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ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit

During development, multicellular organisms undergo stereotypical patterns of tissue growth in space and time. How developmental growth is orchestrated remains unclear, largely due to the difficulty of observing and quantitating this process in a living organism. Drosophila histoblast nests are smal...

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Autores principales: Davis, John Robert, Ainslie, Anna P., Williamson, John J., Ferreira, Ana, Torres-Sánchez, Alejandro, Hoppe, Andreas, Mangione, Federica, Smith, Matthew B., Martin-Blanco, Enrique, Salbreux, Guillaume, Tapon, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cell Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8967408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35167804
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.01.045
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author Davis, John Robert
Ainslie, Anna P.
Williamson, John J.
Ferreira, Ana
Torres-Sánchez, Alejandro
Hoppe, Andreas
Mangione, Federica
Smith, Matthew B.
Martin-Blanco, Enrique
Salbreux, Guillaume
Tapon, Nicolas
author_facet Davis, John Robert
Ainslie, Anna P.
Williamson, John J.
Ferreira, Ana
Torres-Sánchez, Alejandro
Hoppe, Andreas
Mangione, Federica
Smith, Matthew B.
Martin-Blanco, Enrique
Salbreux, Guillaume
Tapon, Nicolas
author_sort Davis, John Robert
collection PubMed
description During development, multicellular organisms undergo stereotypical patterns of tissue growth in space and time. How developmental growth is orchestrated remains unclear, largely due to the difficulty of observing and quantitating this process in a living organism. Drosophila histoblast nests are small clusters of progenitor epithelial cells that undergo extensive growth to give rise to the adult abdominal epidermis and are amenable to live imaging. Our quantitative analysis of histoblast proliferation and tissue mechanics reveals that tissue growth is driven by cell divisions initiated through basal extracellular matrix degradation by matrix metalloproteases secreted by the neighboring larval epidermal cells. Laser ablations and computational simulations show that tissue mechanical tension does not decrease as the histoblasts fill the abdominal epidermal surface. During tissue growth, the histoblasts display oscillatory cell division rates until growth termination occurs through the rapid emergence of G0/G1 arrested cells, rather than a gradual increase in cell-cycle time as observed in other systems such as the Drosophila wing and mouse postnatal epidermis. Different developing tissues can therefore achieve their final size using distinct growth termination strategies. Thus, adult abdominal epidermal development is characterized by changes in the tissue microenvironment and a rapid exit from the cell cycle.
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spelling pubmed-89674082022-05-03 ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit Davis, John Robert Ainslie, Anna P. Williamson, John J. Ferreira, Ana Torres-Sánchez, Alejandro Hoppe, Andreas Mangione, Federica Smith, Matthew B. Martin-Blanco, Enrique Salbreux, Guillaume Tapon, Nicolas Curr Biol Article During development, multicellular organisms undergo stereotypical patterns of tissue growth in space and time. How developmental growth is orchestrated remains unclear, largely due to the difficulty of observing and quantitating this process in a living organism. Drosophila histoblast nests are small clusters of progenitor epithelial cells that undergo extensive growth to give rise to the adult abdominal epidermis and are amenable to live imaging. Our quantitative analysis of histoblast proliferation and tissue mechanics reveals that tissue growth is driven by cell divisions initiated through basal extracellular matrix degradation by matrix metalloproteases secreted by the neighboring larval epidermal cells. Laser ablations and computational simulations show that tissue mechanical tension does not decrease as the histoblasts fill the abdominal epidermal surface. During tissue growth, the histoblasts display oscillatory cell division rates until growth termination occurs through the rapid emergence of G0/G1 arrested cells, rather than a gradual increase in cell-cycle time as observed in other systems such as the Drosophila wing and mouse postnatal epidermis. Different developing tissues can therefore achieve their final size using distinct growth termination strategies. Thus, adult abdominal epidermal development is characterized by changes in the tissue microenvironment and a rapid exit from the cell cycle. Cell Press 2022-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8967408/ /pubmed/35167804 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.01.045 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Davis, John Robert
Ainslie, Anna P.
Williamson, John J.
Ferreira, Ana
Torres-Sánchez, Alejandro
Hoppe, Andreas
Mangione, Federica
Smith, Matthew B.
Martin-Blanco, Enrique
Salbreux, Guillaume
Tapon, Nicolas
ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title_full ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title_fullStr ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title_full_unstemmed ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title_short ECM degradation in the Drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
title_sort ecm degradation in the drosophila abdominal epidermis initiates tissue growth that ceases with rapid cell-cycle exit
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8967408/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35167804
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2022.01.045
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