ReferenceID 3563

Warts Signaling Controls Organ and Body Growth through Regulation of Ecdysone

Curr Biol

Coordination of growth between individual organs and the whole body is essential during development to produce adults with appropriate size and proportions [1, 2]. How local organ-intrinsic signals and nutrient-dependen

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Reference Id
3563
Evidence Id
20153
Core Evidence Id
20153
Source Reference Id
459
Herb2 Reference Id
HBREF000786
Subject Paper Key
HBIN024784_28528906
Pubmed Id
28528906
Doi
10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.048
Paper Title
Warts Signaling Controls Organ and Body Growth through Regulation of Ecdysone
Paper Abstract
Coordination of growth between individual organs and the whole body is essential during development to produce adults with appropriate size and proportions [1, 2]. How local organ-intrinsic signals and nutrient-dependent systemic factors are integrated to generate correctly proportioned organisms under different environmental conditions is poorly understood. In Drosophila, Hippo/Warts signaling functions intrinsically to regulate tissue growth and organ size [3, 4], whereas systemic growth is controlled via antagonistic interactions of the steroid hormone ecdysone and nutrient-dependent insulin/insulin-like growth factor (IGF) (insulin) signaling [2, 5]. The interplay between insulin and ecdysone signaling regulates systemic growth and controls organismal size. Here, we show that Warts (Wts; LATS1/2) signaling regulates systemic growth in Drosophila by activating basal ecdysone production, which negatively regulates body growth. Further, we provide evidence that Wts mediates effects of insulin and the neuropeptide prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) on regulation of ecdysone production through Yorkie (Yki; YAP/TAZ) and the microRNA bantam (ban). Thus, Wts couples insulin signaling with ecdysone production to adjust systemic growth in response to nutritional conditions during development. Inhibition of Wts activity in the ecdysone-producing cells non-autonomously slows the growth of the developing imaginal-disc tissues while simultaneously leading to overgrowth of the animal. This indicates that ecdysone, while restricting overall body growth, is limiting for growth of certain organs. Our data show that, in addition to its well-known intrinsic role in restricting organ growth, Wts/Yki/ban signaling also controls growth systemically by regulating ecdysone production, a mechanism that we propose controls growth between tissues and organismal size in response to nutrient availability.
Journal
Curr Biol
Publish Year
2017
Experiment Subject
drosophila
Experiment Type
Animal Experiment
Phenotype Related
Paper Title Cn
Paper Title En
Warts Signaling Controls Organ and Body Growth through Regulation of Ecdysone
Bilingual Status
semi_complete