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There and back again: The mechanisms of differentiation and transdifferentiation in Drosophila blood cells

Gábor Csordás, Erika Gábor, Viktor Honti

2020Developmental Biology41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transdifferentiation is a conversion of an already differentiated cell type into another cell type without the involvement of stem cells. This transition is well described in the case of vertebrate immune cells, as well as in Drosophila melanogaster, which therefore serves as a suitable model to study the process in detail. In the Drosophila larva, the latest single-cell sequencing methods enabled the clusterization of the phagocytic blood cells, the plasmatocytes, which are capable of transdifferentiation into encapsulating cells, the lamellocytes. Here we summarize the available data of the past years on the plasmatocyte-lamellocyte transition, and make an attempt to harmonize them with transcriptome-based blood cell clustering to better understand the underlying mechanisms of transdifferentiation in Drosophila, and in general.

Topics & Concepts

TransdifferentiationBiologyDrosophila melanogasterTranscriptomeCell typeDrosophila (subgenus)CellCell biologyCellular differentiationStem cellComputational biologyGeneticsEvolutionary biologyGeneGene expressionInvertebrate Immune Response MechanismsAquaculture disease management and microbiotaMosquito-borne diseases and control
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