Abstract

In the Drosophila oogenesis, germline stem cells (GSCs) continuously self-renew and differentiate into daughter cells for consecutive germline lineage commitment. This developmental process has become an in vivo working platform for studying adult stem cell fate regulation. An increasing number of studies have shown that while concerted actions of extrinsic signals from the niche and intrinsic regulatory machineries control GSC self-renewal and germline differentiation, epigenetic regulation is implicated in the process. Here, we report that Brahma (Brm), the ATPase subunit of the Drosophila SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complexes, is required for maintaining GSC fate. Removal or knockdown of Brm function in either germline or niche cells causes a GSC loss, but does not disrupt normal germline differentiation within the germarium evidenced at the molecular and morphological levels. There are two Drosophila SWI/SNF complexes: the Brm-associated protein (BAP) complex and the polybromo-containing BAP (PBAP) complex. More genetic studies reveal that mutations in polybromo/bap180, rather than gene encoding Osa, the BAP complex-specific subunit, elicit a defect in GSC maintenance reminiscent of the brm mutant phenotype. Further genetic interaction test suggests a functional association between brm and polybromo in controlling GSC self-renewal. Taken together, studies in this paper provide the first demonstration that Brm in the form of the PBAP complex functions in the GSC fate regulation.

Highlights

  • Drosophila oogenesis begins with the asymmetric division of the germline stem cells (GSCs) at the anterior tip of the germarium in the ovary [1]

  • Recent studies have shown that the Brm-associated protein (BAP) complex, one of the Drosophila SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complexes, regulates stem cell lineage commitment and stem cell proliferation in the adult Drosophila intestine [45,46]

  • To determine if loss-of-function mutations in brm perturb GSC self-renewal, we performed a clonal analysis in which GSC clones homozygous for either the mutant allele of brm or wild type control are generated by FLP/FRT-based mitotic recombination

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Summary

Introduction

Drosophila oogenesis begins with the asymmetric division of the germline stem cells (GSCs) at the anterior tip of the germarium in the ovary [1]. Genetic studies revealed that Brm, the ATPase subunit of the SWI/SNF complexes, is required intrinsically and extrinsically for maintaining GSCs, but not for germline differentiation within the germarium.

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