Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2039382 Cell Reports 2015 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Drosophila intestinal cells are transcriptionally diverse across regions R1–R5•GATAe, sna, and Ptx1 are key players in global and regional ISC regulation•Digestive enzymes are expressed cell type specifically in regions•P. entomophila infection causes a massive transcriptional change in midgut cells

SummaryDeciphering contributions of specific cell types to organ function is experimentally challenging. The Drosophila midgut is a dynamic organ with five morphologically and functionally distinct regions (R1–R5), each composed of multipotent intestinal stem cells (ISCs), progenitor enteroblasts (EBs), enteroendocrine cells (EEs), enterocytes (ECs), and visceral muscle (VM). To characterize cellular specialization and regional function in this organ, we generated RNA-sequencing transcriptomes of all five cell types isolated by FACS from each of the five regions, R1–R5. In doing so, we identify transcriptional diversities among cell types and document regional differences within each cell type that define further specialization. We validate cell-specific and regional Gal4 drivers; demonstrate roles for transporter Smvt and transcription factors GATAe, Sna, and Ptx1 in global and regional ISC regulation, and study the transcriptional response of midgut cells upon infection. The resulting transcriptome database (http://flygutseq.buchonlab.com) will foster studies of regionalization, homeostasis, immunity, and cell-cell interactions.

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