Cyclin E in centrosome duplication and reduplication in sea urchin zygotes.

J Cell Physiol

Program in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599, USA.

Published: December 2008

When protein synthesis is completely blocked from before fertilization, the sea urchin zygote arrests in first S phase and the paternal centrosome reduplicates multiple times. However, when protein synthesis is blocked starting in prophase of first mitosis, the zygote divides and the blastomeres arrest in a G1-like state. The centrosome inherited from this mitosis duplicates only once in each blastomere for reasons that are not understood. The late G1 rise in cyclin E/cdk2 kinase activity initiates centrosome duplication in mammalian cells and its activity is needed for centrosome duplication in Xenopus egg extracts. Since the half-time for cyclin E turnover is normally approximately 1 h in sea urchin zygotes, the different behaviors of centrosomes during G1 and S phase arrests could be due to differential losses of cyclin E and its associated kinase activities at these two arrest points. To better understand the mechanisms that limit centrosome duplication, we characterize the levels of cyclin E and its associated kinase activity at the S phase and G1 arrest points. We first demonstrate that cyclin E/cdk2 kinase activity is required for centrosome duplication and reduplication in sea urchin zygotes. Next we find that cyclin E levels and cyclin E/cdk2 kinase activities are both constitutively and equivalently elevated during both the S phase and G1 arrests. This indicates that centrosome duplication during the G1 arrest is limited by a block to reduplication under conditions permissive for duplication. The cytoplasmic conditions of S phase, however, abrogate this block to reduplication.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2950072PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jcp.21531DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

centrosome duplication
24
sea urchin
16
urchin zygotes
12
cyclin e/cdk2
12
e/cdk2 kinase
12
kinase activity
12
cyclin
8
duplication reduplication
8
reduplication sea
8
protein synthesis
8

Similar Publications

The nucleophosmin (NPM1) gene encodes for the most abundant nucleolar protein. Thanks to its property to act as histone chaperone and to shuttle between the nucleus and cytoplasm, the NPM1 protein is involved in multiple cellular function that are here extensively reviewed and include the formation of the nucleolus through liquid-liquid phase separation, regulation of ribosome biogenesis and transport, control of DNA repair and centrosome duplication as well as response to nucleolar stress. NPM1 is mutated in about 30-35% of adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Drastic changes in chromosome number and cellular contents upon ploidy alterations profoundly affect the stability of mitotic regulation in different biological and pathological processes. Isogenic ploidy series of somatic cell lines are useful for studying the effects of ploidy differences on mitotic regulation at cellular and molecular levels. This chapter describes experimental procedures using isogenic human HAP1 cell lines that cover haploid, diploid, and tetraploid states.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conserved process of centriole duplication requires establishment of a Sas6-centred cartwheel initiated by Plk4's phosphorylation of Ana1/STIL. Subsequently the centriole undergoes conversion to a centrosome requiring its radial expansion and elongation, mediated by a network requiring interactions between Cep135, Ana1/Cep295, and Asterless/Cep152. Here we show that mutant alleles encoding overlapping N- and C-terminal parts of Ana1 are capable of intragenic complementation to rescue radial expansion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Caspase-2 kills cells with extra centrosomes.

Sci Adv

November 2024

Armenise-Harvard Laboratory of Cell Division, Department of Cellular, Computational and Integrative Biology-CIBIO, University of Trento, Trento, Italy.

Centrosomes are membrane-less organelles that orchestrate a wide array of biological functions by acting as microtubule organizing centers. Here, we report that caspase-2-driven apoptosis is elicited in blood cells failing cytokinesis and that extra centrosomes are necessary to trigger this cell death. Activation of caspase-2 depends on the PIDDosome multi-protein complex, and priming of PIDD1 at extra centrosomes is necessary for pathway activation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Copy number variation (CNV) in the 16p11.2 (BP4-BP5) genomic locus is strongly associated with autism. Carriers of 16p11.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!