Gaziova Ivana, Bhat Krishna Moorthi
Department of Neuroscience and Cell Biology, University of Texas Medical Branch School of Medicine, Galveston, Texas 77555, USA.
Prog Mol Subcell Biol. 2007;45:143-78. doi: 10.1007/978-3-540-69161-7_7.
At some point during the history of organismal evolution, unicellular, unipotent and mitotically active cells acquired an ability to undergo a special type of cell division called asymmetric division. By this special type of cell division, these cells could divide to generate two different progeny or to self-renew and at the same time generate a progeny that is committed to become a cell different from the mother cell. This type of cell division, which forms the basis for the functioning of totipotent or multipotent stem cells, underlies the fundamental basis for the developmental evolution of organisms. It is not clear if the asymmetric division without self-renewal preceded the asymmetric division with self-renewal. It is reasonable to assume that the asymmetric division without self-renewal preceded the asymmetric division with self-renewal. In this review we explore the genetic regulation of these two types of asymmetric divisions using the Drosophila central nervous system (CNS) as a model system. The results from recent studies argue that for cells to undergo a self-renewing asymmetric division, certain "stem cell" proteins must be maintained or up-regulated, while genes encoding proteins responsible for differentiation must be repressed or down-regulated. As long as a balance between these two classes of proteins is maintained via asymmetric segregation and activation/repression, the progeny that receives stem cell proteins/maintains stem cell competence will have the potential to undergo self-renewing asymmetric division. The other progeny will commit to differentiate. In non-self-renewing asymmetric division, down-regulation of stem cell proteins/competence combined with asymmetric segregation of cell identity specifying factors (either cell-autonomous or a combination of cell autonomous and non-cell autonomous signals) cause the two progeny to assume different differentiated identities. Identification of mutations that confer a stem cell type of division to nonstem cell precursors, or mutations that eliminate asymmetric division, has led the way in elucidating the molecular basis for these divisions. Given that there is a considerable degree of conservation of genes and their function, these studies should provide clear insight into how the self-renewing asymmetric division of stem cells in neural and other lineages is regulated not only in Drosophila but also in vertebrates including humans.
在生物进化史上的某个时刻,单细胞、单能且有丝分裂活跃的细胞获得了进行一种特殊类型细胞分裂的能力,这种分裂称为不对称分裂。通过这种特殊类型的细胞分裂,这些细胞能够分裂产生两个不同的子代,或者自我更新,同时产生一个注定会成为与母细胞不同类型细胞的子代。这种类型的细胞分裂是全能或多能干细胞发挥功能的基础,也是生物体发育进化的根本基础。目前尚不清楚无自我更新能力的不对称分裂是否先于有自我更新能力的不对称分裂。有理由推测无自我更新能力的不对称分裂先于有自我更新能力的不对称分裂。在本综述中,我们以果蝇中枢神经系统(CNS)为模型系统,探讨这两种类型不对称分裂的遗传调控。近期研究结果表明,对于细胞进行自我更新的不对称分裂而言,某些“干细胞”蛋白必须得以维持或上调,而编码负责分化的蛋白的基因必须受到抑制或下调。只要通过不对称分离和激活/抑制维持这两类蛋白之间的平衡,接收干细胞蛋白/保持干细胞能力的子代就有潜力进行自我更新的不对称分裂。另一个子代则会走向分化。在无自我更新能力的不对称分裂中,干细胞蛋白/能力的下调,再加上细胞身份决定因子的不对称分离(无论是细胞自主的,还是细胞自主和非细胞自主信号的组合),会使两个子代呈现不同的分化身份。鉴定赋予非干细胞前体干细胞类型分裂能力的突变,或消除不对称分裂的突变,为阐明这些分裂的分子基础指明了方向。鉴于基因及其功能存在相当程度的保守性,这些研究不仅应能清晰地洞察果蝇中神经及其他谱系干细胞的自我更新不对称分裂是如何调控的,还能为包括人类在内的脊椎动物中的相关调控提供清晰的见解。