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PLoS GeneticsVolume 13, Issue 3, March 2017, Article number e1006647

dMyc is required in retinal progenitors to prevent JNK-mediated retinal glial activation(Article)(Open Access)

  • ai3S –Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal
  • bIBMC–Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal

Abstract

In the nervous system, glial cells provide crucial insulation and trophic support to neurons and are important for neuronal survival. In reaction to a wide variety of insults, glial cells respond with changes in cell morphology and metabolism to allow repair. Additionally, these cells can acquire migratory and proliferative potential. In particular, after axonal damage or pruning the clearance of axonal debris by glial cells is key for a healthy nervous system. Thus, bidirectional neuron-glial interactions are crucial in development, but little is known about the cellular sensors and signalling pathways involved. In here, we show that decreased cellular fitness in retinal progenitors caused by reduced Drosophila Myc expression triggers non cell-autonomous activation of retinal glia proliferation and overmigration. Glia migration occurs beyond its normal limit near the boundary between differentiated photoreceptors and precursor cells, extending into the progenitor domain. This overmigration is stimulated by JNK activation (and the function of its target Mmp1), while proliferative responses are mediated by Dpp/TGF-β signalling activation. © 2017 Tavares et al.

Indexed keywords

EMTREE drug terms:decapentaplegic proteininterstitial collagenaseMyc proteinstress activated protein kinasetransforming growth factor betadiminutive protein, DrosophilaDNA binding proteinDrosophila proteinmitogen activated protein kinase kinase 4transcription factortransforming growth factor beta
EMTREE medical terms:animal cellanimal tissueArticlecell activationcell migrationcell proliferationcontrolled studyDrosophilaglia cellmalenonhumanphotoreceptorprotein expressionprotein functionretinasignal transductionstem cellanimalapoptosisaxoncell differentiationcell motioncytologyDrosophila melanogasterextracellular matrixfemalegeneticsgliainvertebrate photoreceptor cellmetabolismnerve cellnervous system developmentphysiologyretinastem cell
MeSH:AnimalsApoptosisAxonsCell DifferentiationCell MovementCell ProliferationDNA-Binding ProteinsDrosophila melanogasterDrosophila ProteinsExtracellular MatrixFemaleMaleMAP Kinase Kinase 4NeurogenesisNeurogliaNeuronsPhotoreceptor Cells, InvertebrateRetinaSignal TransductionStem CellsTranscription FactorsTransforming Growth Factor beta

Chemicals and CAS Registry Numbers:

interstitial collagenase, 9001-12-1; stress activated protein kinase, 155215-87-5;

diminutive protein, Drosophila; DNA-Binding Proteins; Drosophila Proteins; MAP Kinase Kinase 4; Transcription Factors; Transforming Growth Factor beta

  • ISSN: 15537390
  • Source Type: Journal
  • Original language: English
  • DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006647
  • PubMed ID: 28267791
  • Document Type: Article
  • Publisher: Public Library of Science

  Tavares, L.; i3S –Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal;
© Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Cited by 2 documents

Mashanov, V. , Zueva, O.
Radial Glia in Echinoderms
(2019) Developmental Neurobiology
Eusebio, N. , Tavares, L. , Pereira, P.S.
CtBP represses Dpp-dependent Mad activation during Drosophila eye development
(2018) Developmental Biology
View details of all 2 citations
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