Summary of ssbd-repos-000467

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URL
DOI

Title
Reduction of endocytosis and EGFR signaling is associated with the switch from isolated to clustered apoptosis during epithelial tissue remodeling in Drosophila.
Description

Epithelial tissues undergo cell turnover both during development and for homeostatic maintenance. Removal of cells is coordinated with the increase in number of newly dividing cells to maintain barrier function of the tissue. In Drosophila metamorphosis, larval epidermal cells (LECs) are replaced by adult precursor cells called histoblasts. Removal of LECs must counterbalance the exponentially increasing adult histoblasts. Previous work showed that the LEC removal accelerates as endocytic activity decreases throughout all LECs. Here, we show that the acceleration is accompanied by a mode switching from isolated single-cell apoptosis to clustered ones induced by the endocytic activity reduction. We identify the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway via extracellular-signal regulated kinase (ERK) activity as the main components downstream of endocytic activity in LECs. The reduced ERK activity, caused by the decrease in endocytic activity, is responsible for the apoptotic mode switching. Initially, ERK is transiently activated in normal LECs surrounding a single apoptotic LEC in a ligand-dependent manner, preventing clustered cell death. Following the reduction of endocytic activity, LEC apoptosis events do not provoke these transient ERK up-regulations, resulting in the acceleration of the cell elimination rate by frequent clustered apoptosis. These findings contrasted with the common perspective that clustered apoptosis is disadvantageous. Instead, switching to clustered apoptosis is required to accommodate the growth of neighboring tissues.

Submited Date
2025-09-10
Release Date
2025-10-20
Updated Date
-
License
Funding information
This work was supported by the following grants: Japan Science and Technology Agency - JST SPRING (JPMJSP2114) to K.Y., Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology - JST CREST (JPMJCR1852), Japan Society for the Promotion of Science - MEXT KAKENHI (JP26114003, JP21H05255), JSPS KAKENHI (JP24687027, JP16H04800), Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development - AMED moonshot (22zf0127001h002) and the research grant for Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders to E. K., JSPS KAKENHI (JP21K06144, JP21H05105, JP24H01405), JST FOREST Program (J210000474), Takeda Science Foundation, and Tohoku University FRIS Program for Creation of Interdisciplinary Research to D. U.
File formats
.tiff, .lif, .czi
Data size
90.3 GB

Organism
Drosophila melanogaster(NCBI:txid7227),
Strain
-
Cell Line
-
Genes
-
Proteins
-

GO Molecular Function (MF)
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GO Biological Process (BP)
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GO Cellular Component (CC)
-
Study Type
-
Imaging Methods
Laser Scanning Confocal Microscopy

Method Summary

See detail in Yuswan, et al., (2024)

Related paper(s)

Kevin Yuswan, Xiaofei Sun, Erina Kuranaga, Daiki Umetsu (2024) Reduction of endocytosis and EGFR signaling is associated with the switch from isolated to clustered apoptosis during epithelial tissue remodeling in Drosophila., PLoS biology, Volume 22, Number 10, pp. e3002823

Published in 2024 Oct (Electronic publication in Oct. 14, 2024, midnight )

(Abstract) Epithelial tissues undergo cell turnover both during development and for homeostatic maintenance. Removal of cells is coordinated with the increase in number of newly dividing cells to maintain barrier function of the tissue. In Drosophila metamorphosis, larval epidermal cells (LECs) are replaced by adult precursor cells called histoblasts. Removal of LECs must counterbalance the exponentially increasing adult histoblasts. Previous work showed that the LEC removal accelerates as endocytic activity decreases throughout all LECs. Here, we show that the acceleration is accompanied by a mode switching from isolated single-cell apoptosis to clustered ones induced by the endocytic activity reduction. We identify the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathway via extracellular-signal regulated kinase (ERK) activity as the main components downstream of endocytic activity in LECs. The reduced ERK activity, caused by the decrease in endocytic activity, is responsible for the apoptotic mode switching. Initially, ERK is transiently activated in normal LECs surrounding a single apoptotic LEC in a ligand-dependent manner, preventing clustered cell death. Following the reduction of endocytic activity, LEC apoptosis events do not provoke these transient ERK up-regulations, resulting in the acceleration of the cell elimination rate by frequent clustered apoptosis. These findings contrasted with the common perspective that clustered apoptosis is disadvantageous. Instead, switching to clustered apoptosis is required to accommodate the growth of neighboring tissues.
(MeSH Terms)

Contact(s)
Kevin Yuswan, Daiki Umetsu, Erina Kuranaga
Organization(s)
Tohoku University, The University of Osaka, Kyoto University , Graduate School of Life Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences
Image Data Contributors
Quantitative Data Contributors

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