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Limited functional redundancy and oscillation of cyclins in multinucleated Ashbya gossypii fungal cells. | LitMetric

Limited functional redundancy and oscillation of cyclins in multinucleated Ashbya gossypii fungal cells.

Eukaryot Cell

Department of Molecular Microbiology, Biozentrum University of Basel, Klingelbergstrasse 50/70, 4056 Basel, Switzerland.

Published: March 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cyclin proteins in multinucleated cells, specifically in the filamentous fungus A. gossypii, have not been thoroughly studied, particularly in relation to asynchronous mitosis.
  • Researchers analyzed G1 and B-type cyclins to see if any showed periodic abundance during the cell cycle, discovering that only one cyclin, AgClb5/6p, changes its location within the cell during division.
  • The study indicates that three out of five cyclins are essential, suggesting low functional redundancy in this context, and identifies a cyclin that is crucial specifically for sporulation, hinting at increased substrate specificity among the cyclins in these unique cellular environments.

Article Abstract

Cyclin protein behavior has not been systematically investigated in multinucleated cells with asynchronous mitoses. Cyclins are canonical oscillating cell cycle proteins, but it is unclear how fluctuating protein gradients can be established in multinucleated cells where nuclei in different stages of the division cycle share the cytoplasm. Previous work in A. gossypii, a filamentous fungus in which nuclei divide asynchronously in a common cytoplasm, demonstrated that one G1 and one B-type cyclin do not fluctuate in abundance across the division cycle. We have undertaken a comprehensive analysis of all G1 and B-type cyclins in A. gossypii to determine whether any of the cyclins show periodic abundance across the cell cycle and to examine whether cyclins exhibit functional redundancy in such a cellular environment. We localized all G1 and B-type cyclins and notably found that only AgClb5/6p varies in subcellular localization during the division cycle. AgClb5/6p is lost from nuclei at the meta-anaphase transition in a D-box-dependent manner. These data demonstrate that efficient nuclear autonomous protein degradation can occur within multinucleated cells residing in a common cytoplasm. We have shown that three of the five cyclins in A. gossypii are essential genes, indicating that there is minimal functional redundancy in this multinucleated system. In addition, we have identified a cyclin, AgClb3/4p, that is essential only for sporulation. We propose that the cohabitation of different cyclins in nuclei has led to enhanced substrate specificity and limited functional redundancy within classes of cyclins in multinucleated cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1828934PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/EC.00273-06DOI Listing

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