Summary The ability of adult stem cells to maintain their undifferentiated state depends upon residence in their niche. While simple models of a single self-renewal signal are attractive, niche-stem cell interactions are likely to be more complex. Many niches have multiple cell types, and the Drosophila testis is one such complex niche with two stem cell types, germline stem cells (GSCs) and somatic cyst progenitor cells (CPCs). These stem cells require chemokine activation of Jak/STAT signaling for self-renewal. We identified the transcriptional repressor Zfh-1 as a presumptive somatic target of Jak/STAT signaling, demonstrating that it is necessary and sufficient to maintain CPCs. Surprisingly, sustained zfh-1 expression or intrinsic STAT activation in somatic cells caused neighboring germ cells to self-renew outside their niche. In contrast, germline-intrinsic STAT activation was insufficient for GSC renewal. This data reveals unexpected complexity in cell interactions in the niche, implicating CPCs in GSC self-renewal.
While course-based research in genomics can generate both knowledge gains and a greater appreciation for how science is done, a significant investment of course time is required to enable students to show gains commensurate to a summer research experience. Nonetheless, this is a very cost-effective way to reach larger numbers of students.
The roles of tenascin in cartilage development and function remain unclear. Based on the observation that tenascin is particularly abundant at the epiphyseal extremities of developing cartilaginous models of long bones in chick and mouse embryo, we tested the hypothesis that tenascin is involved in articular cartilage development. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed that tenascin was first localized in the cell condensation region of Day 4 chick embryo limb buds, where the cartilaginous models form. With further development, tenascin gene expression became indeed restricted to the articular cap of the models. Tenascin persisted in the articular cartilage of postnatal chickens but appeared to decrease with age. The protein was also abundant in embryonic and adult tracheal cartilage rings which, like articular cartilage, persist throughout postnatal life. Similar patterns of tenascin expression were seen in mouse. Using monoclonal antibodies to avian tenascin variants, we found that the bulk of articular cartilage contained the shortest tenascin variant (Tn190), whereas the largest variant (Tn230) was present in tissues associated or interacting with articular cartilage (ligaments and meniscus). The protein and its mRNA, however, were undetectable in growth plate cartilage undergoing maturation and endochondral ossification. This inverse correlation between chondrocyte maturation and tenascin production was corroborated by the finding that tenascin gene expression decreased markedly during maturation of chondrocytes in culture and during formation of a secondary ossification center within the articular cap in vivo. Thus, tenascin is intimately associated with the development of articular cartilage and other permanent cartilages whereas absence or reduced amounts of this matrix protein characterize transient cartilages which undergo maturation and are replaced by bone.0 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
The mechanisms by which the early limb cell Condensations and interzone mesenchyme give rise to skeletal elements and joints are poorly understood. Previous work from this laboratory has shown that the extracellular matrix protein tenascin-C is associated with articular cartilage and joint tissue development; others have shown that tenascin-C may exert its biological activities via interactions with cell surface receptors, such as syndecans. To further analyze the roles of tenascin-C and its putative receptors in skeletal development, we carried out a detailed in situ hybridization analysis of tenascin-C and syndecan-3 gene expression during development of chick limb skeletal elements and joints. We found that as the early mesenchymal condensations chondrify around day 5 (E5) of development, they become surrounded by a thick syndecan-3 rich perichondrium while tenascin-C transcripts are much fewer and restricted to diaphyseal perichondrium and developing interzones. Similar patterns were observed as distal carpal and digit condensations formed in older embryos. As the cartilaginous long bone models elongated proximo-distally and joint formation proceeded with age, we observed that syndecan-3 transcripts decrease significantly along the diaphysis and remain very abundant along the metaphysis and in the epiphyseal articular cap and interzone. Conversely, tenascin-C RNAs remain abundant along the diaphysis and begin to increase at the epiphysis and in interzone-derived tissues, such as menisci and joint capsule. By E10, the skeletal elements have well-defined morphologies, endochondral ossification has initiated in their diaphysis, and diaphyseal perichondrium has become periosteum. These developmental changes were accompanied by equally marked changes in gene expression; these included a marked increase in tenascin-C gene expression in articular cap, fragmentation of tenascin-C gene expression along the periosteum, reinitiation of syndecan-3 gene expression in periosteum, and differential gene expression in osteoprogenitor cells. The sheer complexity of the gene expression patterns documented in this study attests to the complexity of processes that bring about normal skelatogenesis. Clearly,tenascin-C and syndecan-3 appear to be closely associated with several of these processes, particularly in establishing tissue boundaries (perichondrium and periosteum) between condensations and surrounding mesenchymal cells, in regulating perichondral cell differentiation and incorporation into the growing skeletal elements, and in the genesis of epiphyseal chondrocytes and associated joint tissues. o 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
The germ lineage has been studied for a long time because of its crucial role in the propagation and survival of a species. While this lineage, in contrast to the soma, is clearly unique in its totipotent ability to produce a new organism, it has now been found also to have specific features at the cellular level. One feature, a period of transcriptional quiescence in the early germ cell precursors, has been observed in both Drosophila and C. elegans, where it is essential for the formation and the survival of the germline. In addition, there are numerous instances where these early germ cells are reliant on translational regulation, especially in Drosophila. The genes that are important for these two functions, the mechanisms of their action, and studies in vertebrate organisms that reveal similarities as well as some potential differences in early germ cell development are discussed.
Previously, it has been shown that, during early Drosophila and C. elegans development, the germ cell precursors undergo a period of transcriptional quiescence. Here, we report that Germ cell-less (GCL), a germ plasm component necessary for the proper formation of "pole cells," the germ cell precursors in Drosophila, is required for the establishment of this transcriptional quiescence. While control embryos silence transcription prior to pole cell formation in the pole cell-destined nuclei, this silencing does not occur in embryos that lack GCL activity. The failure to establish quiescence is tightly correlated with failure to form the pole cells. Furthermore, we show that GCL can repress transcription of at least a subset of genes in an ectopic context, independent of other germ plasm components. Our results place GCL as the earliest gene known to act in the transcriptional repression of the germline. GCL's subcellular distribution on the nucleoplasmic surface of the nuclear envelope and its effect on transcription suggest that it may act to repress transcription in a manner similar to that proposed for transcriptional silencing of telomeric regions.
The germ cell precursors of Drosophila (pole cells) are specified by maternally supplied germ plasm localized to the posterior pole of the egg. One component of the germ plasm, germ cell-less (gcl) mRNA, encodes a novel protein which specifically localizes to the nuclear envelope of the pole cell nuclei. In addition to its maternal expression, gcl is zygotically expressed through embryonic development. In this report, we have characterized a null allele of germ cell-less to determine its absolute requirement during development. We have found that gcl activity is required only for the establishment of the germ cell lineage. Most embryos lacking maternal gcl activity fail to establish a germline. No other developmental defects were detected. Examination of germline development in these mutant embryos revealed that gcl activity is required for proper pole bud formation, pole cell formation, and pole cell survival. Using this null mutant we have also assayed the activity of forms of Gcl protein with altered subcellular distribution and found that localization to the nuclear envelope is crucial for promoting pole cell formation, but not necessary to initiate and form proper pole buds. These results indicate that gcl acts in at least two different ways during the establishment of the germ cell lineage.
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