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Review
. 2015:114:93-119.
doi: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2015.07.025. Epub 2015 Sep 9.

The End of the Beginning: Cell Death in the Germline

Affiliations
Review

The End of the Beginning: Cell Death in the Germline

Jeanne S Peterson et al. Curr Top Dev Biol. 2015.

Abstract

Programmed cell death occurs in the germline of many organisms, both as an essential part of development and throughout adult life. Germline cell death can be apoptotic or nonapoptotic, depending on the stimulus or stage of development. Here, we focus on the Drosophila ovary, which is a powerful model for studying diverse types of cell death. In Drosophila, the death of primordial germ cells occurs normally during embryonic development, and germline nurse cells are programmed to die during oocyte development in adult flies. Cell death of previtellogenic egg chambers in adults can also be induced by starvation or other environmental cues. Mid-oogenesis seems to be particularly sensitive to such cues and has been proposed to serve as a checkpoint to avoid the energetically expensive cost of egg production. After the germline dies in mid-oogenesis, the remnants are engulfed by an epithelial layer of follicle cells; thus, the fly ovary also serves as a highly tractable model for engulfment by epithelial cells. These examples of cell death in the fly ovary share many similarities to the types of cell death seen in the mammalian germline. Recent progress in elucidating the molecular mechanisms of cell death in the germline is discussed.

Keywords: Apoptosis; Autophagy; Drosophila; Engulfment; Germline; Necrosis; Ovary; Phagocytosis; Primordial germ cell; Testis.

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