Cell Reports (Feb 2023)

Cell polarity opposes Jak/STAT-mediated Escargot activation that drives intratumor heterogeneity in a Drosophila tumor model

  • Deeptiman Chatterjee,
  • Fei Cong,
  • Xian-Feng Wang,
  • Caique Almeida Machado Costa,
  • Yi-Chun Huang,
  • Wu-Min Deng

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 2
p. 112061

Abstract

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Summary: In proliferating neoplasms, microenvironment-derived selective pressures promote tumor heterogeneity by imparting diverse capacities for growth, differentiation, and invasion. However, what makes a tumor cell respond to signaling cues differently from a normal cell is not well understood. In the Drosophila ovarian follicle cells, apicobasal-polarity loss induces heterogeneous epithelial multilayering. When exacerbated by oncogenic-Notch expression, this multilayer displays an increased consistency in the occurrence of morphologically distinguishable cells adjacent to the polar follicle cells. Polar cells release the Jak/STAT ligand Unpaired (Upd), in response to which neighboring polarity-deficient cells exhibit a precursor-like transcriptomic state. Among the several regulons active in these cells, we could detect and further validate the expression of Snail family transcription factor Escargot (Esg). We also ascertain a similar relationship between Upd and Esg in normally developing ovaries, where establishment of polarity determines early follicular differentiation. Overall, our results indicate that epithelial-cell polarity acts as a gatekeeper against microenvironmental selective pressures that drive heterogeneity.

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