Abstract
AbstractTwo broadly known characteristics of germ cells in many organisms are their development as a ‘cyst’ of interconnected cells and their high sensitivity to DNA damage. Here we provide evidence that these characteristics are linked, and that interconnectivity is a mechanism that confers to the Drosophila testis a high sensitivity to DNA damage. We show that all germ cells within a cyst die simultaneously even when only a subset of them exhibit detectable DNA damage. Compromising connectivity results in cysts in which only a subset of germ cells die upon DNA damage, lowering overall germ cell death. Our data indicate that a death-promoting signal is shared through the intercellular connections of germ cells. Taken together, we propose that intercellular connectivity is a mechanism that uniquely increases the sensitivity of the germline to DNA damage, thereby protecting the integrity of gamete genomes that are passed on to the next generation.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory