Department of Biology, University of Virginia, P.O. Box 400328, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4328, USA
Present address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: crc2s{at}virginia.edu)
Accepted 12 April 2002
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Oogenesis, daughterless, bHLH, E protein, Drosophila melanogaster
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INTRODUCTION |
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Several lines of evidence suggest that a general role of da is to regulate proliferation and cell cycle progression. In da mutant embryos transcription of several cell cycle genes is reduced or eliminated in the peripheral nervous system precursors (Hassan and Vaessin, 1997). In larval eye discs, da mutant clones in the posterior region of the morphogenetic furrow do not accumulate cyclin B, indicating that the cell cycle is blocked in G1 (Brown et al., 1996
). In the larval optic lobes overexpression of the Class 2 HLH asense (ase), a Da binding partner (Jarman et al., 1993
), results in reduced mitotic activity, while loss of function causes an increase in mitotic activity (Wallace et al., 2000
). Overexpression of da in embryonic mesodermal tissue culture cells drives nautilus-dependent cell cycle arrest and concomitant differentiation into muscle (Wei et al., 2000
). Finally, numerous observations that the Da-related E proteins in mammals affect cell proliferation and/or cell cycle progression (Pagliuca et al., 2000
; Peverali et al., 1994
; Zhao et al., 2001
) suggest that cell cycle control may be an inherent functional activity of this evolutionarily conserved protein family, of which Da is the only member in Drosophila.
One morphogenetic process for which da function is critical is ovarian follicle formation, which requires the coordinated control of the proliferation and differentiation of both germline and somatic cells. Stem cells for both the germline and soma reside in the germarium, at the anterior end of each ovariole of the ovary (see Fig. 1A). At the anterior of the germarium, overlying somatic cells create a niche to maintain the germline stem cells (Spradling et al., 2001; Xie and Spradling, 2000
). One of the two germline stem cells undergoes an asymmetric division to produce another stem cell and a cystoblast. The cystoblast undergoes four rounds of mitotic division with incomplete cytokinesis to produce a germline cyst, containing one oocyte and fifteen interconnected nurse cells, within region 2a of the germarium. Morphologically unidentifiable somatic stem cells reside in region 2 of the germarium and give rise to mesenchymal somatic cells that surround each germline cyst and compress it into the characteristic lens shape of region 2b of the germarium. As the somatic cells continue to envelop the cyst, they differentiate into an epithelial monolayer to form a follicle. Each follicle is separated from the previously (and subsequently) formed follicle by additional somatic cells, which form a stalk. In da loss-of-function mutants, phenotypes include absence of interfollicular stalks, compound follicles in which two cysts are incompletely separated by somatic cells, bicyst follicles in which two cysts are neatly packaged inside an epithelial monolayer, and more extreme compound follicles in which multiple cysts are improperly packaged and can include the contents of an entire ovariole (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994
). The consequence of all of these defects is loss of egg production, and this sterility can be traced conceptually back to defects in the morphogenetic sequence that leads to follicle formation in the germarium.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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ectopic hh expression
Flies carrying one copy of the phsp70-hh+ transgene received pulses of 1 hour at 37°C twice daily for 5-6 days; the regime began 24-48 hours after eclosion.
Staining
Ovaries were fixed and DAPI stained as previously described (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994). Enhancer trap lines were stained using X-gal substrate or immunostained using anti-ß-galactosidase (1:10,000; Cappel) as previously described (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994
). Monoclonal mouse anti-FasIII 2D5 (1:10) (Patel et al., 1987
), monoclonal mouse anti-Hts 1B1 (1:10, Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank) (Zaccai and Lipshitz, 1996
) and polyclonal rabbit anti-Vasa (1:1000) (Styhler et al., 1998
) were detected using FITC- or TRITC-conjugated secondary antibodies (1:300, Jackson Immunoresearch).
Acridine Orange
Acridine Orange is a vital stain for apoptotic nuclei, which are visible with a filter for green fluoresence, and for lysosomes that associate with fragmenting nuclei, which are visible with a filter for red fluorescence (Mpoke and Wolfe, 1997). Ovaries were dissected in Shields and Sang M3 insect medium (Sigma), stained for 15 minutes in Acridine Orange (5 µg/ml in M3 medium), and washed for 15 minutes in M3 medium. Similar results were obtained using PBS; germarium staining was dose- and site-dependent, with considerably lower intensity in the germarium compared to apoptotic stage 13 nurse cells or occasional stage 8 apoptotic follicles in which the follicle maturation checkpoint had been activated. A dramatic enhancement of the germarial staining was observed when samples were dissected in PBS, stained with Acridine Orange (5 µg/ml) or Nile Blue A (100 µg/ml) in hypotonic 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2, and washed 15 minutes in PBS [based on Abrams et al. (Abrams et al., 1993
)]. For our standard Acridine Orange staining protocol (Fig. 5D and supplemental data: http://dev.biologists.org/supplemental/), ovaries were dissected from flies reared on molasses-cornmeal-yeast medium at 25°C, placed in Acridine Orange (5 µg/ml in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.2) for 1-2 minutes, transferred to PBS on a slide and immediately scored.
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Image processing
All images were either captured on film or with a MagnaFire Camera (Optronics) on a Zeiss (Axiophot/Axioskop) microscope. Captured images were processed and annotated in Adobe Photoshop. Images depict FITC as green and TRITC as magenta (overlap white) to make the images color-blind-accessible.
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RESULTS |
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At eclosion every da ovariole was already defective (Fig. 1C-E, compare to 1B). Normal follicles were generally not observed, except in an occasional ovariole that contained at most a single properly formed follicle. By examining ovaries at eclosion and noting the presence of the basal stalk on each ovariole, we were able to ensure that we scored the phenotype of every germline cyst produced within an ovariole. Each follicle attached to a basal stalk contained a single germline cyst, the first generated in that ovariole. In 90% of the ovarioles, the second and third germline cysts produced were likewise individualized into follicles; however, follicles in these ovarioles were never separated by interfollicular stalks (Fig. 1C,D). Follicles containing the first germline cyst produced were generally complete, namely the cyst was surrounded by a continuous epithelium, as indicated by the presence of two discrete epithelial layers between the first and second cysts. Such a double epithelial layer was less commonly observed between the second and third cysts, which instead appeared to share a disorganized layer of somatic cells that more closely resembled undifferentiated mesenchymal cells than differentiated epithelial cells. Similarly appearing cells also separated the next youngest cysts in the ovariole, which would correspond to the germarium/vitellarium junction in wild type. In the remaining 10% of the ovarioles, the first germline cyst was contained in a properly formed follicle that was separated from the next youngest cyst and its follicular epithelium by an interfollicular stalk: these were the only completely normal follicles observed (Fig. 1E). Invariably, in such ovarioles, the second and third cysts were contained within a single continuous epithelium. These bicyst follicles appeared to have arisen because there were insufficient somatic cells to surround the second germline cyst. This suggests that the number of available somatic cells located between the first and second cysts was sufficient to contribute to an interfollicular stalk in this position only at the expense of the epithelium of the second cyst. Finally, the frequency of completely normal follicles is consistent with the fecundity of dalyh females, each of which can lay up to 5 eggs before completely ceasing oviposition; thus, follicles not separated by stalks never give rise to functional eggs.
In maturing females, although the da mutant phenotype is so severe that follicular structure is almost completely disrupted (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994; Smith and Cronmiller, 2001
), we found that the overall organization of the germarium appeared to be undisturbed. Based on the appearance of spectrosomes, fusomes and germline cysts, all four regions of the germarium generally could be distinguished in dalyh mutants, and their arrangement was indistinguishable from wild type (Fig. 1F,G). In dalyh germaria, however, there was an increased distance between regions 1 and 2b relative to wild type, suggesting the presence of an increased number of germline cysts in region 2a (Fig. 1G). Also, in region 3 of the germarium, where somatic cells normally differentiate into an epithelial monolayer to envelop each germline cyst, there was no evidence of constriction by somatic cells in the posterior region to complete follicle individualization. This could be due to insufficient somatic cells to form the necessary interfollicular stalk, consistent with our observations of ovaries from newly eclosed females. However, even in germaria that were connected to multicyst follicles, where the somatic cell number was greater than in wild type (arrow, Fig. 1G), stalks still failed to form. Thus, the absence of a distinct junction between the germarium and vitellarium in da mutant ovaries results not only from defective cell number but also from aberrant cell behavior. In the extreme, as mutant defects accumulated with age, even previously organized regions of the germarium were lost, as regions 2b and 3 were no longer distinguishable (Fig. 1H).
da regulates differentiation
Because aberrant somatic cell behavior appeared to contribute to the da mutant phenotype, we examined the expression of cell markers to determine whether specific cell types were affected. For interfollicular stalk cells, we examined two markers, B1-93F (Fig. 2A) and l(3)01344 (Ruohola et al., 1991; Forbes et al., 1996a
). Even though stalks were not evident in da mutant ovaries, cells expressing stalk cell markers were still present. B1-93F-expressing cells formed either small clumps on the edge of a junction of two follicles that were not separated by a stalk (data not shown) or small clusters or rope-like strings of cells within the epithelium in conjunction with more extreme phenotypes (Fig. 2B,C). Expression of the stalk cell marker was drastically reduced in both the strong hypomorphic and null mutant genotypes, such that staining was consistently detectable only with two copies of the enhancer trap reporter. Identical observations were made with l(3)01344 (data not shown). So, da may be a transcriptional regulator of the genes identified by both of these enhancer traps; however, this regulation would have to be cell specific, since enhancer trap expression in the terminal filament was not affected (Fig. 2C). Alternatively, da may be required for complete differentiation of stalk cells, resulting in an indirect effect upon enhancer trap expression, which is only one characteristic of the differentiated state.
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Effects of increased Da levels
The consequences of increased da dose on follicle formation also demonstrated a role for da in somatic cell proliferation. Ovaries from flies that carry an extra copy of da+ in a tandem duplication (Dp20) have normal ovariole morphology, but the interfollicular stalks are longer (Fig. 3B, compare with 3A) (Smith and Cronmiller, 2001). In flies that carried an extra copy of da+ in a chromosomal transposition (DpB231), in addition to longer stalks we observed an increased number of previtellogenic follicles (Fig. 3C-E). The average number of stage 2-7 follicles per ovariole was significantly higher in DpB231 ovaries relative to wild type: 5.4±0.07 (s.e.m.) versus 4.8±0.04 (P<0.01, t-test). Thus, the rate of follicle production in DpB231 was higher than in wild type. The increases in stalk length and rate of follicle formation indicate that excess da+ leads not only to increased somatic cell proliferation, but also to either increased germline cyst production or reduced germline cyst loss at the region 2a/2b checkpoint. The additional ovarian phenotype of DpB231 can be accounted for by the higher level of da+ function it provides relative to Dp20; this was corroborated by the strength of their genetic interactions with dalyh (data not shown).
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da loss-of-function mutants suppress normal germline apoptosis in the germarium
In da loss-of-function mutants we found the converse relationship between da function and germline viability, namely, reduced da protected germline cysts from degradation. Although cyst degradation has not been reported in wild-type germaria [except under nutrient-deprived conditions (Drummond-Barbosa and Spradling, 2001)], we observed apoptosing cysts in region 2a/2b of wild-type germaria (from flies reared on either of two nutrient-rich media) when we assayed cell death by two different methods, vital staining (Acridine Orange and Nile Blue) and TUNEL. Acridine Orange staining was detected with filters for green fluorescence, where apoptotic cells were visible as bright spots against diffuse background staining (Fig. 5A); however, staining was most dramatic with filters for red fluorescence, where the highest concentrations of Acridine Orange fluoresced with no general background staining (Fig. 5A'). Localized within region 2 of the germarium, the largest bright spots could often be correlated with blebs on the germarium surface that were visible under DIC or phase contrast (data not shown). At a low frequency, smaller punctate fluorescence was was observed as an outline of the germarium, apparently restricted to the space between the germarium and the overlying epithelial sheath; this distinct acellular background staining did not reflect apoptosis, since it was never observed following TUNEL. Because apoptosis in wild-type germaria was unexpected, we repeated the vital stain analyses numerous times, varying the dissection and staining solutions (phosphate buffer, PBS, M3 insect medium), and in spite of minor trial-to-trial variation, Acridine Orange fluorescence in region 2 of the germarium was always observed. Establishing a standard staining protocol, we quantified the frequency of apoptosis in wild-type germaria of typical laboratory strains (OregonR, CantonS, and the commonly used transformation host white1118) (Fig. 5D and supplemental data: http:// dev.biologists.org/supplemental/). Each strain had a high frequency of Acridine Orange staining in the germaria, yet the specific frequency varied with each genotype. Additionally, the frequency increased with age, e.g. in OregonR females the frequency of Acridine Orange-staining germaria increased to over 90% (supplemental and unpublished data). Evidence of apoptosis was even more dramatic from TUNEL assays, which were routinely more consistent than the vital staining methods and allowed costaining for Vasa and DNA (DAPI). TUNEL-positive cells were restricted to the region 2a/2b boundary, often transecting the germarium and indicating the apoptosis of the entire interconnected cyst (Fig. 5E,E'). As with Acridine Orange, TUNEL-positive cells often corresponded to blebs on the germarium surface (data not shown); the label also often coincided with either reduced DAPI intensity (Fig. 5E'') or bright punctate DAPI staining (Fig. 5F'). Colocalization of Vasa protein with TUNEL indicated that the apoptotic cells were germline in origin (Fig. 5F), and the level of Vasa in these degrading cells was markedly lower than in the neighboring viable cysts, reminiscent of the reduced Vasa seen in degrading cysts of da-overexpressing ovaries (Fig. 4F). In contrast to wild type, da loss-of-function mutant germaria rarely contained apoptotic cells, when assayed by either vital staining or TUNEL. Various mutant genotypes (dalyh, dalyh/Df(da) and da7/das22) consistently showed a drastic reduction or complete absence of Acridine Orange and Nile Blue staining in the germarium under various conditions (Fig. 5B-D and data not shown). Again using our standard Acridine Orange staining protocol, we quantified the frequency of apoptosis in germaria of da mutant females and their heterozygous siblings, thus controlling for genetic background effects. Both da7/das22 and dalyh ovaries showed a dramatic reduction in Acridine Orange staining relative to both the wild-type strains and the sibling controls (Fig. 5D). In da mutants, the effect of age on the frequency of Acridine Orange staining could not be assayed, since flies older than 2-4 days had extensive degradation within the ovarioles that precluded scoring in the germarium. In germaria of dalyh mutants of any age, TUNEL-positive cells were never seen. Thus, loss of da function reduces normally occurring apoptosis of germline cysts at the region 2a/2b boundary.
Genetic interactions between da and signal transduction pathways
Since many aspects of the da mutant phenotype detailed here have been described previously for mutants in several signal transduction pathways, we examined genetic interaction phenotypes to identify which specific pathway(s) include da+ function. This approach has already been used to identify a connection between da and the Notch (N) signaling pathway (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994), and we extended this by showing similar interactions between da and deltex (dx), Suppressor of deltex [Su(dx)], or Suppressor of Hairless [Su(H)] (Table 2). In addition to the N pathway, we also found interactions with another regulatory pathway that is similarly required for differentiation of specific somatic cell types, namely the Janus Kinase/Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway (Baksa et al., 2002
; McGregor et al., 2002
). Females doubly heterozygous for mutations in da and either hopscotch (encoding the Drosophila JAK) or Stat92E showed da-like ovarian defects (Table 2, Fig. 6A-C). These genetic interactions are consistent with a role for da in differentiation, but they could also result if da helps regulate somatic proliferation.
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Finally, we tested the hedgehog (hh) pathway for involvement with da, since this pathway has been shown to regulate somatic cell proliferation by acting as a stem cell factor. By conferring stem cell properties on multiple somatic cells, ectopic overexpression of hh leads to overproduction of somatic cells, resulting in long interfollicular stalks (Forbes et al., 1996a; Zhang and Kalderon, 2001
). We found that da+ was required for hh-induced somatic cell overproliferation. The phenotype produced by induced ectopic hh expression was partially suppressed when females were also heterozygous for a da null allele: interfollicular cell populations were notably smaller (compare Fig. 7A with 7B,C). Moreover, the complete elimination of da from the somatic ovary was epistatic to induced hh: the phenotype was indistinguishable from the da null phenotype alone (Fig. 7D). Apparently, the extra somatic stem cells induced by ectopic hh, or their own mitotic derivatives, required da+ to proliferate. Conversely, elevated da+ levels enhanced the hh-induced increase in interfollicular cells (Fig. 7E,F). In addition to causing surplus cells, the increased da+ dose also affected the behavior of those cells, resulting in the formation of branched stalks (Fig. 7F-H). Each stalk branch usually terminated with an apparently normal follicle, producing a novel lollipop structure (Fig. 7F-H). Presumably, formation of lollipops arose by interfollicular cell rearrangements, which only occurred after some critical mass of supernumerary cells was attained, since lollipops were observed only in the vitellarium at some distance from the germarium. Thus, elevated da conferred behavioral changes to the excess interfollicular somatic cells, causing them to carry out the convergence and extension process that is characteristic of normal stalk cells (Godt and Laski, 1995
).
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DISCUSSION |
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An expanded model for follicle formation
Integrating this information about da activities with several published models of early oogenesis leads to the following outline for the sequential steps required for the iterative production of follicles (Fig. 8). (1) Signaling by Hh protein from the terminal filament creates a somatic stem cell niche at the region 2a/2b boundary (Zhang and Kalderon, 2001). (2) Somatic stem cells produce undifferentiated mesenchymal cells that surround the germline cyst and compress it into the characteristic lens shape (King, 1970
). (3) EGFR-mediated signaling from the germline cyst provides a continuous proliferative signal to somatic cells (Goode et al., 1996
; Goode et al., 1992
). (4) A second germline-to-soma signal, Dl, induces the somatic cells, located between adjacent cysts in region 2b/3, to begin differentiating as polar cells (Lopez-Schier and St. Johnston, 2001
). (5) Other somatic cells, which contact only a single germline cyst, differentiate as cuboidal epithelial cells. (6) The differentiating polar cells signal to neighboring cells to refine polar cell number, recruit stalk cells and promote local somatic cell proliferation. (7) The stalk cells migrate between the polar cells associated with each cyst and converge and extend to form a single column of cells as they terminally differentiate. In this scheme, da function appears to contribute to steps 2, 3, 6 and 7.
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Although das role in the control of somatic proliferation is unknown, it probably involves regulation of cell cycle progression. Connections between EGFR signaling and cell cycle progression have already been established in the R2-R5 photoreceptor cells in the morphogenetic furrow of the eye, where EGFR signal transduction is required for G2/M progression, but signal inactivity is necessary for G1/S progression (Baker and Yu, 2001). Coincidentally, Da protein levels are high in those cells, and da function is required for their G1/S progression (Brown et al., 1996
). A similar connection between da and cell cycle control in the ovary is implicated by our observation that da exhibits genetic interaction phenotypes with both loss of function (rl) and persistently activated (rlSem) MAPK alleles. Loss of EGFR signaling would be expected to delay cell cycle progression at the G2/M transition, but persistent MAPKSem activity, being a poor substrate for the inactivating phosphatase (Karim and Rubin, 1999
), would delay the cell cycle at the G1/S transition. In either situation additionally reducing the da dose, which itself would slow G1/S progression, would lead to the mutant phenotype we observed in genetic interactions, and the higher frequency of defects with rlSem is consistent with both da and rlSem impacting on the same stage of the cell cycle.
There is probably no role for da in induction of polar cells or the differentiation of follicular epithelium (steps 4 and 5). It is clear from clonal analysis that both N and fringe (fng) are required in the soma for induction of polar cells in response to Dl signaling from the germline (Grammont and Irvine, 2001; Lopez-Schier and St. Johnston, 2001
). The N response is localized to a thin stripe of cells in region 2b of the germarium (Jordan et al., 2000
). This single layer of cells will eventually give rise to two sets of polar cells, one for the anterior pole of the older adjacent cyst and one for the posterior pole of the younger adjacent cyst. Because these cells are sandwiched between two germline cysts, their exposure to Dl should be higher (assuming uniform distribution of the protein) than the exposure to neighboring cells that contact only a single germline cyst. Thus, N-mediated polar cell induction occurs only between two germline cysts, where Dl signaling is highest. Since fng expression is also high in these cells, it is likely that fng sensitizes N to respond to Dl, as it does in imaginal discs (Grammont and Irvine, 2001
; Jordan et al., 2000
). In the absence of sufficiently high Dl levels, cells in contact with the germline contribute to the overlying epithelium of that cyst. No specific genes have been identified that affect the morphological differentiation of the follicular epithelium; however, N mutant clones in the epithelium fail to lose FasIII expression after entering the vitellarium and fail to switch from a mitotic cycle to an endocycle at stage 6, indicating that later aspects of differentiation of these epithelial cells are dependent upon low levels of Dl germline signaling (Deng et al., 2001
; Lopez-Schier and St. Johnston, 2001
). Initially, however, for undifferentiated mesenchymal cells to become epithelial, a different germline-to-soma signal may be involved. Alternatively, these cells may only require polarizing contact with the germline, mediated by cell adhesion molecules.
Complete polar cell differentiation (step 6) depends on da and is required for several non autonomous polar cell functions. The first function of differentiating polar cells is stalk cell recruitment. Clonal analysis of fng and N has shown that the function of these genes is required in the polar cells to form interfollicular stalks (Grammont and Irvine, 2001; Lopez-Schier and St. Johnston, 2001
). In fng clones in which no distinct stalk is visible, the stalk-specific enhancer trap B1-93F is expressed in a peripheral cluster of cells at the junction between two incompletely separated follicles (Grammont and Irvine, 2001
); we observed the same clusters in Nts1 mutant ovaries (data not shown). This arrangement would result if the differentiating polar cells normally recruit stalk cells from the periphery, where a population of undifferentiated somatic cells is not in contact with any germline cyst. Like N and fng, da interferes with recruitment of stalk cells from the periphery, since similar stalk cell clusters were often observed in hypomorphic mutant ovarioles. In da mutant ovaries with more extreme defects, the stalk cells were actually integrated within the follicular epithelium, suggesting that there were insufficient somatic cells to complete the epithelium. Thus, when there are sufficient somatic epthelial cells to cover the germline cyst completely (weak da phenotype), differentiating stalk cells never touch the germline; however, when there are not enough somatic cells (strong da phenotype), differentiating stalk cells consequently make contact with the germline and become incorporated into the epithelium. We propose that a second function of differentiating polar cells is the production of a booster proliferative signal to ensure sufficient somatic cells to form a stalk. A number of genetic manipulations [elevated da; ectopic Nintra, Dl, unpaired (upd) or hh; and clones of patched or of double mutant Protein kinaseA (PKA/Pka-C1) Suppressor of fused (Su(fu))] lead to overproduction of somatic cells within the germarium, and in every case the result is excess interfollicular cells (Forbes et al., 1996a
; Forbes et al., 1996b
; Larkin et al., 1996
; Larkin et al., 1999
; McGregor et al., 2002
; Zhang and Kalderon, 2000
). (To what extent these interfollicular cells organize into recognizable stalks likely reflects each genotypes impact on stalk cell differentiation.) These phenotypes implicate all of these genes in proliferation control: the N pathway (N, Dl), the JAK/STAT pathway (upd), and the hh pathway (hh, ptc, PKA, Su(fu)). A proliferative role for the N pathway is substantiated by reconsideration of the loss-of-function phenotypes (Nts1, fng), in which stalk cells are observed within the follicular epithelium (Grammont and Irvine, 2001
) (our unpublished data); the N pathway may be generally required for somatic proliferation, like da. However, for the JAK/STAT pathway, whose only known ligand is encoded by upd (Harrison et al., 1998
), expression of the ligand is restricted to the polar cells in the ovary (McGregor et al., 2002
). Although other studies have demonstrated roles for the JAK/STAT pathway that are limited to polar and stalk cell specification and/or differentiation during follicle formation (Baksa et al., 2002
; McGregor et al., 2002
), the effects of ectopic upd, together with the genetic interaction phenotypes between da and JAK/STAT pathway mutants, suggest that JAK/STAT is also a regulator of proliferation in the ovary, as it is elsewhere (Dearolf, 1999
). If so, this would require expression of upd in region 2b, earlier than previously detected (Silver and Montell, 2001
; McGregor et al., 2002
). Finally, complete polar cell differentiation includes refinement to two polar cells; a number of markers [FasIII (Ruohola et al., 1991
), A101 (Johnson et al., 1995
), fng (Jordan et al., 2000
), PZ80 (McGregor et al., 2002
)] show that variable numbers (4-8 between adjacent germline cysts) of polar cells form but always refine to 2 per pole by the time a follicle matures to stage 4. In a number of mutants, including da, excess polar cells often persist past stage 4 (McGregor et al., 2002
; Johnson et al., 1995
; Ruohola et al., 1991
), suggesting a failure in refinement.
The differentiation of stalk cells (step 7) also requires da. In weak da phenotypes where cells expressing stalk cell markers were seen in clusters physically isolated from the germline cyst by an epithelial layer, the stalk cells did not converge and extend to form a stalk, as wild-type stalk cells would. This failure to form stalks could result from defects in recruitment of stalk cells by polar cells (step 6), in stalk cell differentiation, or both. Consistent with a proactive role for da in stalk cell differentiation, genotypes with elevated da levels occasionally formed stalk-like structures at the expense of the follicular epithelium. Indeed, Da protein levels normally remain high in the stalk and polar cells, even after they have dropped in the follicular epithelium (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994). Additionally, stalk-like differentiation of the excess somatic cells generated by ectopic hh was da-dependent: reduced da resulted in more aggregation (i.e. less convergence and extension) and increased da resulted in more convergence and extension (i.e. less aggregation). In this context, the lollipop phenotype reflects the acquisition of a stalk-like characteristic by excess somatic cells; hh-induced somatic cells that rearrange in the vitellarium to form cables running along the sides of follicles, as shown by Forbes et al. (Forbes et al., 1996a
), converge and extend to form a lollipop, when da is increased. Relatively high Da levels appear to be required to drive convergence and extension in differentiating stalk cells. This da requirement may involve transcriptional activation of stalk-specific genes, since the expression of two stalk cell markers is reduced in strong da phenotypes. However, reduced marker expression could result indirectly from incorporation of stalk cells into the follicular epithelium, where stalk-specific gene expression may be repressed.
A checkpoint for germline cyst progression
Successful follicle formation requires the right balance of somatic cells per germline cyst, such that ratios that are too low activate germline apoptosis to abort cyst progression in the germarium; the function of this cyst progression checkpoint was first demonstrated in nutrient-deprived flies (Drummond-Barbosa and Spradling, 2001). The mechanism for assessing the soma-to-germline ratio is completely unknown; however, the relative balance of cells is evaluated as each 16-cell cyst enters region 2b of the germarium. Thus, environmental variables such as nutrition could lead to activation of the cyst progression checkpoint either by increasing germline cyst production or retarding somatic cell production. If these two cell populations (germline and soma) have different nutritional requirements, cyst apoptosis might be activated only at nutritional extremes: at one extreme (low nutritional values), slackened somatic cell proliferation does not keep pace with normal cyst production, resulting in aborted cyst progression, while at the other extreme (high nutritional values), accelerated cyst production outpaces normal somatic cell proliferation, resulting in a similar termination of cyst progression. Only in situations in which the rates of cyst production and somatic cell proliferation are balanced (e.g., intermediate nutritional values) would activation of the cyst progression checkpoint be unnecessary. Age could affect the proliferation rate of either of these two cell populations, and we have observed that the frequency of cyst apoptosis in the germarium does increase with age. Other environmental conditions that have been shown to affect egg production, such as temperature, humidity, prior anesthesia, adult crowding, mate abundance and dessication state (reviewed by King, 1970
; Ashburner, 1989
), should be examined similarly for effects on cyst progression. Checkpoint activation is also influenced by the genetic background as the frequency of apoptosis varied among wild-type strains. How a somatic cell deficit, once detected, leads to activation of apoptosis in the germline cyst is unknown; however, our evidence indicates that somatic cells are involved in the process.
Numerous observations from our analyses of da mutant phenotypes identify da as a key component in the somas regulation of the cyst progression checkpoint. The significant reduction in cyst degradation (as viewed either by Acridine Orange staining or TUNEL) in da loss-of-function mutants indicates that the checkpoint is da-dependent, and since Da protein is absent from the germline (Cummings and Cronmiller, 1994), it is the genes somatic dose that is critical in this process. This is consistent with the phenotype caused by moderate elevations of da (by chromosomal duplications) in which the checkpoint appears to function normally; the increased somatic cell production provided by the weaker duplication only resulted in longer interfollicular stalks, while the stronger duplication additionally resulted in more cysts surviving the checkpoint and being packaged into follicles due to the further increased production of somatic cells. Additional evidence that da normally contributes to the checkpoint comes from the analysis of the effects of higher elevations of da, which can lead to ectopic cyst degradation in the germarium. The synergistic interaction between the da dose and an environmental variable (i.e. cyst degradation in flies with elevated da levels increased with age) suggests that environmental conditions can sensitize the checkpoint to activation by da. Moreover, the apoptotic checkpoint is only activated in post-mitotic cysts, since elevated da did not lead to the degradation of still-dividing cysts, even when these slipped into region 2b or 3 of the germarium. Although only post-mitotic cysts appear capable of activating the apoptosis pathway, cells in the adjacent soma are responsible for monitoring the germline cyst/somatic cell balance and sending an activating signal. The role of da in those cells could entail either positive or negative regulation. For positive regulation, da+ would promote the generation of a proapoptotic factor as an integral part of the checkpoint. For negative regulation, da+ would repress an antiapoptotic (i.e. prosurvival) factor; such a factor would normally be required for the maintenance of post-mitotic cysts in the germarium. The identification of additional genetic components of the checkpoint will help distinguish between these two models.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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REFERENCES |
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