C. elegans FOG-3/Tob can either promote or inhibit germline proliferation, depending on gene dosage and genetic context
Vertebrate Tob/BTG proteins inhibit cell proliferation when overexpressed in tissue-culture cells, and they can function as tumor suppressors in mice. The single Caenorhabditis elegans Tob/BTG ortholog, FOG-3, by contrast, was identified from its loss-of-function phenotype as a regulator of sperm fa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oncogene 2013-05, Vol.32 (21), p.2614-2621 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Vertebrate Tob/BTG proteins inhibit cell proliferation when overexpressed in tissue-culture cells, and they can function as tumor suppressors in mice. The single
Caenorhabditis elegans
Tob/BTG ortholog, FOG-3, by contrast, was identified from its loss-of-function phenotype as a regulator of sperm fate specification. Here we report that FOG-3 also regulates proliferation in the germline tissue. We first demonstrate that FOG-3 is a positive regulator of germline proliferation. Thus,
fog-3
null mutants possess fewer germ cells than normal, a modest but reproducible decrease observed for each of two distinct
fog-3
null alleles. A similar decrease also occurred in
fog-3/+
heterozygotes, again for both
fog-3
alleles, revealing a haplo-insufficient effect on proliferation. Therefore, FOG-3 normally promotes proliferation, and two copies of the
fog-3
gene are required for this function. We next overexpressed FOG-3 by removal of FBF, the collective term for FBF-1 and FBF-2, two nearly identical PUF RNA-binding proteins. We find that overexpressed FOG-3 blocks proliferation in
fbf-1 fbf-2
mutants; whereas germ cells stop dividing and instead differentiate in
fbf-1 fbf-2
double mutants, they continue to proliferate in
fog-3; fbf-1 fbf-2
triple mutants. Therefore, like its vertebrate Tob/BTG cousins, overexpressed FOG-3 is ‘antiproliferative’. Indeed, some
fog-3; fbf-1 fbf-2
mutants possess small tumors, suggesting that FOG-3 can act as a tumor suppressor. Finally, we show that FOG-3 and FBF work together to promote tumor formation in animals carrying oncogenic Notch mutations. A similar effect was not observed when germline tumors were induced by manipulation of other regulators; therefore, this FOG-3 tumor-promoting effect is context dependent. We conclude that FOG-3 can either promote or inhibit proliferation in a manner that is sensitive to both genetic context and gene dosage. The discovery of these FOG-3 effects on proliferation has implications for our understanding of vertebrate Tob/BTG proteins and their influence on normal development and tumorigenesis. |
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ISSN: | 0950-9232 1476-5594 |
DOI: | 10.1038/onc.2012.291 |