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Insights into Melanocyte Regeneration and Melanoma Initiation Using the Zebrafish Model System: A Dissertation
Authors
Iyengar, SharanyaFaculty Advisor
Craig J. Ceol, PhDAcademic Program
Cancer BiologyUMass Chan Affiliations
Program in Molecular MedicineDocument Type
Doctoral DissertationPublication Date
2015-10-06Keywords
Dissertations, UMMSMelanocytes
Zebrafish
Cell Differentiation
Regeneration
Wnt Proteins
Melanocytes
Melanoma
Zebrafish
Cell Differentiation
Regeneration
Wnt Proteins
Cancer Biology
Cell Biology
Neoplasms
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
During regeneration, cells must coordinate proliferation and differentiation to rebuild tissues that are lost. Understanding how source cells execute the regeneration process has been a longstanding goal in regenerative biology with implications in wound healing and cell replacement therapies. Melanocytes are pigment-producing cells in the skin of vertebrates that can be lost during hair graying, injury and disease-related depigmentation. Melanoma is an aggressive skin cancer that develops from melanocytes, and it is hypothesized that melanoma cells have properties that are similar to melanocyte stem cells. To gain insight into melanocyte regeneration we set out to identify the source of regeneration melanocytes in adult zebrafish and the path through which progenitor cells reconstitute the pigment pattern. Using targeted cell ablation and single cell lineage-tracing analyses we identified that a majority of regeneration melanocytes arise through direct differentiation of mitfa-expressing progenitor cells. Concurrently, other mitfa-expressing cells divide symmetrically to generate additional mitfa-positive progenitors, thus maintaining regeneration capability. Using reporter assays and drug studies, we found that Wnt signaling gets turned on in progenitor cells during regeneration and Wnt inhibition after melanocyte ablation blocks regeneration. Based on our finding that Wnt signaling is active in differentiated melanocytes but not in the progenitor cells, we explored the role of Wnt signaling in tumor initiation. We found that approximately half of the melanomas are Wnt silent, and overexpression of dkk1b, a negative regulator of canonical Wnt signaling, accelerates melanoma onset. This work defines an unappreciated contribution by direct differentiation in melanocyte regeneration and suggests a broader role for this process in the maintenance of epithelial sheets. This study also identifies a shared pathway between melanocyte progenitors and melanoma cells, which could be applicable to other cancers.DOI
10.13028/M2BS39Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/32163Rights
Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.13028/M2BS39