Understanding development, differentiation and the activity of the blood cells in post larval stages of Drosophila melanogaster
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
IISERM
Abstract
The process of new blood cell development is known as hematopoiesis.
Drosophila hematopoiesis shows several similarities with vertebrate
counterpart both at the level of phases as well as signalling molecules
participating in this process. Although active sites of hematopoiesis have
been identified in embryonic and larval stages, it was a general belief of
the field that adult fruit-flies are devoid of these active sites and are
solely dependent on the long-lived hemocytes of earlier developmental
stages. We argued since the adult stage is the most exploratory phase,
therefore, chances of encountering various insults is much higher. Thus,
just the long-lived blood cells might not be sufficient for dealing with
the diverse challenges that it might face during adulthood.
We discovered that there is indeed a new spell of blood cell development
in adult fly. We have identified hematopoietic centres/hubs situated
dorsally in the adult abdomen. This adult hematopoietic hub harbours
progenitor cells along with differentiated blood cells. These progenitors
are capable of forming new blood cells which can respond to immune
challenges.
In the next section, I have attempted to characterize tisssues in an
around the hematopoietic hub which might act as a a niche or local
microenvironment. The expression studies along with genetic correlate
provides a unique opportunity to demonstrate how aberrant niche signal/s
can lead to hematopoietic malignancy. Altogether, the finding of the
hematopoietic hub in adult Drosophila brings about a paradigm shifts in
our understanding of post-larval hematopoiesis.
In the third part of my thesis, I demonstrated an in vivo spatiotemporal
analysis of macrophage-mediated efferocytosis (the process of apoptotic
tissue clearance) in response to massive tissue remodelling during
metamorphosis.
Overall, my work provides a significant enhancement over the current
understanding of Drosophila post-larval hematopoiesis and immune cell
activity in response to tissue remodelling. Considering the remarkable
similarity between Drosophila and vertebrate hematopoiesis, my work can be
employed to gain a better understanding of hematopoiesis and related
disorders.