Abstract

Niche cell enwrapment of stem cells and their differentiating progeny is common and provides a specialized signaling and protective environment. Elucidating the mechanisms underlying enwrapment behavior has important basic and clinical significance in not only understanding how niches are formed and maintained, but also how they can be engineered and how they are misregulated in human pathologies such as cancer. Previous work in C. elegans found that when germ cells, which are enwrapped by somatic gonadal niche cells, are freed into the body cavity, they embed into other tissues. We investigated this phenomenon using live cell imaging and discovered that ectopic germ cells preferentially induce body wall muscle to extend cellular processes that enwrap the germ cells, the extent of which was strikingly similar to the distal tip cell (DTC)-germ stem cell niche. Enwrapment was specific for ectopic germ cells, and genetic analysis revealed it did not depend on pathways that control cell death and engulfment or muscle arm extension. Instead, using a large-scale RNAi screen and GFP knock-in strains, we discovered that the enwrapping behavior of muscle relied upon the same suite of cell-cell adhesion molecules that functioned in the endogenous niche: the C. elegans E-cadherin HMR-1, its intracellular associates a-catenin (HMP-1) and β-catenin (HMP-2A), and the L1CAM protein SAX-7. This ectopic niche-like behavior resembles the seed and soil model of cancer metastasis and offers a new model to understand factors regulating ectopic niche formation.

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