Drosophila SPARC Is a Self-Protective Signal Expressed by Loser Cells during Cell Competition
pmid: 20951347
Drosophila SPARC Is a Self-Protective Signal Expressed by Loser Cells during Cell Competition
During development and aging, animals suffer insults that modify the fitness of individual cells. In Drosophila, the elimination of viable but suboptimal cells is mediated by cell competition, ensuring that these cells do not accumulate during development. In addition, certain genes such as the Drosophila homolog of human c-myc (dmyc) are able to transform cells into supercompetitors, which eliminate neighboring wild-type cells by apoptosis and overproliferate, leaving total cell numbers unchanged. Here we have identified Drosophila Sparc as an early marker transcriptionally upregulated in loser cells that provides a transient protection by inhibiting Caspase activation in outcompeted cells. Overall, we describe the unexpected existence of a physiological mechanism that counteracts cell competition during development.
- University of Bern Switzerland
- University Hospital of Zurich Switzerland
- University of Zurich Switzerland
- Spanish National Cancer Research Centre Spain
Apoptosis, Epistasis, Genetic, Cell Line, Up-Regulation, Drosophila melanogaster, Cytoprotection, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Osteonectin, Biomarkers, Developmental Biology, Signal Transduction
Apoptosis, Epistasis, Genetic, Cell Line, Up-Regulation, Drosophila melanogaster, Cytoprotection, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Osteonectin, Biomarkers, Developmental Biology, Signal Transduction
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