Drosophila activins adapt gut size to food intake and promote regenerative growth

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Rapidly renewable tissues adapt different strategies to cope with environmental insults. While tissue repair is associated with increased intestinal stem cell (ISC) proliferation and accelerated tissue turnover rates, reduced calorie intake triggers a homeostasis-breaking process causing adaptive resizing of the gut. Here we show that activins are key drivers of both adaptive and regenerative growth. Activin-β (Actβ) is produced by stem and progenitor cells in response to intestinal infections and stimulates ISC proliferation and turnover rates to promote tissue repair. Dawdle (Daw), a divergent Drosophila activin, signals through its receptor, Baboon, in progenitor cells to promote their maturation into enterocytes (ECs). Daw is dynamically regulated during starvation-refeeding cycles, where it couples nutrient intake with progenitor maturation and adaptive resizing of the gut. Our results highlight an activin-dependent mechanism coupling nutrient intake with progenitor-to-EC maturation to promote adaptive resizing of the gut and further establish activins as key regulators of adult tissue plasticity.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer273
TidsskriftNature Communications
Vol/bind15
Udgave nummer1
Antal sider12
ISSN2041-1723
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We are grateful to all members of the Colombani and Andersen laboratory for scientific discussion and for carefully reading the manuscript. We thank M. O’Connor, M. Dominguez, A. Gallet, L. O’Brien, the Bloomington Stock Center and the Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center for fly stocks. J.C. and D.S.A. are funded by H2020 European Research Council grant number 803630, Novo Nordisk Foundation grant number NNF180C0033920. We thank the Carlsberg foundation for an equipment grant CF19-0353.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, The Author(s).

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