Cytonemes coordinate asymmetric signaling and organization in the Drosophila muscle progenitor niche
Cytonemes coordinate asymmetric signaling and organization in the Drosophila muscle progenitor niche
ABSTRACTAsymmetric signaling and organization in the stem-cell niche determine stem-cell fates. Here, we investigate the basis of asymmetric signaling and stem-cell organization using the Drosophila wing-disc that creates an adult muscle progenitor (AMP) niche. We show that AMPs extend polarized cytonemes to contact the disc epithelial junctions and adhere themselves to the disc/niche. Niche-adhering cytonemes localize FGF-receptor to selectively adhere to the FGF-producing disc and receive FGFs in a contact-dependent manner. Activation of FGF signaling in AMPs, in turn, reinforces disc-specific cytoneme polarity/adhesion, which maintains their disc-proximal positions. Loss of cytoneme-mediated adhesion promotes AMPs to lose niche occupancy and FGF signaling, occupy a disc-distal position, and acquire morphological hallmarks of differentiation. Discrete AMP organization and diversification patterns are determined by localized expression and presentation patterns of two different FGFs in the wing-disc and their polarized target-specific distribution through niche-adhering cytonemes. Thus, cytonemes are essential for asymmetric signaling and niche-specific AMP organization.
- National Institutes of Health
- National Institutes of Health United States
- National Institute of Health
- National Institute of Health (NIH/NICHD) United States
- National Institute of Health Pakistan
Science, Muscles, Q, 610, 500, Article, Fibroblast Growth Factors, Drosophila melanogaster, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Drosophila
Science, Muscles, Q, 610, 500, Article, Fibroblast Growth Factors, Drosophila melanogaster, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Drosophila
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