Asymmetric cell division

An asymmetric cell division produces two daughter cells with different cellular fates. This is in contrast to symmetric cell divisions which give rise to daughter cells of equivalent fates. Notably, stem cells divide asymmetrically to give rise to two distinct daughter cells: one copy of the original stem cell as well as a second daughter programmed to differentiate into a non-stem cell fate. (In times of growth or regeneration, stem cells can also divide symmetrically, to produce two identical copies of the original cell.[1])

In principle, there are two mechanisms by which distinct properties may be conferred on the daughters of a dividing cell. In one, the daughter cells are initially equivalent but a difference is induced by signaling between the cells, from surrounding cells, or from the precursor cell. This mechanism is known as extrinsic asymmetric cell division. In the second mechanism, the prospective daughter cells are inherently different at the time of division of the mother cell. Because this latter mechanism does not depend on interactions of cells with each other or with their environment, it must rely on intrinsic asymmetry. The term asymmetric cell division usually refers to such intrinsic asymmetric divisions [2]

Intrinsic asymmetry

In multi-celled organisms this mechanism raises two requirements: first, the mother cell must be polarized; second, the mitotic spindle must be aligned with the axis of polarity. The cell biology of these events has been most traditionally studied in three animal models: the mouse, the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster. Recent work in spiralian development has also discovered insightful mechanisms of asymmetric cell division.

Asymmetric cell division in C. elegans

Asymmetric cell divisions during the first steps of the embryogenesis of C. elegans.

In C. elegans, a series of asymmetric cell divisions in the early embryo are critical in setting up the anterior/posterior, dorsal/ventral, and left/right axes of the body plan.[3] After fertilization, events are already occurring in the one cell stage embryo to allow for the first asymmetric cell division. This first division produces two distinctly different blastomeres, termed AB and P1. When the sperm fertilizes the egg, the sperm nucleus and centrosomes are deposited within the egg, which causes a cytoplasmic flux resulting in the movement of the sperm pronucleus and centrosomes towards one pole.[4] The centrosomes deposited by the sperm seem to be responsible for the establishment of the posterior pole within the one cell embryo. Studies have shown that the pole in which the sperm-derived centrosomes reside always becomes the posterior pole.[5] Furthermore, sperm with mutant or absent centrosomes fail to establish a posterior pole, while enucleated sperm with intact centrosomes successfully fertilize the egg and set up the posterior pole.[6][7][8] The establishment of this polarity initiates the polarized distribution of a group of proteins present in the zygote called the PAR proteins (partitioning-defective), which are a conserved group of proteins that function in establishing cell polarity during development.[9] These proteins are initially distributed uniformly throughout the zygote and then become polarized with the creation of the posterior pole. This series of events allows the single celled zygote to obtain polarity through an unequal distribution of multiple factors.

The single cell is now set up to undergo an asymmetric cell division, however the orientation in which the division occurs is also an important factor. The mitotic spindle must be oriented correctly to ensure that the proper cell fate determinants are distributed appropriately to the daughter cells. The alignment of the spindle is mediated by the PAR proteins, which regulate the positioning of the centrosomes along the A/P axis as well as the movement of the mitotic spindle along the A/P axis.[10] Following this first asymmetric division, the AB daughter cell divides symmetrically, giving rise to ABa and ABp, while the P1 daughter cell undergoes another asymmetric cell division to produce P2 and EMS. This division is also dependent on the distribution of the PAR proteins.[11]

Asymmetric cell division of Drosophila neuroblasts

Numb (blue) is asymmetrically distributed within the neuroblast. Following cell division, the GMC contains the Numb protein which suppresses Notch signaling. The other daughter cell is receptive to Notch signaling, causing distinct cellular responses, and ultimately two distinct cell fates between the daughter cells.

In Drosophila melanogaster, asymmetric cell division plays an important role in neural development. Neuroblasts are the progenitor cells which divide asymmetrically to give rise to another neuroblast and a ganglion mother cell (GMC). The neuroblast repeatedly undergoes this asymmetric cell division while the GMC continues on to produce a pair of neurons. Two proteins play an important role in setting up this asymmetry in the neuroblast, Prospero and Numb. These proteins are both synthesized in the neuroblast and segregate into only the GMC during divisions.[12] Numb is a suppressor of Notch, therefore the asymmetric segregation of Numb to the basal cortex biases the response of the daughter cells to Notch signaling, resulting in two distinct cell fates.[13] Prospero is required for gene regulation in GMCs. It is equally distributed throughout the neuroblast cytoplasm, but becomes localized at the basal cortex when the neuroblast starts to undergo mitosis. Once the GMC buds off from the basal cortex, Prospero becomes translocated into the GMC nucleus to act as a transcription factor.[12]

Other proteins present in the neuroblast mediate the asymmetric localization of Numb and Prospero. Miranda is an anchoring protein that binds to Prospero and keeps it in the basal cortex. Following the generation of the GMC, Miranda releases Prospero and then becomes degraded.[12][14] The segregation of Numb is mediated by Pon (the partner of Numb protein). Pon binds to Numb and colocalizes with it during neuroblast cell division.[12]

The mitotic spindle must also align parallel to the asymmetrically distributed cell fate determinants to allow them to become segregated into one daughter cell and not the other. The mitotic spindle orientation is mediated by Inscuteable, which is segregated to the apical cortex of the neuroblast. Without the presence of Inscuteable, the positioning of the mitotic spindle and the cell fate determinants in relationship to each other becomes randomized. Inscuteable mutants display a uniform distribution of Miranda and Numb at the cortex, and the resulting daughter cells display identical neuronal fates.[12]

Asymmetric cell division in Spiralian development

Spiralia (commonly synonymous with lophotrochozoa) represent a diverse clade of animals whose species comprise the bulk of the bilaterian animals present today. Examples include mollusks, annelid worms, and the entoprocta. Although much is known at the cellular and molecular level about the other bilateralian clades (ecdysozoa and deuterostomia), research into the processes that govern spiralian development is comparatively lacking. However, one unifying feature shared among spiralia is the pattern of cleavage in the early embryo known as spiral cleavage.[15]

Mechanisms of asymmetric division (See Figure, right panel):

Asymmetric cell division is integral during development. In spiralia, the first cleavage can be either symmetric or asymmetric, as shown in the left panel. Asymmetry can be accomplished through simple unequal segregation of cell fate determinants across a single plane, through sequestration of cell fate determinants in a polar lobe which is absorbed by one of the daughter cells, or a combination of both processes. The right panel summarizes the mechanisms of spiralian asymmetric cleavage discussed here. Red features indicate the molecule(s) implicated in establishing asymmetry.

Asymmetric division in development

Animals are made up of a vast number of distinct cell types. During development, the zygote undergoes many cell divisions that give rise to various cell types, including embryonic stem cells. Asymmetric divisions of these embryonic cells gives rise to one cell of the same potency (self-renewal), and another that maybe of the same potency or stimulated to further differentiate into specialized cell types such as neurons. This stimulated differentiation arises from many factors which can be divided into two broad categories: intrinsic and extrinsic. Intrinsic factors generally involve differing amounts of cell-fate determinants being distributed into each daughter cell. Extrinsic factors involve interactions with neighboring cells and the micro and macro environment of the precursor cell.[19]

In addition to the aforementioned Drosophila neuronal example, it was proposed that the macrosensory organs of the Drosophila, specifically the glial cells, also arise from a similar set of asymmetric division from a single progenitor cell via regulation of the Notch signaling pathway and transcription factors.[20] An example of how extrinsic factors bring about this phenomenon is the physical displacement of one of the daughter cells out of the original stem cell niche, exposing it to signalling molecules such as chondroitin sulfate.[21] In this manner, the daughter cell is forced to interact with the heavily sulfated molecules, which stimulate it to differentiate while the other daughter cell remains in the original niche in a quiescent state.

Role of asymmetric cell division in disease

In normal stem and progenitor cells, asymmetric cell division balances proliferation and self-renewal with cell-cycle exit and differentiation. Disruption of asymmetric cell division leads to aberrant self-renewal and impairs differentiation, and could therefore constitute an early step in the tumorogenic transformation of stem and progenitor cells. In normal non-tumor stem cells, a number of genes have been described which are responsible for pluripotency, such as Bmi-1, Wnt and Notch. These genes have been discovered also in the case of cancer stem cells, and shows that their aberrant expression is essential for the formation of tumor cell mass.[22] For example, it has been shown that gastrointestinal cancers contain rare subpopulation of cancer stem cells which are capable to divide asymmetrically. The asymmetric division in these cells is regulated by cancer niche (microenvironment) and Wnt pathway. Blocking the Wnt pathway with IWP2 (WNT antagonist) or siRNA-TCF4 resulted in high suppression of asymmetric cell division.[23]

Another mutation in asymmetric cell divisions which are involved in tumor growth are loss-of-function mutations. The first suggestion that loss of asymmetric cell division might be involved in tumorigenesis came from studies of Drosophila. Studies of loss-of-function mutations in key regulators of asymmetric cell division including lgl, aurA, polo, numb and brat, revealed hyperproliferative phenotypes in situ. In these mutants cells divide more symmetrically and generate mis-specified progeny that fail to exit the cell cycle and differentiate, but rather proliferate continuously and form a tumor cell mass.[24]

References

  1. Morrison, S. J.; Kimble, J. (2006). "Asymmetric and symmetric stem-cell divisions in development and cancer". Nature. 441 (7097): 1068–1074. doi:10.1038/nature04956. PMID 16810241.
  2. Hawkins, Nancy; Garriga, Gian (1998). "Asymmetric cell division: from A to Z". Genes Dev. 12 (23): 3625–3638. doi:10.1101/gad.12.23.3625. PMID 9851969.
  3. Gönczy, P. and Rose, L.S. Asymmetric cell division and axis formation in the embryo (October 15, 2005), WormBook, ed. The C. elegans Research Community, WormBook, doi/10.1895/wormbook.1.30.1,
  4. Goldstein, B, Hird, SN. "Specification of the anteroposterior axis in Caenorhabditis elegans." Development 1996. 122:1467-74.
  5. Cowan, C; Hyman, A (2004). "Centrosomes direct cell polarity independently of microtubule assembly in C. elegans embryos". Nature. 431 (7004): 92–6. doi:10.1038/nature02825. PMID 15343338.
  6. O'; Connell, K. Maxwell; White, J. (2000). "The spd-2 gene is required for polarization of the anteroposterior axis and formation of the sperm asters in the Caenorhabditis elegans zygote". Developmental Biology. 222 (1): 55–70. doi:10.1006/dbio.2000.9714. PMID 10885746.
  7. Hamill, DR; Severson, AF; Carter, JC; Bowerman, B (2002). "Centrosome maturation and mitotic spindle assembly in C. elegans require SPD-5, a protein with multiple coiled-coil domains". Dev. Cell. 3 (5): 673–84. doi:10.1016/s1534-5807(02)00327-1. PMID 12431374.
  8. Sadler, PL; Shakes, DC (2000). "Anucleate Caenorhabditis elegans sperm can crawl, fertilize oocytes and direct anterior-posterior polarization of the 1-cell embryo". Development. 127 (2): 355–66. PMID 10603352.
  9. Cheeks, RJ; Canman, JC; Gabriel, WN; Meyer, N; Strome, S; Goldstein, B (2004). "C. elegans PAR proteins function by mobilizing and stabilizing asymmetrically localized protein complexes". Curr Biol. 14 (10): 851–62. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2004.05.022. PMID 15186741.
  10. Gönczy, P. and Rose, L.S. Asymmetric cell division and axis formation in the embryo (October 15, 2005), WormBook, ed. The C. elegans Research Community, WormBook, doi:10.1895/wormbook.1.30.1
  11. Schneider, SQ; Bowerman, B (2003). "Cell polarity and the cytoskeleton in the Caenorhabditis elegans zygote". Annu Rev Genet. 37: 221–49. doi:10.1146/annurev.genet.37.110801.142443. PMID 14616061.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Matsuzaki, F (2000). "Asymmetric division of Drosophila neural stem cells: a basis for neural diversity". Current Opinion in Neurobiology. 10 (1): 38–44. doi:10.1016/s0959-4388(99)00052-5. PMID 10679433.
  13. Guo, M; Jan, LY; Jan, YN (1996). "Control of daughter cell fates during asymmetric division: interaction of Numb and Notch". Neuron. 17 (1): 27–41. doi:10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80278-0. PMID 8755476.
  14. Ikeshima-Kataoka, H; Skeath, JB; Nabeshima, Y; Doe, CQ; Matsuzaki, F (1997). "Miranda directs Prospero to a daughter cell during Drosophila asymmetric divisions". Nature. 390 (6660): 625–629. doi:10.1038/37641. PMID 9403694.
  15. Henry, Jonathan J.; Martindale, Mark Q. (1999). "Conservation and innovation in spiralian development". Hydrobiologia. 402: 255–265. doi:10.1007/978-94-017-2887-4_15. ISBN 978-90-481-5340-4.
  16. 1 2 Shimizu, T.; et al. (1998). "Unequal Cleavage in the early Tubifex Embryo". Develop. Growth Differ. 40 (3): 257–266. doi:10.1046/j.1440-169x.1998.00001.x.
  17. 1 2 Ren, Xiaoyun; Weisblat, David A. (2006). "Asymmetrization of first cleavage by transient disassembly of one spindle pole aster in the leech Helobdella robusta". Developmental Biology. 292 (1): 103–115. doi:10.1016/j.ydbio.2005.12.049. PMID 16458880.
  18. 1 2 Lambert, J. David; Nagy, Lisa M. (2002). "Asymmetric inheritance of centrosomally localized mRNAs during embryonic cleavages". Nature. 420 (6916): 682–6. doi:10.1038/nature01241. PMID 12478296.
  19. Jan, Y. N. & Jan, L. Y. (1998). "Asymmetric cell division". Nature. 392 (6678): 775–778. doi:10.1038/33854. PMID 9572136.
  20. Gho, M.; Bellaiche, Y.; Schweisguth, F. (1999). "Revisiting the Drosophila microchaete lineage: a novel intrinsically asymmetric cell division generates a glial cell". Development. 126: 573–3584.
  21. Hayes, A. J.; Tudor, D.; Nowell, M. A.; Caterson, B.; Hughes, C. E (2008). "Chondroitin sulfate sulfation motifs as putative biomarkers for isolation of articular cartilage progenitor cells". J Histochem Cytochem. 56 (2): 125–138. doi:10.1369/jhc.7a7320.2007. PMC 2324172Freely accessible. PMID 17938280.
  22. Gómez-López, Sandra; Lerner, Robin G.; Petritsch, Claudia (2013). "Asymmetric cell division of stem and progenitor cells during homeostasis and cancer". Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences. 71 (4): 575–97. doi:10.1007/s00018-013-1386-1. PMC 3901929Freely accessible. PMID 23771628.
  23. Xin, H. W.; Ambe, C. M.; Ray, S.; Kim, B. K.; Koizumi, T.; Wiegand, G. W.; Hari, D.; Mullinax, J. E.; Jaiswal, K. R.; Garfield, S. H.; Stojadinovic, A.; Rudloff, U.; Thorgeirsson, S. S.; Avital, I. (2013). "Wnt and the cancer niche: paracrine interactions with gastrointestinal cancer cells undergoing asymmetric cell division". J Cancer. 4 (6): 447–457. doi:10.7150/jca.6896. PMC 3726705Freely accessible. PMID 23901343.
  24. Gonzalez, C. (2007). "Spindle orientation, asymmetric division and tumour suppression in Drosophila stem cells". Nat Rev Genet. 8 (6): 462–472. doi:10.1038/nrg2103. PMID 17510666.

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/31/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.