1. Local juvenile hormone activity regulates gut homeostasis and tumor growth in adult Drosophila
- Author
-
David Martin, José L. Maestro, Xavier Franch-Marro, Mohammed Mahidur Rahman, Andreu Casali, European Research Council, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Generalitat de Catalunya, and European Commission
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Medicine ,Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Internal medicine ,Intestinal Neoplasms ,Coactivator ,medicine ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,lcsh:Science ,Receptor ,Cell Proliferation ,Multidisciplinary ,Cell growth ,Stem Cells ,lcsh:R ,Wnt signaling pathway ,Hormones ,Gastrointestinal Tract ,Juvenile Hormones ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Juvenile hormone ,Drosophila ,lcsh:Q ,Stem cell ,Corpus allatum ,Hormone - Abstract
Hormones play essential roles during development and maintaining homeostasis in adult organisms, regulating a plethora of biological processes. Generally, hormones are secreted by glands and perform a systemic action. Here we show that Juvenile Hormones (JHs), insect sesquiterpenoids synthesized by the corpora allata, are also synthesized by the adult Drosophila gut. This local, gut specific JH activity, is synthesized by and acts on the intestinal stem cell and enteroblast populations, regulating their survival and cellular growth through the JH receptors Gce/Met and the coactivator Tai. Furthermore, we show that this local JH activity is important for damage response and is necessary for intestinal tumor growth driven by activating mutations in Wnt and EGFR/Ras pathways. Together, our results identify JHs as key hormonal regulators of gut homeostasis and open the possibility that analogous hormones may play a similar role in maintaining vertebrate adult intestinal stem cell population and sustaining tumor growth., MMR was supported by the Marie Curie Cofund Fellowship under FP7 programme of the ERC. This work was supported by the MICINN (BFU2014-59781P) to AC and MICINN (CGL2014-55786P) and SGR-2014 from Catalan Government to XF-M and D. M. The research has also benefited from FEDER funds.
- Published
- 2017