Transcriptional Repression of reaper by Stand Still Safeguards Female Germline Development in Drosophila

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Abstract

Apoptosis plays a central role in shaping tissues and preserving cellular integrity across developmental stages. In the germline, its precise regulation is critical to ensure both the elimination of aberrant cells and the maintenance of reproductive capacity. However, the molecular mechanisms that control apoptotic susceptibility in germline cells remain poorly defined. Here, we identify stand still ( stil ) as a female germline-specific regulator of apoptosis in Drosophila . Loss of stil leads to near-complete depletion of germline cells at the time of eclosion, associated with upregulation of the pro-apoptotic gene reaper ( rpr ) and activation of caspase-dependent cell death. Reporter assays in S2 cells show that Stil directly represses rpr transcription through its N-terminal BED-type zinc finger domain. Despite the absence of stil , undifferentiated germline cells remain resistant to apoptosis. Analysis of publicly available chromatin data reveals that the rpr locus in these cells resides in a closed, H3K9me3-enriched chromatin state, suggesting a Stil-independent mode of transcriptional silencing. Together, our findings uncover two distinct mechanisms that protects the female germline from rpr -dependent apoptosis: Stil-mediated transcriptional repression that operates in both undifferentiated and differentiated germline cells, and an additional chromatin-based silencing mechanism that functions specifically in undifferentiated cells. This work provides new insights into the interplay between transcriptional and chromatin-based regulations that maintain germline cell identity and survival.

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