Publication: Discovery of Progenitor Cell Signatures by Time-Series Synexpression Analysis During Drosophila Embryonic Cell Immortalization
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2015-10-20
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National Academy of Sciences
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Dequeant, Mary-Lee, Delphine Fagegaltier, Yanhui Hu, Kerstin Spirohn, Amanda Simcox, Gregory J. Hannon, Norbert Perrimon. "Discovery of Progenitor Cell Signatures by Time-Series Synexpression Analysis During Drosophila Embryonic Cell Immortalization." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112, no. 42 (2015): 12974-12979. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1517729112
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Abstract
The use of time series profiling to identify groups of functionally related genes (synexpression groups) is a powerful approach for the discovery of gene function. Here we apply this strategy during RasV12 immortalization of Drosophila embryonic cells, a phenomenon not well characterized. Using high-resolution transcriptional time-series datasets, we generated a gene network based on temporal expression profile similarities. This analysis revealed that common immortalized cells are related to adult muscle precursors (AMPs), a stem cell-like population contributing to adult muscles and sharing properties with vertebrate satellite cells. Remarkably, the immortalized cells retained the capacity for myogenic differentiation when treated with the steroid hormone ecdysone. Further, we validated in vivo the transcription factor CG9650, the ortholog of mammalian Bcl11a/b, as a regulator of AMP proliferation predicted by our analysis. Our study demonstrates the power of time series synexpression analysis to characterize Drosophila embryonic progenitor lines and identify stem/progenitor cell regulators.
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