Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system

<p>The deregulation of caspase activity and stem cell properties are often correlated with the appearance and propagation of cancer, including colorectal cancer. However, the caspase-dependent regulation of the intestinal system remains poorly understood. Taking advantage of the powerful genet...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Arthurton, L
Other Authors: Baena-Lopez, A
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
_version_ 1817932780870303744
author Arthurton, L
author2 Baena-Lopez, A
author_facet Baena-Lopez, A
Arthurton, L
author_sort Arthurton, L
collection OXFORD
description <p>The deregulation of caspase activity and stem cell properties are often correlated with the appearance and propagation of cancer, including colorectal cancer. However, the caspase-dependent regulation of the intestinal system remains poorly understood. Taking advantage of the powerful genetic tractability of <em>Drosophila melanogaster</em>, I aimed to decipher the functional role of the caspases within the intestinal system, in addition to their role in tumour formation. In this thesis, I demonstrated that using an apical-caspase reporter, I was able to observe widespread and stereotyped patterns of caspase activation within the intestinal system. Furthermore, this activation was non-apoptotic and occurred in non-regenerative conditions. Upon conditional knockout of the mammalian <em>caspase-9/2</em> orthologue, <em>Dronc</em>, in intestinal progenitors, I demonstrated that Dronc was required to restrain proliferation and prevent the premature differentiation of Enteroblasts into Enteroctytes. Additionally, this activity of Dronc relied on its catalytic activity but not the canonical apoptotic pathway. Using a Dronc-protein reporter I was able to correlate these functions with its specific accumulation within the Enteroblasts. Molecularly, the non-apoptotic activity of Dronc in this context relies on the activity of the Notch and Insulin-TOR pathways. Using the Drop-seq single-cell sequencing technique, I observed the misexpression of several regional and cell-specific genes following loss of <em>Dronc</em>. Furthermore, these Dronc-specific effects may result in the deregulation of the intestinal microbiota. Collectively, this data provides novels insights into the caspase-dependent but non-apoptotic regulation of the intestinal system in non-regenerative conditions. Furthermore, these findings could explain the correlation between caspase-9 misexpression and the bad prognosis observed in patients suffering from colon cancer. </p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:56:40Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:397ebd2d-e77a-4d76-8a35-2112d94bb4dd
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:43:22Z
publishDate 2019
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:397ebd2d-e77a-4d76-8a35-2112d94bb4dd2024-12-07T14:27:54ZElucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal systemThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:397ebd2d-e77a-4d76-8a35-2112d94bb4ddnon-apoptoticIntestineCell Biologycaspase-9caspasegutCancerDrosophila melanogasterDroncEnglishORA Deposit2019Arthurton, LBaena-Lopez, AWilson, CMcGregor, A<p>The deregulation of caspase activity and stem cell properties are often correlated with the appearance and propagation of cancer, including colorectal cancer. However, the caspase-dependent regulation of the intestinal system remains poorly understood. Taking advantage of the powerful genetic tractability of <em>Drosophila melanogaster</em>, I aimed to decipher the functional role of the caspases within the intestinal system, in addition to their role in tumour formation. In this thesis, I demonstrated that using an apical-caspase reporter, I was able to observe widespread and stereotyped patterns of caspase activation within the intestinal system. Furthermore, this activation was non-apoptotic and occurred in non-regenerative conditions. Upon conditional knockout of the mammalian <em>caspase-9/2</em> orthologue, <em>Dronc</em>, in intestinal progenitors, I demonstrated that Dronc was required to restrain proliferation and prevent the premature differentiation of Enteroblasts into Enteroctytes. Additionally, this activity of Dronc relied on its catalytic activity but not the canonical apoptotic pathway. Using a Dronc-protein reporter I was able to correlate these functions with its specific accumulation within the Enteroblasts. Molecularly, the non-apoptotic activity of Dronc in this context relies on the activity of the Notch and Insulin-TOR pathways. Using the Drop-seq single-cell sequencing technique, I observed the misexpression of several regional and cell-specific genes following loss of <em>Dronc</em>. Furthermore, these Dronc-specific effects may result in the deregulation of the intestinal microbiota. Collectively, this data provides novels insights into the caspase-dependent but non-apoptotic regulation of the intestinal system in non-regenerative conditions. Furthermore, these findings could explain the correlation between caspase-9 misexpression and the bad prognosis observed in patients suffering from colon cancer. </p>
spellingShingle non-apoptotic
Intestine
Cell Biology
caspase-9
caspase
gut
Cancer
Drosophila melanogaster
Dronc
Arthurton, L
Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title_full Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title_fullStr Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title_full_unstemmed Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title_short Elucidating the non-apoptotic role of the caspases in the Drosophila intestinal system
title_sort elucidating the non apoptotic role of the caspases in the drosophila intestinal system
topic non-apoptotic
Intestine
Cell Biology
caspase-9
caspase
gut
Cancer
Drosophila melanogaster
Dronc
work_keys_str_mv AT arthurtonl elucidatingthenonapoptoticroleofthecaspasesinthedrosophilaintestinalsystem