These secret battles between your body’s cells might just save your life
To fight cancer and ageing, biologists are looking at how cells evict, kill or cannibalize less-fit rivals.
Kendall Powell Nature
Yasuyaki Fujita
has seen first-hand what happens when cells stop being polite and start getting
real. He caught a glimpse of this harsh microscopic world when he switched on a
cancer-causing gene called Ras in a few kidney cells in a dish. He
expected to see the cancerous cells expanding and forming the beginnings of
tumours among their neighbours. Instead, the neat, orderly neighbours armed
themselves with filament proteins and started “poking, poking, poking”, says
Fujita, a cancer biologist at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan. “The
transformed cells were eliminated from the society of normal cells,” he says,
literally pushed out by the cells next door.
In the past two
decades, an explosion of similar discoveries has revealed squabbles, fights and
all-out wars playing out on the cellular level. Known as cell competition, it
works a bit like natural selection between species, in that fitter cells win
out over their less-fit neighbours. The phenomenon can act as quality control
during an organism’s development, as a defence against precancerous cells and
as a key part of maintaining organs such as the skin, intestine and heart.
Cells use a variety of ways to eliminate their rivals, from kicking them out of
a tissue to inducing cell suicide or even engulfing them and cannibalizing
their components. The observations reveal that the development and maintenance
of tissues are much more chaotic processes than previously thought. “This is a
radical departure from development as a preprogrammed set of rules that run
like clockwork,” says Thomas Zwaka, a stem-cell biologist at the Icahn School
of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City.
But questions
abound as to how individual cells recognize and act on weaknesses in their
neighbours. Labs have been diligently hunting for — and squabbling over — the
potential markers for fitness and how they trigger competitive behaviours.
These mechanisms could allow scientists to rein in the process or to help it
along, which might lead to better methods for fighting cancer and combating
disease and ageing using regenerative medicine.
“Cell competition
is on the global scientific map,” says Eugenia Piddini, a cell biologist at the
University of Bristol, UK, who likens the buzz around this idea to the
excitement that helped propel modern cancer immunotherapies. The better
scientists understand competition, she says, the more likely it is that they
will be able to use it therapeutically.
History repeats
During a blizzard
that dumped more than 30 centimetres of snow this past February, biologists
from about a dozen disciplines convened at a hotel at Lake Tahoe, California,
for the first major meeting devoted to cell competition.
“It was a zoo of
researchers,” says co-organizer Zwaka, and included biologists who study
flatworms that can regenerate their whole body from a single cell, geneticists
attempting to make interspecies chimaeras of mouse, monkey and rabbit embryos,
and a keynote speaker who spoke about the terrible battles and cooperative
campaigns waged in bacterial communities.
The snowbound
attendees, about 150 in all, debated how and why cells size up their
competition. And they celebrated the discovery that gave birth to the field.
How secret
conversations inside cells are transforming biology
In 1973, two PhD
students, Ginés Morata and Pedro Ripoll were perfecting a way to track the
various cell populations in a fruit-fly larva that would eventually develop
into a wing. Working at the Spanish National Research Council’s Biological
Research Center in Madrid, they introduced a mutation called Minute into
a few select cells in the larva and left the rest of the cells unaltered.
Knowing
that Minute cells grow slower than their unaltered neighbours, the
scientists expected to find some smaller cells amid the wild-type counterparts.
“Instead, we found that the cells disappeared,” says Morata, now a
developmental biologist at the Autonomous University of Madrid in Spain.
On their
own, Minute cells can develop into a fly that is normal — except for
the short, thin bristles on their bodies that give the mutation its name. But
when mixed with wild-type cells in the larva, the cells simply vanished.
“Minute cells were not able to compete with the more vigorous,
metabolically active wild-type cells,” says Morata. They described the activity
as cell competition1. “It was a very surprising and interesting observation,”
Morata says. But lacking the molecular tools to follow cell fates more closely,
he and his colleagues let the finding simmer.
Twenty-six years
later, postdocs Laura Johnston and Peter Gallant observed nearly the same
phenomenon. Working with Bruce Edgar and Robert Eisenman, respectively, at the
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Washington, they were studying a
mutation in another fly gene, Drosophila Myc (dMyc), that also slows
cell growth2.
“There was a
eureka moment when Peter and I realized that these dMyc mutant cells
would disappear,” says Johnston, now a developmental biologist at Columbia
University Medical Center in New York City. They eventually showed that the
mutant cells were forced to initiate a form of programmed cell death called
apoptosis. “It was very clear that this was a competitive situation,” Johnston
says.
Their 1999 paper
ignited interest among scientists, including Morata. He jumped back into the
fray with Eduardo Moreno, and they took advantage of modern molecular tools to
repeat the Minute experiments. “The field blossomed from there,” says
Johnston.
Myc acts as
a master controller of cell growth, and Minute encodes a key
component needed for synthesizing proteins — so it’s not surprising that
reduced expression of those proteins makes cells less fit. But Johnston’s next
finding took people by surprise. She showed that cells with an extra copy of
normal dMyc outcompeted wild-type cells3. These fitter-than-wild-type
cells came to be called “supercompetitors”.
Johnston’s
discovery of supercompetition emphasized that cell competition is about the
relative fitness of a group of cells, says Zwaka. If one cell is falling
behind, the entire group of neighbours could decide it has to go. But on the
flipside, they can also sense that certain cells are better and should survive.
Cell competition
wasn’t simply about getting rid of defects; it was about survival of the
fittest, with the less-fit ‘loser’ cells dying and the ‘winners’ proliferating.
Importantly, competition was seen only when there was a mixture of genetically
different cells, a phenomenon known as mosaicism. In this way, cell competition
acts like a quality-control system, booting out undesirable cells during
development.
Vying for
viability
Fujita’s
observation of the kicked-out kidney cells was one of the first hints that
mammalian cells compete, too4. Soon after that work was published, researchers
started to observe competition forcing out mutated cells from various other
tissue types such as skin, muscle and gut.
The next most
obvious place to look for competing cells was the mammalian embryo. In 2013,
Zwaka’s team, and two other laboratories, probed mouse embryos at the earliest
stage of development — those that have progressed just beyond a ball of cells.
Zwaka’s group made mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) with a supercompetitor
mutation that lowered expression of p53, an important quality-control protein
that normally puts the brakes on cell division. When these cells were put into
a mouse embryo, they quickly took over and developed into a normal mouse5.
Similarly, Miguel Torres’s lab at the National Center for Cardiovascular
Research in Madrid showed that supercompetition could be induced in an early
mouse embryo using slight overexpression of the mouse Myc gene.
By artificially
creating losers or winners, researchers could force cell competition into play.
But Torres’s team, led by then-postdoc Cristina Clavería, also made the
striking observation that Myc expression varied naturally in mouse
ESCs. Cells in the embryo with approximately half the amount of the protein
compared with their neighbours were dying by apoptosis. This was one of the
first studies that strongly pointed to naturally arising cell competition6.
Sculpting tissues
The phenomenon
also comes into play later on in embryonic development. In a study published
this year, postdoc Stephanie Ellis at Elaine Fuch’s lab in Rockefeller
University in New York City, looked at mouse skin. During development, its
surface area expands by a factor of 30 over the course of about a week. The
cells within proliferate wildly — first as a single layer and later as multiple
layers.
Ellis injected
mouse embryos with a concoction that turns cells into genetic losers. She
targeted a few cells present when the embryonic skin is a single layer thick,
and added a marker gene that made them glow red. Then she used time-lapse
imaging to watch their grim fates: the skin cells popped out from the surface
layer, broke up and disappeared. Later, she noticed the winner cells engulfing
and clearing the losers’ corpses7.
Repeating the
experiment at the multilayer stage, Ellis no longer saw the less-fit skin cells
perishing or being engulfed. Instead, the loser cells tended to differentiate
and migrate into the outer layers of skin — where they acted as a barrier for a
short time before being shed. The winner cells were more likely to remain
behind in the bottom layer as stem cells.
This made sense.
“Killing a cell is energetically expensive,” says Ellis. A developing tissue,
she says, might decide: “Why not just remove losers through differentiation?”
Emi Nishimura’s lab at the Tokyo Medical and Dental University in Japan, found
that competing stem cells in the ageing tail skin of adult mice used the same
pattern of asymmetrical divisions to eliminate stem cells with lower levels of
a key structural collagen protein8.
These experiments
could provide guidance for scientists looking to harness stem cells to
rejuvenate ageing tissues and organs. Cell competition could either help or
hurt such therapies: stem cells might outcompete older, less-fit cells, or they
might encounter a hostile neighbourhood when transplanted into tissue.
Understanding whether and how cell competition happens in adult tissue could
help settle this matter.
Piddini admits
that she was a little obsessed with the idea, and her group was part of a wave
of researchers that proved cell competition does take place in adult organisms.
To test the idea, she says, the team “genetically sprinkled” a mutated copy
of RPS3, a gene functionally related to Minute, into some cells in
the intestine of adult flies. Cells with the mutant copy were outcompeted by
their wild-type counterparts. It didn’t matter whether the losers were the stem
cells that maintain the gut or differentiated cells: all eventually perished9.
Cristina Villa
del Campo, a senior postdoc in the Torres lab, tested for adult competition in
the mouse heart by introducing winner cardiac cells at eight to ten weeks of
age. Over the course of one year, she tracked the numbers of winner cells and
wild-type losers and saw the loser population decline by about 40%10.
“It was a slow
replacement in the adult,” says Villa del Campo. “But even highly
differentiated functional adult cells can sense the less-fit heart cells and
eliminate them.”
Unanswered
questions
Even with so many
examples of cell competition playing out in different conditions, the field
still faces a torrent of unanswered questions. One big puzzle is how cells in a
group sense fitness. “Maybe cells are recognizing chemical differences, or
physical differences, or differences in cell-membrane composition,” says
Fujita, who adds that labs have found evidence for all three.
His
filament-poking kidney-cell experiments suggest that cell–cell contact is
needed. Others have seen chemical-fitness signals that seem to be short-range,
travelling up to eight cell diameters. Exactly which molecules are responsible
for this signalling — either secreted chemicals or physical tags — is the
subject of intense debate and investigation.
Both Johnston and
Zwaka have turned up signals associated with immune surveillance. Johnston’s
group identified molecules that typically call immune cells to swarm in and
engulf foreign invaders and that were driving death in losers11. Normal cells
express low levels of these death signals at all times. But in a competitive
mix, winners flooded their loser neighbours with the signal, which pushed them
to kill themselves.
Zwaka proposes
that cells might assess each other’s health by sniffing out the general signals
or debris that cells shed. It’s akin to smelling the steaks that your neighbour
is grilling for dinner and concluding that they must be doing well.
Or it could be as
simple as seeing which flag your neighbour is flying. Moreno heads his own
group now at the Champalimaud Centre for the Unknown in Lisbon, Portugal, which
discovered a membrane-spanning protein called Flower12. In humans, the protein
can take four forms, each displaying its own characteristic structure on the
outer cell surface. Two signal ‘I’m a winner’ and the other two signal ‘I’m a
loser’ to nearby cells, says Moreno.
Some human cancer
cells fly the Flower-winner signals, which might enhance their survival. Experiments
in Moreno’s lab showed that silencing the winning flags on tumours slowed the
cells’ growth and made them susceptible to chemotherapy13.
Some researchers,
however, dispute the importance of the Flower tags. Moreno acknowledges that
they are not present in all cell-competition situations.
Healthy
competition. Cracking the
mechanics of competition will be key if researchers want to use it to improve
cell-based cancer or regenerative therapies.
There are
tantalizing hints that cell competition might already protect against cancer.
Findings made in the past few years reveal that human skin, oesophageal and
lung cells show high levels of mosaicism. Approximately one-quarter of skin
cells, for example, harbour many precancerous mutations that only rarely turn
into tumours14,15.
It is unclear
what gives cancerous cells the advantage when tumours do form. If researchers
can learn how to subdue supercompetitors or blunt cancer cells’ ability to
compete, they might be able to turn that against cancer.
Conversely, stem
cells might need to gain a competitive edge if they are to replace aged or
diseased tissue for an organ makeover. Villa del Campo says that clinicians are
already considering how to enhance patient-derived cardiac stem cells to
efficiently replace cells that have been damaged by heart attacks or disease.
What started as
modest observations in minuscule fruit-fly larvae has exposed the primal
cellular battles that could usher in a new era of cell-based medicine. The
process has scientists buzzing, but it remains mysterious.
“Cell competition
might be a general process to remove any undesirable cell that should not be
there,” says Morata, after returning from a one-day meeting in Lausanne,
Switzerland devoted to competition in September.
Now 74, he’s
thrilled that work he essentially shelved more than 40 years ago is gaining new
life and that the competition is heating up. “It’s really exciting.”
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