1. S-nitrosylation-triggered unfolded protein response maintains hematopoietic progenitors in Drosophila.
- Author
-
Cho, Bumsik, Shin, Mingyu, Chang, Eunji, Son, Seogho, Shin, Incheol, and Shim, Jiwon
- Subjects
- *
UNFOLDED protein response , *CELLULAR control mechanisms , *DROSOPHILA , *PROGENITOR cells , *CELL cycle - Abstract
The Drosophila lymph gland houses blood progenitors that give rise to myeloid-like blood cells. Initially, blood progenitors proliferate, but later, they become quiescent to maintain multipotency before differentiation. Despite the identification of various factors involved in multipotency maintenance, the cellular mechanism controlling blood progenitor quiescence remains elusive. Here, we identify the expression of nitric oxide synthase in blood progenitors, generating nitric oxide for post-translational S-nitrosylation of protein cysteine residues. S-nitrosylation activates the Ire1-Xbp1-mediated unfolded protein response, leading to G2 cell-cycle arrest. Specifically, we identify the epidermal growth factor receptor as a target of S-nitrosylation, resulting in its retention within the endoplasmic reticulum and blockade of its receptor function. Overall, our findings highlight developmentally programmed S-nitrosylation as a critical mechanism that induces protein quality control in blood progenitors, maintaining their undifferentiated state by inhibiting cell-cycle progression and rendering them unresponsive to paracrine factors. [Display omitted] • Nitric oxide (NO) is produced in blood progenitors of the Drosophila lymph gland • This NO is utilized for the S-nitrosylation of target proteins, including EGFR • The S-nitrosylation of EGFR attenuates its membrane trafficking in blood progenitors • S-nitrosylation activates the UPR pathway to arrest progenitors in the G2 cell cycle Cho et al. demonstrated that NO facilitates S-nitrosylation in blood progenitors, which triggers the UPR to pause the progenitor cell cycle in the G2 phase. Notably, they identified EGFR as a target of S-nitrosylation, which alters its membrane trafficking, allowing progenitor cells to timely activate the EGFR pathway for differentiation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF