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Formation of the anteroposterior and dorsoventral body axis in the Caenorhabditis elegans embryo depends on cortical actomyosin flows and advection of polarity determinants. The role of this patterning mechanism in tissue polarization immediately after formation of cell-cell contacts is not fully understood. Here, we demonstrate that planar cell polarity (PCP) is established in the C. elegans embryo at the time of left-right (l/r) symmetry breaking. At this stage, centripetal cortical flows asymmetrically and differentially advect anterior polarity determinants (aPARs) PAR-3, PAR-6 and PKC-3 from cell-cell contacts to the medial cortex, which results in their unmixing from apical myosin. Advection generally requires GSK-3 and CDC-42, while advection of PAR-6 specifically depends on the RhoGAP PAC-1. Concurrent asymmetric retention of PAR-3, E-cadherin/HMR-1, PAC-1 and opposing retention of the antagonistic Wnt pathway components APC/APR-1 and Frizzled/MOM-5 at apical cell-cell contacts leads to planar asymmetries. The most obvious mark of PCP, asymmetric retention of PAR-3 at posterior cell-cell contacts on the left side of the embryo, is required for proper cytokinetic cell intercalation. Hence, our data uncover how PCP can be established through Wnt signaling as well as dissociation and planar asymmetric retention of aPARs mediated by distinct Rho GTPases and their regulators.
Autophagy can act either as a tumor suppressor or as a survival mechanism for established tumors. To understand how autophagy plays this dual role in cancer, in vivo models are required. By using a highly heterogeneous C. elegans germline tumor, we show that autophagy-related proteins are expressed in a specific subset of tumor cells, neurons. Inhibition of autophagy impairs neuronal differentiation and increases tumor cell number, resulting in a shorter life span of animals with tumors, while induction of autophagy extends their life span by impairing tumor proliferation. Fasting of animals with fully developed tumors leads to a doubling of their life span, which depends on modular changes in transcription including switches in transcription factor networks and mitochondrial metabolism. Hence, our results suggest that metabolic restructuring, cell-type specific regulation of autophagy and neuronal differentiation constitute central pathways preventing growth of heterogeneous tumors.