Ma Lin, Cantrup Robert, Varrault Annie, Colak Dilek, Klenin Natalia, Götz Magdalena, McFarlane Sarah, Journot Laurent, Schuurmans Carol
IMCH, HBI, University of Calgary, T2N 4N1, Canada.
Neural Dev. 2007 Jun 8;2:11. doi: 10.1186/1749-8104-2-11.
Organs are programmed to acquire a particular size during development, but the regulatory mechanisms that dictate when dividing progenitor cells should permanently exit the cell cycle and stop producing additional daughter cells are poorly understood. In differentiated tissues, tumor suppressor genes maintain a constant cell number and intact tissue architecture by controlling proliferation, apoptosis and cell dispersal. Here we report a similar role for two tumor suppressor genes, the Zac1 zinc finger transcription factor and that encoding the cytokine TGFbetaII, in the developing retina.
Using loss and gain-of-function approaches, we show that Zac1 is an essential negative regulator of retinal size. Zac1 mutants develop hypercellular retinae due to increased progenitor cell proliferation and reduced apoptosis at late developmental stages. Consequently, supernumerary rod photoreceptors and amacrine cells are generated, the latter of which form an ectopic cellular layer, while other retinal cells are present in their normal number and location. Strikingly, Zac1 functions as a direct negative regulator of a rod fate, while acting cell non-autonomously to modulate amacrine cell number. We implicate TGFbetaII, another tumor suppressor and cytokine, as a Zac1-dependent amacrine cell negative feedback signal. TGFbetaII and phospho-Smad2/3, its downstream effector, are expressed at reduced levels in Zac1 mutant retinae, and exogenous TGFbetaII relieves the mutant amacrine cell phenotype. Moreover, treatment of wild-type retinae with a soluble TGFbeta inhibitor and TGFbeta receptor II (TGFbetaRII) conditional mutants generate excess amacrine cells, phenocopying the Zac1 mutant phenotype.
We show here that Zac1 has an essential role in cell number control during retinal development, akin to its role in tumor surveillance in mature tissues. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Zac1 employs a novel cell non-autonomous strategy to regulate amacrine cell number, acting in cooperation with a second tumor suppressor gene, TGFbetaII, through a negative feedback pathway. This raises the intriguing possibility that tumorigenicity may also be associated with the loss of feedback inhibition in mature tissues.
器官在发育过程中被设定为获得特定大小,但对于决定分裂中的祖细胞何时应永久退出细胞周期并停止产生额外子细胞的调控机制,我们了解甚少。在分化组织中,肿瘤抑制基因通过控制增殖、凋亡和细胞扩散来维持恒定的细胞数量和完整的组织结构。在此,我们报道了两个肿瘤抑制基因,即Zac1锌指转录因子和编码细胞因子TGFβII的基因,在发育中的视网膜中具有类似作用。
通过功能缺失和功能获得方法,我们表明Zac1是视网膜大小的重要负调控因子。Zac1突变体由于祖细胞增殖增加和发育后期凋亡减少而形成细胞过多的视网膜。因此,产生了额外的视杆光感受器和无长突细胞,后者形成异位细胞层,而其他视网膜细胞数量和位置正常。引人注目的是,Zac1作为视杆细胞命运的直接负调控因子,同时以非细胞自主方式调节无长突细胞数量。我们认为另一种肿瘤抑制因子和细胞因子TGFβII是一种依赖于Zac1的无长突细胞负反馈信号。TGFβII及其下游效应物磷酸化Smad2/3在Zac1突变体视网膜中的表达水平降低,外源性TGFβII可缓解突变体无长突细胞表型。此外,用可溶性TGFβ抑制剂处理野生型视网膜和TGFβ受体II(TGFβRII)条件突变体可产生过多的无长突细胞,模拟Zac1突变体表型。
我们在此表明,Zac1在视网膜发育过程中的细胞数量控制中起重要作用,类似于其在成熟组织肿瘤监测中的作用。此外,我们证明Zac1采用一种新的非细胞自主策略来调节无长突细胞数量,通过负反馈途径与第二个肿瘤抑制基因TGFβII协同作用。这引发了一个有趣的可能性,即肿瘤发生也可能与成熟组织中反馈抑制的丧失有关。