Publications by authors named "Yuko Ikegawa"

Cell death and proliferation are at a glance dichotomic events, but occasionally coupled. Caspases, traditionally known to execute apoptosis, play non-apoptotic roles, but their exact mechanism remains elusive. Here, using intestinal stem cells (ISCs), we discovered that activation of caspases induces massive cell proliferation rather than cell death.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Recent research indicates that necrosis, previously viewed as a passive response to damage, includes a programmed version known as necroptosis.
  • A new genetically encoded fluorescent sensor called Necrosensor has been developed to detect necrosis in the fruit fly Drosophila by recognizing the HMGB1 molecule released during cell damage.
  • This innovative tool not only identifies necrosis caused by different stresses in various tissues but also uncovers previously unknown physiological necrosis in developing larvae, paving the way for real-time in vivo observations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cancer exerts pleiotropic, systemic effects on organisms, leading to health deterioration and eventually to organismal death. How cancer induces systemic effects on remote organs and the organism itself still remains elusive. Here we describe a role for NetrinB (NetB), a protein with a particularly well-characterized role as a tissue-level axon guidance cue, in mediating oncogenic stress-induced organismal, metabolic reprogramming as a systemic humoral factor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cells need to sense stresses to initiate the execution of the dormant cell death program. Since the discovery of the first BH3-only protein Bad, BH3-only proteins have been recognized as indispensable stress sensors that induce apoptosis. BH3-only proteins have so far not been identified in Drosophila despite their importance in other organisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many adult tissues are composed of differentiated cells and stem cells, each working in a coordinated manner to maintain tissue homeostasis during physiological cell turnover. Old differentiated cells are believed to typically die by apoptosis. Here, we discovered a previously uncharacterized, new phenomenon, which we name erebosis based on the ancient Greek word erebos ("complete darkness"), in the gut enterocytes of adult Drosophila.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Under food deprivation conditions, Drosophila larvae exhibit increases in locomotor speed and synaptic bouton numbers at neuromuscular junctions (NMJs). Octopamine, the invertebrate counterpart of noradrenaline, plays critical roles in this process; however, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We show here that a glypican (Dlp) negatively regulates type I synaptic bouton formation, postsynaptic expression of GluRIIA, and larval locomotor speed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF