Cell cycle-dependent cues regulate temporal patterning of the Drosophila central brain neural stem cells

Author:

Morales Chaya Gonzalo N.ORCID,Syed Mubarak HussainORCID

Abstract

Abstract During nervous system development, diverse types of neurons and glia are sequentially generated by self-renewing neural stem cells (NSCs). Temporal changes in gene expression within NSCs are thought to regulate neural diversity; however, the mechanisms regulating the timing of these temporal gene transitions remain poorly understood. Drosophila type 2 NSCs, like human outer radial glia, divide to self-renew and generate intermediate neural progenitors, amplifying and diversifying the population of neurons innervating the central complex, a brain region crucial for sensorimotor coordination. Type 2 NSCs express over a dozen genes temporally, broadly classified as early and late-expressed genes. A conserved gene, seven-up, mediates early to late gene expression by activating ecdysone receptor (EcR) expression. However, the timing of EcR expression and, consequently, the transition from early to late gene expression remains unknown. This study investigates whether intrinsic mechanisms of cell cycle progression and cytokinesis are required to induce the NSC early-late transition. By generating mutant clones that arrest the NSC cell cycle or block cytokinesis, we show that both processes are necessary for the early-to-late transition. When NSCs are cell cycle or cytokinesis arrested, the early gene Imp fails to be downregulated and persists in the old NSCs, while the late factors EcR and Syncrip fail to be expressed. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the early factor Seven-up is insufficient to drive the transition, despite its normal expression in cell cycle- or cytokinesis-inhibited NSCs. These results suggest that both cell-intrinsic (cell cycle/cytokinesis) and extrinsic (hormone) cues are required for the early-late NSC gene expression transition.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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