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1.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2800: 1-10, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38709473

ABSTRACT

The fruit fly Drosophila is a well-established invertebrate model that enables in vivo imaging of innate immune cell (e.g., macrophage) migration and signaling at high spatiotemporal resolution within the intact, living animal. While optimized methods already exist to enable flow cytometry-based macrophage isolation from Drosophila at various stages of development, there remains a need for more rapid and gentle methods to isolate living macrophages for downstream ex vivo applications. Here, we describe techniques for rapid and direct isolation of living macrophages from mature Drosophila pupae and their downstream ex vivo preparation for live imaging and immunostaining. This strategy enables straightforward access to physiologically relevant innate immune cells, both circulating and tissue-resident populations, for subsequent imaging of signal transduction.


Subject(s)
Macrophages , Pupa , Animals , Pupa/cytology , Macrophages/cytology , Macrophages/metabolism , Drosophila , Cell Separation/methods , Flow Cytometry/methods , Drosophila melanogaster/cytology
2.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 8405, 2023 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38110414

ABSTRACT

Precise coupling between cellular physiology and metabolism is emerging as a vital relationship underpinning tissue health and longevity. Nevertheless, functional-metabolic coupling within heterogenous microenvironments in vivo remains poorly understood due to tissue complexity and metabolic plasticity. Here, we establish the Drosophila renal system as a paradigm for linking mechanistic analysis of metabolism, at single-cell resolution, to organ-wide physiology. Kidneys are amongst the most energetically-demanding organs, yet exactly how individual cell types fine-tune metabolism to meet their diverse, unique physiologies over the life-course remains unclear. Integrating live-imaging of metabolite and organelle dynamics with spatio-temporal genetic perturbation within intact functional tissue, we uncover distinct cellular metabolic signatures essential to support renal physiology and healthy ageing. Cell type-specific programming of glucose handling, PPP-mediated glutathione regeneration and FA ß-oxidation via dynamic lipid-peroxisomal networks, downstream of differential ERR receptor activity, precisely match cellular energetic demands whilst limiting damage and premature senescence; however, their dramatic dysregulation may underlie age-related renal dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Aging, Premature , Kidney , Humans , Kidney/metabolism , Mitochondria/metabolism , Oxidation-Reduction , Longevity , Aging, Premature/metabolism
3.
J Cell Biol ; 222(6)2023 06 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36995284

ABSTRACT

Phagosomal reactive oxygen species (ROS) are strategically employed by leukocytes to kill internalized pathogens and degrade cellular debris. Nevertheless, uncontrolled oxidant bursts could cause serious collateral damage to phagocytes or other host tissues, potentially accelerating aging and compromising host viability. Immune cells must, therefore, activate robust self-protective programs to mitigate these undesired effects, and yet allow crucial cellular redox signaling. Here, we dissect in vivo the molecular nature of these self-protective pathways, their precise mode of activation, and physiological effects. We reveal Drosophila embryonic macrophages activate the redox-sensitive transcription factor Nrf2 upon corpse engulfment during immune surveillance, downstream of calcium- and PI3K-dependent ROS release by phagosomal Nox. By transcriptionally activating the antioxidant response, Nrf2 not only curbs oxidative damage but preserves vital immune functions (including inflammatory migration) and delays the acquisition of senescence-like features. Strikingly, macrophage Nrf2 also acts non-autonomously to limit ROS-induced collateral damage to surrounding tissues. Cytoprotective strategies may thus offer powerful therapeutic opportunities for alleviating inflammatory or age-related diseases.


Subject(s)
Calcium , Macrophages , NF-E2-Related Factor 2 , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases , Calcium/metabolism , Leukocytes/metabolism , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/genetics , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , Oxidative Stress , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/genetics , Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Phagosomes , Drosophila/immunology , Animals , Oxidation-Reduction , Macrophages/metabolism
4.
iScience ; 25(8): 104778, 2022 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35996582

ABSTRACT

Wound healing is an aspect of normal physiology that we all take for granted until it goes wrong, such as, for example, the scarring that results from a severe burn, or those patients who suffer from debilitating chronic wounds that fail to heal. Ever since wound repair research began as a discipline, clinicians and basic scientists have collaborated to try and understand the cell and molecular mechanisms that underpin healthy repair in the hope that this will reveal clues for the therapeutic treatment of pathological healing. In recent decades mathematicians and physicists have begun to join in with this important challenge. Here we describe examples of how mathematical modeling married to biological experimentation has provided insights that biology alone could not fathom. To date, these studies have largely focused on wound re-epithelialization and inflammation, but we also discuss other components of wound healing that might be ripe for similar interdisciplinary approaches.

5.
Free Radic Biol Med ; 188: 287-297, 2022 08 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35753585

ABSTRACT

5-methoxy tryptophan (5-MTP) is an anti-fibrotic metabolite made by fibroblasts and epithelial cells, present in a micromolar concentrations in human blood, and is associated with the progression of fibrotic kidney disease, but the mechanism is unclear. Here, we show by microscopy and functional assays that 5-MTP influences mitochondria in human peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages. As a result, the mitochondrial membranes are more rigid, more branched, and are protected against oxidation. The macrophages also change their metabolism by reducing mitochondrial import of acyl-carnitines, intermediates of fatty acid metabolism, driving glucose import. Moreover, 5-MTP increases the endocytosis of collagen by macrophages, and experiments with inhibition of glucose uptake showed that this is a direct result of their altered metabolism. However, 5-MTP does not affect the macrophages following pathogenic stimulation, due to 5-MTP degradation by induced expression of indole-amine oxygenase-1 (IDO-1). Thus, 5-MTP is a fibrosis-protective metabolite that, in absence of pathogenic stimulation, promotes collagen uptake by anti-inflammatory macrophages by altering the physicochemical properties of their mitochondrial membranes.


Subject(s)
Macrophages , Tryptophan , Collagen/metabolism , Fibrosis , Humans , Macrophages/metabolism , Mitochondria/metabolism , Tryptophan/metabolism , Tryptophan/pharmacology
6.
Development ; 148(8)2021 04 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33913484

ABSTRACT

Body tissues are frequently exposed to stress, from toxic byproducts generated during cellular metabolism through to infection or wounding. Although it is well-established that tissues respond to exogenous injury by rapidly upregulating cytoprotective machinery, how energetically demanding tissues - vulnerable to persistent endogenous insult - withstand stress is poorly understood. Here, we show that the cytoprotective factors Nrf2 and Gadd45 act within a specific renal cell subtype, the energetically and biosynthetically active 'principal' cells, to drive stress resilience during Drosophila renal development and homeostasis. Renal tubules lacking Gadd45 exhibit striking morphogenetic defects (with cell death, inflammatory infiltration and reduced ploidy) and accumulate significant DNA damage in post-embryonic life. In parallel, the transcription factor Nrf2 is active during periods of intense renal physiological activity, where it protects metabolically active renal cells from oxidative damage. Despite its constitutive nature, renal cytoprotective activity must be precisely balanced and sustained at modest sub-injury levels; indeed, further experimental elevation dramatically perturbs renal development and function. We suggest that tissues requiring long-term protection must employ restrained cytoprotective activity, whereas higher levels might only be beneficial if activated transiently pre-emptive to exogenous insult.


Subject(s)
Homeostasis , Kidney Tubules/metabolism , Oxidative Stress , Polyploidy , Animals , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/genetics , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/genetics , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , GADD45 Proteins
7.
J Cell Biol ; 219(7)2020 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32539109

ABSTRACT

Tissue damage triggers a rapid and robust inflammatory response in order to clear and repair a wound. Remarkably, many of the cell biology features that underlie the ability of leukocytes to home in to sites of injury and to fight infection-most of which are topics of intensive current research-were originally observed in various weird and wonderful translucent organisms over a century ago by Elie Metchnikoff, the "father of innate immunity," who is credited with discovering phagocytes in 1882. In this review, we use Metchnikoff's seminal lectures as a starting point to discuss the tremendous variety of cell biology features that underpin the function of these multitasking immune cells. Some of these are shared by other cell types (including aspects of motility, membrane trafficking, cell division, and death), but others are more unique features of innate immune cells, enabling them to fulfill their specialized functions, such as encapsulation of invading pathogens, cell-cell fusion in response to foreign bodies, and their self-sacrifice as occurs during NETosis.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/immunology , Immunity, Innate , Macrophages/immunology , Neutrophils/immunology , Wound Healing/immunology , Wounds, Penetrating/immunology , Alarmins/immunology , Animals , Drosophila melanogaster/immunology , Drosophila melanogaster/microbiology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Inflammation/history , Macrophages/microbiology , Monocytes/immunology , Monocytes/microbiology , Neutrophils/microbiology , Pathogen-Associated Molecular Pattern Molecules/immunology , Phagocytosis , Wounds, Penetrating/microbiology , Zebrafish/immunology , Zebrafish/microbiology
8.
Curr Biol ; 29(22): 3851-3862.e4, 2019 11 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31668626

ABSTRACT

In healthy individuals, injured tissues rapidly repair themselves following damage. Within a healing skin wound, recruited inflammatory cells release a multitude of bacteriocidal factors, including reactive oxygen species (ROS), to eliminate invading pathogens. Paradoxically, while these highly reactive ROS confer resistance to infection, they are also toxic to host tissues and may ultimately delay repair. Repairing tissues have therefore evolved powerful cytoprotective "resilience" machinery to protect against and tolerate this collateral damage. Here, we use in vivo time-lapse imaging and genetic manipulation in Drosophila to dissect the molecular and cellular mechanisms that drive tissue resilience to wound-induced stress. We identify a dynamic, cross-regulatory network of stress-activated cytoprotective pathways, linking calcium, JNK, Nrf2, and Gadd45, that act to both "shield" tissues from oxidative damage and promote efficient damage repair. Ectopic activation of these pathways confers stress protection to naive tissue, while their inhibition leads to marked delays in wound closure. Strikingly, the induction of cytoprotection is tightly linked to the pathways that initiate the inflammatory response, suggesting evolution of a fail-safe mechanism for tissue protection each time inflammation is triggered. A better understanding of these resilience mechanisms-their identities and precise spatiotemporal regulation-is of major clinical importance for development of therapeutic interventions for all pathologies linked to oxidative stress, including debilitating chronic non-healing wounds.


Subject(s)
Cytoprotection/physiology , Oxidative Stress/physiology , Wound Healing/physiology , Animals , Calcium/metabolism , Cytoprotection/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Inflammation/pathology , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins , MAP Kinase Signaling System , NF-E2-Related Factor 2 , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxidative Stress/genetics , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Wound Healing/genetics , GADD45 Proteins
9.
J Vis Exp ; (136)2018 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29985351

ABSTRACT

During the rapid inflammatory response to tissue damage, cells of the innate immune system are quickly recruited to the injury site. Once at the wound, innate immune cells perform a number of essential functions, such as fighting infection, clearing necrotic debris, and stimulating matrix deposition. In order to fully understand the diverse signaling events that regulate this immune response, it is crucial to observe the complex behaviors of (and interactions that occur between) multiple cell lineages in vivo, and in real-time, with the high spatio-temporal resolution. The optical translucency and the genetic tractability of Drosophila embryos have established Drosophila as an invaluable model to live-image and dissect fundamental aspects of inflammatory cell behavior, including mechanisms of developmental dispersal, clearance of apoptotic corpses and/or microbial pathogens, and recruitment to wounds. However, more recent work has now demonstrated that employing a much later stage in the Drosophila lifecycle - the Drosophila pupa - offers a number of distinct advantages, including improved RNAi efficiency, longer imaging periods, and significantly greater immune cell numbers. Here we describe a protocol for imaging wound repair and the associated inflammatory response at the high spatio-temporal resolution in live Drosophila pupae. To follow the dynamics of both re-epithelialization and inflammation, we use a number of specific in vivo fluorescent markers for both the epithelium and innate immune cells. We also demonstrate the effectiveness of photo-convertible fluorophores, such as Kaede, for following the specific immune cell subsets, to track their behavior as they migrate to, and resolve from, the injury site.


Subject(s)
Drosophila/physiology , Inflammation/immunology , Pupa/pathogenicity , Animals , Microscopy, Confocal
10.
J Cell Biol ; 217(9): 3045-3056, 2018 09 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941473

ABSTRACT

Inflammation is pivotal to fight infection, clear debris, and orchestrate repair of injured tissues. Although Drosophila melanogaster have proven invaluable for studying extravascular recruitment of innate immune cells (hemocytes) to wounds, they have been somewhat neglected as viable models to investigate a key rate-limiting component of inflammation-that of immune cell extravasation across vessel walls-due to their open circulation. We have now identified a period during pupal development when wing hearts pulse hemolymph, including circulating hemocytes, through developing wing veins. Wounding near these vessels triggers local immune cell extravasation, enabling live imaging and correlative light-electron microscopy of these events in vivo. We show that RNAi knockdown of immune cell integrin blocks diapedesis, just as in vertebrates, and we uncover a novel role for Rho-like signaling through the GPCR Tre1, a gene previously implicated in the trans-epithelial migration of germ cells. We believe this new Drosophila model complements current murine models and provides new mechanistic insight into immune cell extravasation.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Transendothelial and Transepithelial Migration/physiology , Wings, Animal/embryology , rho GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Drosophila melanogaster/immunology , Hemocytes/metabolism , Hemolymph/metabolism , Inflammation/immunology , Integrins/genetics , Pupa/growth & development , Pupa/immunology , RNA Interference , RNA, Small Interfering/genetics , Signal Transduction/physiology , Transendothelial and Transepithelial Migration/genetics , Wings, Animal/blood supply
11.
Curr Biol ; 26(15): 1975-1989, 2016 08 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27426513

ABSTRACT

In the acute inflammatory phase following tissue damage, cells of the innate immune system are rapidly recruited to sites of injury by pro-inflammatory mediators released at the wound site. Although advances in live imaging allow us to directly visualize this process in vivo, the precise identity and properties of the primary immune damage attractants remain unclear, as it is currently impossible to directly observe and accurately measure these signals in tissues. Here, we demonstrate that detailed information about the attractant signals can be extracted directly from the in vivo behavior of the responding immune cells. By applying inference-based computational approaches to analyze the in vivo dynamics of the Drosophila inflammatory response, we gain new detailed insight into the spatiotemporal properties of the attractant gradient. In particular, we show that the wound attractant is released by wound margin cells, rather than by the wounded tissue per se, and that it diffuses away from this source at rates far slower than those of previously implicated signals such as H2O2 and ATP, ruling out these fast mediators as the primary chemoattractant. We then predict, and experimentally test, how competing attractant signals might interact in space and time to regulate multi-step cell navigation in the complex environment of a healing wound, revealing a period of receptor desensitization after initial exposure to the damage attractant. Extending our analysis to model much larger wounds, we uncover a dynamic behavioral change in the responding immune cells in vivo that is prognostic of whether a wound will subsequently heal or not. VIDEO ABSTRACT.


Subject(s)
Chemotactic Factors/metabolism , Drosophila/physiology , Immunity, Innate , Animals , Systems Analysis
12.
Dev Cell ; 38(2): 129-32, 2016 07 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27459064

ABSTRACT

Drosophila macrophages exhibit functional parallels with their vertebrate counterparts in both their early developmental roles and later diverse roles in health and disease. This, together with the fly's genetic tractability and opportunities for live imaging, has recently established Drosophila as a powerful model to study macrophage behavior in vivo.


Subject(s)
Drosophila/immunology , Immunity, Innate/immunology , Macrophages/cytology , Macrophages/immunology , Animals , Drosophila/growth & development , Drosophila/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Immunity, Innate/genetics , Macrophages/metabolism
13.
Cell Syst ; 3(1): 102-7, 2016 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27453447

ABSTRACT

Spatial structures often constrain the 3D movement of cells or particles in vivo, yet this information is obscured when microscopy data are analyzed using standard approaches. Here, we present methods, called unwrapping and Riemannian manifold learning, for mapping particle-tracking data along unseen and irregularly curved surfaces onto appropriate 2D representations. This is conceptually similar to the problem of reconstructing accurate geography from conventional Mercator maps, but our methods do not require prior knowledge of the environments' physical structure. Unwrapping and Riemannian manifold learning accurately recover the underlying 2D geometry from 3D imaging data without the need for fiducial marks. They outperform standard x-y projections, and unlike standard dimensionality reduction techniques, they also successfully detect both bias and persistence in cell migration modes. We demonstrate these features on simulated data and zebrafish and Drosophila in vivo immune cell trajectory datasets. Software packages that implement unwrapping and Riemannian manifold learning are provided.


Subject(s)
Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Algorithms , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Microscopy , Phantoms, Imaging , Reproducibility of Results
14.
Cell ; 165(7): 1658-1671, 2016 Jun 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27212238

ABSTRACT

Macrophages are multifunctional cells that perform diverse roles in health and disease. Emerging evidence has suggested that these innate immune cells might also be capable of developing immunological memory, a trait previously associated with the adaptive system alone. While recent studies have focused on the dramatic macrophage reprogramming that follows infection and protects against secondary microbial attack, can macrophages also develop memory in response to other cues? Here, we show that apoptotic corpse engulfment by Drosophila macrophages is an essential primer for their inflammatory response to tissue damage and infection in vivo. Priming is triggered via calcium-induced JNK signaling, which leads to upregulation of the damage receptor Draper, thus providing a molecular memory that allows the cell to rapidly respond to subsequent injury or infection. This remarkable plasticity and capacity for memory places macrophages as key therapeutic targets for treatment of inflammatory disorders.


Subject(s)
Drosophila/immunology , Immunologic Memory , Macrophages/immunology , Animals , Apoptosis , Drosophila/cytology , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Escherichia coli , Immunity, Innate , MAP Kinase Signaling System , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Phagocytosis
15.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 31: 91-9, 2014 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24721475

ABSTRACT

The normal development of an organ depends on the coordinated regulation of multiple cell activities. Focusing on tubulogenesis, we review the role of specialised cells or groups of cells that are selected from within tissue primordia and differentiate at the outgrowing tips or leading edge of developing tubules. Tip or leading cells develop distinctive patterns of gene expression that enable them to act both as sensors and transmitters of intercellular signalling. This enables them to explore the environment, respond to both tissue intrinsic signals and extrinsic cues from surrounding tissues and to regulate the behaviour of their neighbours, including the setting of cell fate, patterning cell division, inducing polarity and promoting cell movement and cell rearrangements by neighbour exchange. Tip cells are also able to transmit mechanical tension to promote tissue remodelling and, by interacting with the extracellular matrix, they can dictate migratory pathways and organ shape. Where separate tubular structures fuse to form networks, as in the airways of insects or the vascular system of vertebrates, specialised fusion tip cells act to interconnect disparate elements of the developing network. Finally, we consider their importance in the maturation of mature physiological function and in the development of disease.


Subject(s)
Cells/metabolism , Morphogenesis , Animals , Cell Proliferation , Cells/cytology , Humans
16.
Dev Cell ; 27(3): 331-44, 2013 Nov 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24229645

ABSTRACT

Tissue morphogenesis involves both the sculpting of tissue shape and the positioning of tissues relative to one another in the body. Using the renal tubules of Drosophila, we show that a specific distal tubule cell regulates both tissue architecture and position in the body cavity. Focusing on the anterior tubules, we demonstrate that tip cells make transient contacts with alary muscles at abdominal segment boundaries, moving progressively forward as convergent extension movements lengthen the tubule. Tip cell anchorage antagonizes forward-directed, TGF-ß-guided tubule elongation, thereby ensuring the looped morphology characteristic of renal tubules from worms to humans. Distinctive tip cell exploratory behavior, adhesion, and basement membrane clearing underlie target recognition and dynamic interactions. Defects in these features obliterate tip cell anchorage, producing misshapen and misplaced tubules with impaired physiological function.


Subject(s)
Cell Adhesion/physiology , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Drosophila/growth & development , Kidney Tubules/cytology , Morphogenesis/physiology , Animals , Drosophila/metabolism , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Immunoblotting , In Situ Hybridization , Kidney Tubules/metabolism , Lasers , Transforming Growth Factor beta/metabolism
17.
Dev Cell ; 19(2): 296-306, 2010 Aug 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20708591

ABSTRACT

Details of the mechanisms that determine the shape and positioning of organs in the body cavity remain largely obscure. We show that stereotypic positioning of outgrowing Drosophila renal tubules depends on signaling in a subset of tubule cells and results from enhanced sensitivity to guidance signals by targeted matrix deposition. VEGF/PDGF ligands from the tubules attract hemocytes, which secrete components of the basement membrane to ensheath them. Collagen IV sensitizes tubule cells to localized BMP guidance cues. Signaling results in pathway activation in a subset of tubule cells that lead outgrowth through the body cavity. Failure of hemocyte migration, loss of collagen IV, or abrogation of BMP signaling results in tubule misrouting and defective organ shape and positioning. Such regulated interplay between cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions is likely to have wide relevance in organogenesis and congenital disease.


Subject(s)
Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/metabolism , Collagen Type IV/metabolism , Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/embryology , Hemocytes/metabolism , Animals , Bone Morphogenetic Proteins/genetics , Collagen Type IV/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/anatomy & histology , Drosophila melanogaster/cytology , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/anatomy & histology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Hemocytes/cytology , Kidney Tubules/embryology , Morphogenesis , Signal Transduction
18.
Nature ; 457(7227): 322-6, 2009 Jan 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18971929

ABSTRACT

The nephron is the basic structural and functional unit of the vertebrate kidney. It is composed of a glomerulus, the site of ultrafiltration, and a renal tubule, along which the filtrate is modified. Although widely regarded as a vertebrate adaptation, 'nephron-like' features can be found in the excretory systems of many invertebrates, raising the possibility that components of the vertebrate excretory system were inherited from their invertebrate ancestors. Here we show that the insect nephrocyte has remarkable anatomical, molecular and functional similarity to the glomerular podocyte, a cell in the vertebrate kidney that forms the main size-selective barrier as blood is ultrafiltered to make urine. In particular, both cell types possess a specialized filtration diaphragm, known as the slit diaphragm in podocytes or the nephrocyte diaphragm in nephrocytes. We find that fly (Drosophila melanogaster) orthologues of the major constituents of the slit diaphragm, including nephrin, NEPH1 (also known as KIRREL), CD2AP, ZO-1 (TJP1) and podocin, are expressed in the nephrocyte and form a complex of interacting proteins that closely mirrors the vertebrate slit diaphragm complex. Furthermore, we find that the nephrocyte diaphragm is completely lost in flies lacking the orthologues of nephrin or NEPH1-a phenotype resembling loss of the slit diaphragm in the absence of either nephrin (as in human congenital nephrotic syndrome of the Finnish type, NPHS1) or NEPH1. These changes markedly impair filtration function in the nephrocyte. The similarities we describe between invertebrate nephrocytes and vertebrate podocytes provide evidence suggesting that the two cell types are evolutionarily related, and establish the nephrocyte as a simple model in which to study podocyte biology and podocyte-associated diseases.


Subject(s)
Drosophila Proteins/metabolism , Drosophila melanogaster/cytology , Podocytes/cytology , Podocytes/physiology , Animals , Cell Line , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/anatomy & histology , Drosophila melanogaster/physiology , Immunoglobulins/genetics , Immunoglobulins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/deficiency , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Muscle Proteins/genetics , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Podocytes/metabolism
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