The eventual size reached by an animal is determined both by the total number of cells as well as the size of individual cells. Total cell number is determined by cell proliferation and cell death. Recent years have witnessed substantial progress our understanding of the regulation of these two processes. In contrast, the mechanisms that regulate the size of individual cells are not well understood. The experiments detailed in this proposal are aimed at understanding the mechanisms that regulate cell size in vivo. A genetic screen using FLP-recombinase induced mitotic recombination in the Drosophila eye was used to identify mutations that resulted in increased cell size. The mutations isolated to date map to six different genetic loci. One of the loci corresponds to the gigas gene which has been characterized by others and results in large polyploid cells. The gigas gene is the Drosophila homologue of the TSC2 gene which is mutated in approximately 70 percent of patients with tuberous sclerosis. One of the loci identified in the screen, rocky has a phenotype that is extremely similar to that of gigas and maps to the location of the TSC1 gene which is mutated in 30 percent of patients with tuberous sclerosis. Another mutation, which increases cell size without altering ploidy, maps to the vicinity of PTEN gene which is mutated in a number of different human cancers. Another, expanded, appears to act in a non-autonomous manner. Two others have not yet been mapped.
Specific Aim 1 of this proposal describes the completion of a comprehensive genetic screen to identify mutations that lead to an increase in cell size. Mutations will be sorted into complementation groups and the genes will be mapped.
Specific Aim 2 describes a detailed phenotypic analysis of gigas, rocky, wolf and expanded. Experiments will address the precise mechanism by which these mutations increase cell size. In each case the effect of the mutation on ploidy, growth and cycle regulation will be determined and the role of the gene will be studied in the context of known regulators of cell size.
Specific Aim 3 describes a general strategy for characterizing the phenotype of the remaining mutations and those that will be identified as the screen moves to completion. An approach to cloning the genes is also described. Analysis of the mutations identified in the screen will contribute to our understanding of cell size regulation in vivo.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM061672-03
Application #
6525927
Study Section
Cell Development and Function Integrated Review Group (CDF)
Program Officer
Anderson, Richard A
Project Start
2000-08-01
Project End
2004-03-31
Budget Start
2002-08-01
Budget End
2004-03-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$242,200
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts General Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02199
Hariharan, Iswar K; Serras, Florenci (2017) Imaginal disc regeneration takes flight. Curr Opin Cell Biol 48:10-16
Hariharan, Iswar K (2016) Size regulation blossoms in Kobe. Development 143:2691-5
Bosch, Justin A; Sumabat, Taryn M; Hariharan, Iswar K (2016) Persistence of RNAi-Mediated Knockdown in Drosophila Complicates Mosaic Analysis Yet Enables Highly Sensitive Lineage Tracing. Genetics 203:109-18
Bosch, Justin A; Tran, Ngoc Han; Hariharan, Iswar K (2015) CoinFLP: a system for efficient mosaic screening and for visualizing clonal boundaries in Drosophila. Development 142:597-606
Hariharan, Iswar K (2015) Organ Size Control: Lessons from Drosophila. Dev Cell 34:255-65
Bosch, Justin A; Sumabat, Taryn M; Hafezi, Yassi et al. (2014) The Drosophila F-box protein Fbxl7 binds to the protocadherin fat and regulates Dachs localization and Hippo signaling. Elife 3:e03383
Kanda, Hiroshi; Nguyen, Alexander; Chen, Leslie et al. (2013) The Drosophila ortholog of MLL3 and MLL4, trithorax related, functions as a negative regulator of tissue growth. Mol Cell Biol 33:1702-10
Worley, Melanie I; Setiawan, Linda; Hariharan, Iswar K (2013) TIE-DYE: a combinatorial marking system to visualize and genetically manipulate clones during development in Drosophila melanogaster. Development 140:3275-84
Hariharan, Iswar K (2012) How growth abnormalities delay ""puberty"" in Drosophila. Sci Signal 5:pe27
Harvey, Kieran F; Hariharan, Iswar K (2012) The hippo pathway. Cold Spring Harb Perspect Biol 4:a011288

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