Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.

The Hippo pathway negatively regulates the cell number in epithelial tissue. Upon its inactivation, an excess of cells is produced. These additional cells are generated from an increased rate of cell division, followed by inappropriate proliferation of cells that have failed to exit the cell cycle....

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Main Authors: Brandon N Nicolay, Maxim V Frolov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-10-01
Series:PLoS Genetics
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2542417?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-87d1b5d8d452447ba11c52a198d85bf82020-11-25T02:06:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Genetics1553-73901553-74042008-10-01410e100020510.1371/journal.pgen.1000205Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.Brandon N NicolayMaxim V FrolovThe Hippo pathway negatively regulates the cell number in epithelial tissue. Upon its inactivation, an excess of cells is produced. These additional cells are generated from an increased rate of cell division, followed by inappropriate proliferation of cells that have failed to exit the cell cycle. We analyzed the consequence of inactivation of the entire E2F family of transcription factors in these two settings. In Drosophila, there is a single activator, dE2F1, and a single repressor, dE2F2, which act antagonistically to each other during development. While the loss of the activator dE2F1 results in a severe impairment in cell proliferation, this defect is rescued by the simultaneous loss of the repressor dE2F2, as cell proliferation occurs relatively normally in the absence of both dE2F proteins. We found that the combined inactivation of dE2F1 and dE2F2 had no significant effect on the increased rate of cell division of Hippo pathway mutant cells. In striking contrast, inappropriate proliferation of cells that failed to exit the cell cycle was efficiently blocked. Furthermore, our data suggest that such inappropriate proliferation was primarily dependent on the activator, de2f1, as loss of de2f2 was inconsequential. Consistently, Hippo pathway mutant cells had elevated E2F activity and induced dE2F1 expression at a point when wild-type cells normally exit the cell cycle. Thus, we uncovered a critical requirement for the dE2F family during inappropriate proliferation of Hippo pathway mutant cells.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2542417?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brandon N Nicolay
Maxim V Frolov
spellingShingle Brandon N Nicolay
Maxim V Frolov
Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
PLoS Genetics
author_facet Brandon N Nicolay
Maxim V Frolov
author_sort Brandon N Nicolay
title Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
title_short Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
title_full Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
title_fullStr Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
title_full_unstemmed Context-dependent requirement for dE2F during oncogenic proliferation.
title_sort context-dependent requirement for de2f during oncogenic proliferation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Genetics
issn 1553-7390
1553-7404
publishDate 2008-10-01
description The Hippo pathway negatively regulates the cell number in epithelial tissue. Upon its inactivation, an excess of cells is produced. These additional cells are generated from an increased rate of cell division, followed by inappropriate proliferation of cells that have failed to exit the cell cycle. We analyzed the consequence of inactivation of the entire E2F family of transcription factors in these two settings. In Drosophila, there is a single activator, dE2F1, and a single repressor, dE2F2, which act antagonistically to each other during development. While the loss of the activator dE2F1 results in a severe impairment in cell proliferation, this defect is rescued by the simultaneous loss of the repressor dE2F2, as cell proliferation occurs relatively normally in the absence of both dE2F proteins. We found that the combined inactivation of dE2F1 and dE2F2 had no significant effect on the increased rate of cell division of Hippo pathway mutant cells. In striking contrast, inappropriate proliferation of cells that failed to exit the cell cycle was efficiently blocked. Furthermore, our data suggest that such inappropriate proliferation was primarily dependent on the activator, de2f1, as loss of de2f2 was inconsequential. Consistently, Hippo pathway mutant cells had elevated E2F activity and induced dE2F1 expression at a point when wild-type cells normally exit the cell cycle. Thus, we uncovered a critical requirement for the dE2F family during inappropriate proliferation of Hippo pathway mutant cells.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2542417?pdf=render
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AT maximvfrolov contextdependentrequirementforde2fduringoncogenicproliferation
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