Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
Background: In the genesis of many tissues, a phase of cell proliferation is followed by cell cycle exit and terminal
differentiation. The latter two processes overlap: genes involved in the cessation of growth may also be important in triggering
differentiation. Though conceptually distinct, they are often causally related and functional interactions between the cell cycle
machinery and cell fate control networks are fundamental to coordinate growth and differentiation. A switch from
proliferation to differentiation may also be important in the life cycle of single-celled organisms, and genes which arose as
regulators of microbial differentiation may be conserved in higher organisms. Studies in microorganisms may thus contribute
to understanding the molecular links between cell cycle machinery and the determination of cell fate choice networks.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Here we show that in the amoebozoan D. discoideum, an ortholog of the metazoan
antiproliferative gene btg controls cell fate, and that this function is dependent on the presence of a second tumor
suppressor ortholog, the retinoblastoma-like gene product. Specifically, we find that btg-overexpressing cells preferentially
adopt a stalk cell (and, more particularly, an Anterior-Like Cell) fate. No btg-dependent preference for ALC fate is observed in
cells in which the retinoblastoma-like gene has been genetically inactivated. Dictyostelium btg is the only example of nonmetazoan
member of the BTG family characterized so far, suggesting that a genetic interaction between btg and Rb
predated the divergence between dictyostelids and metazoa.
Conclusions/Significance: While the requirement for retinoblastoma function for BTG antiproliferative activity in metazoans
is known, an interaction of these genes in the control of cell fate has not been previously documented. Involvement of a
single pathway in the control of mutually exclusive processes may have relevant implication in the evolution of
multicellularity.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Elenco autori:
CONTE D; MACWILLIAMS H; CECCARELLI A
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