Novel Beta-catenin Regulatory Mechanisms in C. elegans Asymmetric Cell Divisions

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $292,592 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Asymmetric cell division (ACD) critically controls the fates of dividing stem cells during normal embryonic development and misregulation of ACD is implicated in tumorigenesis. β-catenin, a key transcriptional effector of Wnt signaling, is negatively regulated by a destruction complex containing casein kinase Iα (CK1α) and two scaffolds, Axin and APC, which trigger β-catenin degradation. Wnt signaling inhibits this complex through the Frizzled (Fz) receptor and its effector Dishevelled (Dvl), allowing β-catenin to accumulate. However, the mechanisms that regulate the differential accumulation of β-catenin after ACD are unclear in any system. Elucidating these mechanisms would provide broadly important insight into cell fate specification. Our objective is to determine the mechanisms of β-catenin regulation during ACD. C. elegans exhibits Wnt-regulated asymmetric stem cell divisions where only one of the daughter cells activates Wnt target genes. These ACDs thus provide an ideally powerful experimental model for understanding Wnt signaling in an intact organism. We have found that the C. elegans β-catenin, SYS-1, is regulated by an ortholog of the vertebrate destruction complex component, APR-1/APC, which asymmetrically localizes to one pole of the dividing cell and control asymmetric SYS-1 levels after ACD. We will test the central hypothesis that, because tight control of SYS-1 regulation is required, multiple SYS-1 negative regulatory mechanisms are needed in ACD. Supporting this, we have shown that PRY-1/Axin is required to establish the site of SYS-1 destruction by localizing APR-1/APC. We have also shown that SYS-1 is negatively regulated by localization to mother cell centrosomes during ACD. Our data also implicate an asymmetric nuclear export mechanism in the unsignaled daughter. We propose to: Aim 1. Determine the mechanism by which asymmetric PRY-1/Axin activity is achieved. To test our hypothesis that Wnt ligands activate a Fz/Dvl-based PRY-1 polarization mechanism, we will: A) determine the location of the functional destruction complex during normal ACD and after optogenetically inducing Wnt expression to alter mother cell polarity, B) examine the ability of Dvl to generate “signalosomes” and inactivate the destruction complex and C) identify the protein interactions that lead to asymmetric PRY-1/Axin activity. Aim 2. Determine the mechanism of centrosomal control of SYS-1-dependent cell fate. To test our hypothesis that mother cell SYS-1 localizes to the centrosome and is degraded during ACD, we will A) conduct pulse- chase assays using a photoconvertible SYS-1 to examine centrosomal SYS-1 inheritance, B) genetically place centrosomal regulators in the Wnt pathway, C) examine the whether centrosomal SYS-1 regulation is microtubule-dependent and D) extend our analyses to human β-catenin. Aim 3. Determine the role of nuclear export in asymmetric SYS-1 nuclear accumulation. To test the hypothesis that asymmetric SYS-1 nuclear export occ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
9994750
Project number
5R01GM114007-05
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
Principal Investigator
BRYAN T PHILLIPS
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$292,592
Award type
5
Project period
2016-09-01 → 2023-08-31