4.7 Article

Elimination of Oncogenic Neighbors by JNK-Mediated Engulfment in Drosophila

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL CELL
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages 315-328

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2011.02.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japanese Ministry of Education, Science, Sports, Culture and Technology
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  3. G-COE program for Global Center for Education and Research in Integrative Membrane Biology
  4. Sasagawa Scientific Research Grant
  5. Fumi Yamamura Memorial Foundation for Female Natural Scientists
  6. Sumitomo Foundation
  7. Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders
  8. Novartis Foundation for the Promotion of Science
  9. Kanae Foundation for the Promotion of Medical Science
  10. Senri Life Science Foundation
  11. Human Frontier Science Program Career Development Award
  12. RIKEN
  13. Training Course for Raising Research Leaders in Membrane Biology

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A newly emerged oncogenic cell in the epithelial population has to confront antitumor selective pressures in the host tissue. However, the mechanisms by which surrounding normal tissue exerts antitumor effects against oncogenically transformed cells are poorly understood. In Drosophila imaginal epithelia, clones of cells mutant for evolutionarily conserved tumor suppressor genes such as scrib or dig lose their epithelial integrity and are eliminated from epithelia when surrounded by wild-type tissue. Here, we show that surrounding normal cells activate nonapoptotic JNK signaling in response to the emergence of oncogenic mutant cells. This JNK activation leads to upregulation of PVR, the Drosophila PDGF/VEGF receptor. Genetic and time-lapse imaging analyses reveal that PVR expression in surrounding cells activates the ELMO/Mbc-mediated phagocytic pathway, thereby eliminating oncogenic neighbors by engulfment. Our data indicate that JNK-mediated cell engulfment could be an evolutionarily conserved intrinsic tumor-suppression mechanism that eliminates premalignant cells from epithelia.

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