4.8 Article

Coupling organelle inheritance with mitosis to balance growth and differentiation

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 355, Issue 6324, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.aah4701

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Funding

  1. Medical Scientist Training Program grant from the NIH [T32GM007739]
  2. National Cancer Institute Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award for Individual Predoctoral Fellows [F31CA180724-03]
  3. United Negro College Fund/Merck Science Initiative Graduate Fellowship
  4. NIH [R37-AR27883]

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Balancing growth and differentiation is essential to tissue morphogenesis and homeostasis. How imbalances arise in disease states is poorly understood. To address this issue, we identified transcripts differentially expressed in mouse basal epidermal progenitors versus their differentiating progeny and those altered in cancers. We used an in vivo RNA interference screen to unveil candidates that altered the equilibrium between the basal proliferative layer and suprabasal differentiating layers forming the skin barrier. We found that epidermal progenitors deficient in the peroxisome-associated protein Pex11b failed to segregate peroxisomes properly and entered a mitotic delay that perturbed polarized divisions and skewed daughter fates. Together, our findings unveil a role for organelle inheritance in mitosis, spindle alignment, and the choice of daughter progenitors to differentiate or remain stem-like.

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