Dlg, Scrib and Lgl regulate neuroblast cell size and mitotic spindle asymmetry
- 27 January 2003
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Cell Biology
- Vol. 5 (2) , 166-170
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ncb922
Abstract
Asymmetric cell division is important in generating cell diversity from bacteria to mammals. Drosophila melanogaster neuroblasts are a useful model system for investigating asymmetric cell division because they establish distinct apical-basal cortical domains, have an asymmetric mitotic spindle aligned along the apical-basal axis, and divide unequally to produce a large apical neuroblast and a small basal daughter cell (GMC). Here we show that Discs large (Dlg), Scribble (Scrib) and Lethal giant larvae (Lgl) tumour suppressor proteins regulate multiple aspects of neuroblast asymmetric cell division. Dlg/Scrib/Lgl proteins show apical cortical enrichment at prophase/metaphase, and then have a uniform cortical distribution. Mutants have defects in basal protein targeting, a reduced apical cortical domain and reduced apical spindle size. Defects in apical cell and spindle pole size result in symmetric or inverted neuroblast cell divisions. Inverted divisions correlate with the appearance of abnormally small neuroblasts and large GMCs, showing that neuroblast/GMC identity is more tightly linked to cortical determinants than cell size. We conclude that Dlg/Scrib/Lgl are important in regulating cortical polarity, cell size asymmetry and mitotic spindle asymmetry in Drosophila neuroblasts.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Recruitment of Scribble to the Synaptic Scaffolding Complex Requires GUK-holder, a Novel DLG Binding ProteinCurrent Biology, 2002
- Asymmetric cell division: fly neuroblast meets worm zygoteCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 2001
- Asymmetric cell division during animal developmentNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2001
- DmPAR-6 directs epithelial polarity and asymmetric cell division of neuroblasts in DrosophilaNature Cell Biology, 2000
- Role of cortical tumour-suppressor proteins in asymmetric division of Drosophila neuroblastNature, 2000
- The tumour-suppressor genes lgl and dlg regulate basal protein targeting in Drosophila neuroblastsNature, 2000
- Drosophila Atypical Protein Kinase C Associates with Bazooka and Controls Polarity of Epithelia and NeuroblastsThe Journal of cell biology, 2000
- Cooperative Regulation of Cell Polarity and Growth by Drosophila Tumor SuppressorsScience, 2000
- Bazooka recruits Inscuteable to orient asymmetric cell divisions in Drosophila neuroblastsNature, 1999
- Role of inscuteable in orienting asymmetric cell divisions in DrosophilaNature, 1996