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Voutyraki, C., Choromidis, A., Theodorou, V., Efraimoglou, C., Anagnostopoulos, G., Magadi, S.S., Grammenoudi, S., Zacharioudaki, E., Delidakis, C. (2022). Repression of differentiation genes by Hes transcription factors fuels neural tumour growth in Drosophila.  Int. J. Dev. Biol. 66(1-2-3): 211--222.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0253527
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Neural stem cells (NSC) in divide asymmetrically to generate one cell that retains stem cell identity and another that is routed to differentiation. Prolonged mitotic activity of the NSCs gives rise to the plethora of neurons and glial cells that wire the brain and nerve cord. Genetic insults, such as excess of Notch signaling, perturb the normal NSC proliferation programs and trigger the formation of NSC hyperplasias, which can subsequently progress to malignancies. Hes proteins are crucial mediators of Notch signaling, and in the NSC context they act by repressing a cohort of early pro-differentiation transcription factors. Downregulation of these pro-differentiation factors makes NSC progeny cells susceptible to adopting an aberrant stem cell program. We have recently shown that Hes overexpression in Drosophila leads to NSC hyperplasias that progress to malignant tumours after allografting to adult hosts. We have combined genetic analysis, tissue allografting and transcriptomic approaches to address the role of Hes genes in NSC malignant transformation. We show that the E (spl) genes are important mediators in the progression of Notch hyperplasias to malignancy, since allografts lacking the E (spl) genes grow much more slowly. We further present RNA profiling of Hes-induced tumours at two different stages after allografting. We find that the same cohort of differentiation-promoting transcription factors that are repressed in the primary hyperplasias continue to be downregulated after transplantation. This is accompanied by an upregulation of stress-response genes and metabolic reprogramming. The combination of dedifferentiation and cell physiology changes most likely drive tumour growth.
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    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    Int. J. Dev. Biol.
    Title
    International Journal of Developmental Biology
    Publication Year
    1989-
    ISBN/ISSN
    0214-6282
    Data From Reference