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Cell-cycle regulation of NOTCH signaling during C. elegans vulval development.

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posted on 2015-09-25, 15:22 authored by Stefanie Nusser-Stein, Antje Beyer, Ivo Rimann, Magdalene Adamczyk, Nir Piterman, Alex Hajnal, Jasmin Fisher
C. elegans vulval development is one of the best-characterized systems to study cell fate specification during organogenesis. The detailed knowledge of the signaling pathways determining vulval precursor cell (VPC) fates permitted us to create a computational model based on the antagonistic interactions between the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR)/RAS/MAPK and the NOTCH pathways that specify the primary and secondary fates, respectively. A key notion of our model is called bounded asynchrony, which predicts that a limited degree of asynchrony in the progression of the VPCs is necessary to break their equivalence. While searching for a molecular mechanism underlying bounded asynchrony, we discovered that the termination of NOTCH signaling is tightly linked to cell-cycle progression. When single VPCs were arrested in the G1 phase, intracellular NOTCH failed to be degraded, resulting in a mixed primary/secondary cell fate. Moreover, the G1 cyclins CYD-1 and CYE-1 stabilize NOTCH, while the G2 cyclin CYB-3 promotes NOTCH degradation. Our findings reveal a synchronization mechanism that coordinates NOTCH signaling with cell-cycle progression and thus permits the formation of a stable cell fate pattern.

History

Citation

Molecular Systems Biology, 2012, 8:618

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Computer Science

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Molecular Systems Biology

Publisher

EMBO Press

eissn

1744-4292

Copyright date

2012

Available date

2015-09-25

Publisher version

http://msb.embopress.org/content/8/1/618

Language

en