Loiselle Gonzalez-Baez, Elizabeth Mortati, Lillie Mitchell, Vicki P Losick
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Melanization regulates wound healing by limiting polyploid cell growth in the Drosophila epithelium.
Wound healing requires a localized response that restricts growth, remodeling, and inflammation to the site of injury. In the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, the epithelium heals puncture wounds through cell growth instead of cell division. Epithelial cells on wound margin both fuse and duplicate their genome to generate a multinucleated, polyploid cell essential for tissue repair. Despite the essential role of polyploidy in wound healing, the signals that initiate and regulate the extent of cell growth at the wound site remain poorly understood. One of the first steps in wound healing requires the deposit of melanin at the site of injury, which persists as a melanin scar. The melanin scar forms within hours after a puncture wound and is dependent on the activation of three prophenoloxidase genes (PPO1, PPO2, and PPO3). Using a triple loss of function mutant (PPOnull), we have uncovered a novel role for melanization in regulating wound healing by limiting polyploid cell growth post injury. Thus, melanization is required for efficient wound closure and its loss leads to an unexpected exacerbation of polyploid cell growth in the surrounding epithelial cells. This occurs, in part, through the early entry of epithelial cells into the endocycle, which may be due to altered gene expression as a result of delayed JNK signaling and other pathways. In conclusion, we have found that polyploid cell growth requires melanization at the injury site to control the extent of cell growth and regulate wound repair.
期刊介绍:
GENETICS is published by the Genetics Society of America, a scholarly society that seeks to deepen our understanding of the living world by advancing our understanding of genetics. Since 1916, GENETICS has published high-quality, original research presenting novel findings bearing on genetics and genomics. The journal publishes empirical studies of organisms ranging from microbes to humans, as well as theoretical work.
While it has an illustrious history, GENETICS has changed along with the communities it serves: it is not your mentor''s journal.
The editors make decisions quickly – in around 30 days – without sacrificing the excellence and scholarship for which the journal has long been known. GENETICS is a peer reviewed, peer-edited journal, with an international reach and increasing visibility and impact. All editorial decisions are made through collaboration of at least two editors who are practicing scientists.
GENETICS is constantly innovating: expanded types of content include Reviews, Commentary (current issues of interest to geneticists), Perspectives (historical), Primers (to introduce primary literature into the classroom), Toolbox Reviews, plus YeastBook, FlyBook, and WormBook (coming spring 2016). For particularly time-sensitive results, we publish Communications. As part of our mission to serve our communities, we''ve published thematic collections, including Genomic Selection, Multiparental Populations, Mouse Collaborative Cross, and the Genetics of Sex.