cell death inducers, Rpr or Hid. Cells with upregulated Hippo signalling (or yki mutants) exhibit decreased dMyc levels, but cells with decreased ribosomal function, Jak-Stat, or Wg signalling undergo dMyc-independent cell competition. (b) Supercompetition: cells with high levels of dMyc, Jak-Stat, increased Wg signalling, or decreased Hippo signalling show “supercompetitor” behaviour and induce apoptosis in neighbouring wild-type cells. This occurs via the Flower-code or via Spätzle-TLR signalling in the loser cells. (c) Cell polarity mutant cell competition: cell polarity-impaired mutant cells are recognized by their epithelial neighbours or hemocytes (grey) and the TNFR-JNK signalling ligand, Egr (TNF), which is secreted by the wild-type epithelial cells or hemocytes. Mutant cells are removed by JNK-dependent and caspase-dependent apoptosis. JNK activation in neighbouring wild-type cells together with PVR, ELMO, and Mbc signalling is required in the wild-type cells for the removal of the dying cells. Hemocytes play the predominant role in engulfment and removal of the dead cells. The interaction of PTP10D in the mutant cell with SAS in the wild-type cell is important for “loser” cell fate of the polarity-impaired mutant cell. The Slit-Robo-Ena signalling pathway plays an important role in basal extrusion of the mutant cell, where the hemocytes are localized.
Figure 2Cooperative interactions between the tumour and surrounding cells in tumorigenesis. Interactions between cells are shown that result in either the death of the mutant cell or cell survival, proliferation, and neoplastic transformation. Mutant cells are in pink, wild-type cells are in blue, hemocytes are in grey, myoblasts (mesenchymal cells) are in green, a fat body adipocyte is in yellow, and the basement membrane (basal lamina) is in purple. (a) dEMAP secretion-hemocyte attraction: JNK signalling in a cell polarity-impaired loser cell transcriptionally upregulates MMP1, which acts to cleave secreted dTyrRS to form dEMAP and dminiTyr. dEMAP attracts hemocytes to the loser cell by upregulating PI3K signalling in the hemocytes, which is required for chemotaxis and possibly engulfment of the loser cell. (b) Tumour hot-spots: neoplastic tumour-suppressor mutants (nTSGs) induce tumours more preferably, in regions where there is a stiff basal lamina and there are developmentally high levels of the Upd (IL-6) ligand to elevate Jak-Stat signalling, which promotes cell survival and proliferation of the tumour cells. (c) ROS-hemocytes-JNK: in scrib mutant Ras-expressing tumour cells, a feedback loop between the hemocytes and the mutant cells promotes tumorigenesis. In the mutant cells, Ras signalling and caspase activation leads to ROS production that is released from the cells and promotes hemocytes to produce Egr (TNF). Egr signals via the TNFR-JNK pathway in the mutant cell leading to the upregulation of caspase activity, and some apoptosis, which is required for tumour overgrowth and invasion. Due to the disruption of the peripodial epithelium in large scrib mutant Ras-expressing tumours, hemocytes most likely interact with the tumour on both apical and basal sides. (d) Induction of autophagy in surrounding wild-type cells: scrib mutant Ras-expressing tumour cells are metabolically stressed, which leads to ROS production. Egr-JNK signalling leads to the transcriptional upregulation of Upd, ligands for the Dome-Jak-Stat signalling pathway, which is elevated in the mutant cells. Jak-Stat signalling and ROS production are required for the induction of autophagy in the surrounding wild-type cells, and also at distant sites, such as the fat body, muscle, and gut (not shown), which facilitates tumour growth and neoplastic transformation, possibly through supplying amino acids, glucose, and other nutrients to the tumour cells. (e) Interactions with myoblasts: in EGFR-overexpressing psq-knockdown tumours cooperative interactions are observed between the tumour cells and the surrounding myoblasts (mesenchymal cells). EGFR induces Wg and Dpp expression, and psq knockdown leads to increased levels of the extracellular matrix protein, Perlecan (Pcn). Wg acts to promote proliferation of the tumour cells, whilst Dpp, facilitated by Pcn in the basal lamina, stimulates proliferation of the myoblast cells. In turn, the myoblast cells provide unidentified growth factors that drive proliferation and neoplastic transformation of the tumour cells. Myoblasts also supply Egr (not shown), which would be expected to activate the TNFR-JNK signalling pathway in the tumour cells. (f) Interactions with the fat body: polarity-impaired tumours through Egr-JNK signalling upregulate PVF1, a ligand for the PVR receptor on hemocytes, which promotes hemocyte proliferation. Hemocytes, in turn, supply Egr to the tumour cells, and the Toll Receptor ligand, Spätzle, to the fat body, which induces innate immune system signalling in the fat body. These interactions are required to induce apoptosis of tumour cells.
Cooperating genes in Drosophila tumorigenesis.
| Cell-autonomous cooperative tumorigenesis | ||
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| 1st mutation/mechanism | 2nd mutation/mechanism | Phenotype/references |
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| Neoplastic overgrowth in whole tissue context and cell polarity loss and apoptosis in clonal context (reviewed in [ | |
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| Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| Inhibition of JNK signalling | Neoplastic tumour overgrowth in eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| Neoplastic tumours in the larval wing epithelium [ |
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| Invasive neoplastic tumours in the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| Abrupt (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours in the eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissues [ |
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| Taiman (Ecdysone coactivator) | Invasive neoplastic tumours in the eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissues [ |
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| Slit-Robo2-Ena loss of function | Overgrown tumours in the eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ |
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| Slit-Robo overexpression | Excessive extrusion and luminal tumour overgrowth in larval eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ |
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| Inhibition of JNK signalling | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval/pupal eye neural-epithelium [ |
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| Myc overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval wing epithelium [ |
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| Hippo pathway impairment | Neoplastic tumours of the larval wing epithelium [ |
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| Neoplastic tumours of the larval wing epithelium [ |
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| Enhanced neoplastic tumours of the antennal epithelium [ |
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| Eye-antennal and wing tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| Par-1 overexpression |
| Hyperplastic eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| Activation of Actin cytoskeletal regulators | RasV12 (Raf gain-of-function) overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| RhoGEF2 overexpression | Abrupt (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelial tissue [ |
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| Src64B overexpression | Blocking JNK | Eye-antennal epithelial tissue overgrowth [ |
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| RasV12 overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ |
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| Src42A or Src64B overexpression | Notchintra (Act) overexpression | Neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal and wing epithelium [ |
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| Src64B overexpression | Abrupt overexpression | Neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelial tissue [ |
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| Troponin I overexpression |
| Tumour overgrowth or neoplastic tumour overgrowth in wing epithelial tissue [ |
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| Eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| TNF-JNK signalling | Invasive neoplastic tumours in the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Immune signalling and activation of JNK | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the adult hindgut epithelium [ | |
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| Ben/dUev1a E2 ubiquitin ligase overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours in the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| PP6 phosphatase (FMT, PpV) knock down | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Infection/inflammation | Hindgut epithelial tumour invasion [ | |
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| Impaired Hippo pathway signalling | Eye-antennal and wing tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| Lysosomal protein loss of function— | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Autophagy loss of function—e.g., | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Chromosome remodelling complex mutation | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye-antennal epithelium [ | |
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| Chinmo (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Overgrown tumours in the eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ | |
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| Fruitless (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Overgrown tumours in the eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ | |
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| Larval-Pupal tracheal epithelial tissue invasive tumours [ | |
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| Adult midgut epithelial tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| Adult hindgut epithelial tissue invasive tumours [ | |
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| Glial cell overgrowth and invasion [ | |
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| Eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| Eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissue overgrowth [ | |
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| Invasive overgrowth of the larval wing epithelium [ | |
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| Invasive overgrowth of the larval eye-antennal and wing epithelium [ | |
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| Invasive overgrowth of the larval wing epithelium [ | |
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| PI3K pathway activation | Glia cell invasive brain tumours and eye neural-epithelium tumours [ | |
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| Eye-antennal and wing tissue overgrowth (reviewed by [ | |
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| Notchintra (Act) overexpression | Mef2 overexpression | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye neural-epithelium [ |
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| Notchintra (Act) overexpression | Chinmo (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Overgrown tumours in the eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ |
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| Notchintra (Act) overexpression | Fruitless (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) overexpression | Overgrown tumours in the eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Overexpression of transcription factors Psq/Lola ( | Invasive tumours larval/pupal eye neural-epithelium, which are capable of differentiation to express ELAV [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Overexpression of Akt or PI3K (Dp110) | Invasive tumours larval/pupal eye neural-epithelium, which are capable of differentiation (ELAV expression) [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Overexpression of | Eye-antennal disc overgrowth and invasive cells cable of differentiation [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Overexpression of | Invasive tumours larval/pupal eye neural-epithelium, which are capable differentiation to express ELAV [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Knockdown of | Invasive tumours larval/pupal eye neural-epithelium, which are capable differentiation to express ELAV [ |
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| Delta overexpression | Knockdown of | Invasive tumours in larval/pupal eye-antennal epithelium, which are capable differentiation to express ELAV [ |
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| Increased tissue growth (reviewed by [ | |
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| BAP (Brahma) complex knockdown ( | Neoplastic tumour overgrowth in larval wing epithelial tissue [ | |
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| Taiman (Ecdysone Receptor coactivator) overexpression | Hyperplastic tumour overgrowth in larval wing epithelial tissue [ | |
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| Inhibition of JNK signalling | Invasive, but differentiated, tumours in larval/pupal eye-antennal epithelial tissues [ |
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| Invasive tumours in larval eye-antennal epithelial tissue [ |
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| Neoplastic overgrowth of wing epithelial cells [ |
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| Ionizing irradiation and | Overgrowth and cell delamination/migration in the wing epithelial tissue [ |
Figure 3Non-cell-autonomous overgrowth. Examples of different types of non-cell-autonomous overgrowth. Mutant cells are in pink, wild-type cells are in blue, hemocytes are in grey, and the basement membrane (basal lamina) is in purple. (a) Cell polarity or endocytosis mutant cells are induced by JNK signalling to undergo cell death and induce non-cell-autonomous overgrowth of the surrounding wild-type cells. In vps25 or tsg101 (ept) endocytic mutants, which also show apicobasal cell polarity defects, ectopic activation of Notch signalling leads to the expression and secretion of the Dome-Jak-Stat pathway ligand, Upd, which promotes non-cell-autonomous proliferation and overgrowth of surrounding tissue. In scrib mutant cells, elevated JNK signalling, and impaired Hippo signalling, leads to transcriptional upregulation of Upd, which activates Dom-Jak-Stat signalling in the surrounding wild-type cells, thereby inducing their proliferation. (b) Undead cells, where apoptosis is initiated, but effector caspase activity is blocked, emit morphogens (such as Wg, Dpp, and Hh) that promote proliferation of their wild-type epithelial neighbours, thereby leading to non-cell-autonomous overgrowth. (c) Mitochondrial mutants expressing Ras lead to non-cell-autonomous overgrowth. The mitochondrial impairment results in the production of ROS, which induces JNK activation, which, in turn, results in Hippo pathway impairment, leading to expression of the Yki targets, Upd and Wg. Upd elevates Jak/Stat signalling and Wg induces Wg pathway signalling in the surrounding wild-type cells to promote their overgrowth.
Tumour-wild-type tissue and intertumoural interactions.
| Non-cell autonomous overgrowth/tumorigenesis | ||
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| 1st mutation/mechanism | 2nd mutation/mechanism | Phenotype/references |
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| p35 expression (blocks effector caspase activity) generates “undead cells” | Eye-antennal or wing epithelial tissue non-cell autonomous overgrowth [ |
| Initiator caspase (Dronc) activation | Dependent on ROS production, JNK activation, Dpp, Wg upregulation/secretion | |
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| Eye-antennal and wing epithelial tissue non-cell autonomous overgrowth [ |
| Hh pathway upregulation | Results in upregulation of Dpp secretion from mutant cells and elevated Dpp signalling and Yki activity in the | |
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| Strong activation of JNK ( | Non-cell autonomous overgrowth and morphology changes of eye-antennal epithelial tissue [ |
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| Abrupt (BTB-POZ Zn finger transcription factor) | Eye-antennal epithelial tissue non-cell autonomous overgrowth [ |
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| Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye neural-epithelium [ |
| Activation of JNK and Upd upregulation and Jak-Stat signalling | ||
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| Mitochondrial dysfunction in | Invasive neoplastic tumours of the larval eye neural-epithelium [ | |
| Results in ROS production, upregulation of JNK, deregulation of Hippo, secretion of Wg and Upd | ||
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| Cell death blockage ( | Invasive tumours in the wing epithelium [ |
| Induced by spindle assembly or spindle-assembly checkpoint mutants leading to cell delamination ( | Results in Metabolic stress, ROS induced-JNK activation in epithelial cells promoting cell delamination | |
| Results in Secretion of Wg, Upd from delaminated cells, promoting the proliferation of epithelial tumour cells | ||
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| Cell death blockage ( | Invasive tumours in the eye-antennal or wing epithelium [ |
| Due to mutants/knockdown of genes involved in spindle alignment ( |
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| Results in Rho1-Wnd induced JNK activation in epithelial cells promoting cell delamination | ||
| Results in secretion of Wg, Upd from delaminated cells, promoting the proliferation of epithelial tumour cells | ||
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| p35 overexpression or deletion of | Invasive tumours in the wing epithelium [ |
| Knockdown of | Results in ROS induced-JNK activation | |
| Results in MMP1 expression in delaminating cells | ||
Figure 4Different modes of cooperative tumorigenesis. Examples of different modes of cooperative tumorigenesis. Mutant cells are in pink, Ras-expressing cells are in green, wild-type cells are in blue, delaminated mutant cells are in dark pink, and the basement membrane (basal lamina) is in purple. (a) Intraclonal cooperation with cell polarity mutants and Ras: JNK activation in the tumour cells cooperates with oncogenic Ras signalling to promote tumour overgrowth and invasion. (b) Interclonal cooperation with cell polarity mutants and Ras: JNK signalling and Hippo pathway impairment in the scrib mutant cells lead to the production of Upd, which induces Dome-Jak-Stat signalling in the surrounding Ras-expressing cells, thereby inducing their overgrowth and invasion. (c) Interclonal cooperation with a mitochondrial mutant overexpressing Ras and Ras-expressing surrounding cells: Upd and Wg are produced by the mitochondrial mutant Ras-expressing surrounding cells (see Figure 3(c)), which induce upregulation of Dome-Jak-Stat and Wg signalling, respectively, in the Ras cells to induce their neoplastic overgrowth and invasion. (d) Delaminating cells cooperation: in tumours generated by chromosome instability (CIN) mutants (rod, bub3, and asp) or mutants that effect spindle orientation (scrib, dlg, and mud), some cells delaminate, resulting in two populations of cells, which in the case of spindle orientation mutants are not genetically different. The delaminated cell population produces the Wg and Upd ligands to upregulate Wg and Dome-Jak-Stat pathways, respectively, in the nondelaminated cells, thereby inducing their proliferation.