# Regulation of proliferation and differentiation in the male germ line adult stem cell lineage

> **NIH NIH R35** · STANFORD UNIVERSITY · 2024 · $851,548

## Abstract

Project Summary / Abstract
The switch from proliferation to differentiation is a key regulatory point in the adult stem cell lineages that
underlie tissue maintenance and repair, and failure to cleanly switch may contribute to genesis of cancer. My
laboratory has long used the Drosophila male germ line as a model to investigate how self-renewal,
proliferation and differentiation are regulated in adult stem cell lineages. Several lines of our inquiry have
recently converged on the molecular mechanisms underlying the developmentally programmed transition from
mitotic proliferation to onset of meiosis and differentiation, implicating a number of molecular and cellular
mechanisms in regulating this critical switch. We find that RNA binding proteins involved in translational control
and alternative splicing act cell autonomously to regulate the cessation of proliferation and that progression of
differentiation requires communication from associated somatic support cells. We discovered that a
developmentally regulated alternate choice of site at which certain nascent transcripts are cut to form 3' ends,
leading to production of novel mRNA isoforms with shortened 3'UTRs, controls dramatic changes in the suite
of proteins expressed in differentiating spermatocytes compared to proliferating spermatogonia. We found that
dramatic changes in chromatin open over 2000 new promoters with novel core sequence structure to turn on
the new cell type specific transcription program when cells initiate spermatocyte differentiation. Some of the
earliest genes turned on in this differentiation program encode chromatin associated proteins that prevent
spurious opening of normally cryptic promoters, thus preventing massive misexpression of genes associated
with the wrong cell type. Other transcripts upregulated with differentiation onset encode cell type-specific
translational regulators that delay production of core G2/M cell cycle machinery to program the extended G2
phase of meiotic prophase. Over the next 5 years, we propose to map how these processes collaborate to
form the regulatory circuitry that initiates then executes the switch from proliferation to differentiation. We will
investigate how the RNA binding proteins Bam and Bgcn trigger the switch from mitosis to meiosis by
repressing expression of the alternative splice factor HOW, identify candidate substrates of HOW by
immunoprecipitation followed by RNA-Seq, and assess their function in vivo, including whether they
communicate with adjacent somatic support cells. We will investigate how the switch in proteins expressed
due to alternative 3' end cut site selection on nascent transcripts is regulated and influences differentiation.
We will investigate how the differentiation program is kept off in precursor cells and how cell-type specific
chromatin regulators and proteins that recruit them to target loci set up the new transcription program for
differentiation. To elucidate how the developmental program remode...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10852017
- **Project number:** 5R35GM136433-05
- **Recipient organization:** STANFORD UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** MARGARET T FULLER
- **Activity code:** R35 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $851,548
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2020-06-01 → 2025-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10852017

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10852017, Regulation of proliferation and differentiation in the male germ line adult stem cell lineage (5R35GM136433-05). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-21 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10852017. Licensed CC0.

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