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Synchronization of Cells in G1 Phase of the Cell Cycle. | LitMetric

The baker's yeast, is a widely used model organism in molecular biology because of the high homology it shares with human cells in many basic cellular processes such as DNA replication, repair, recombination, transcription, and because of the ease its genome can be manipulated. Other advantages of working with yeast are its fast production rate which is comparable to bacteria's, and its cheap maintenance. To examine certain phenomena, for example whether a mutation affects the passage through a cell cycle phase, it can be necessary to work with a yeast culture, in which all the cells are in the same phase of the cell cycle. Yeasts can be arrested and kept in different phases of the cell cycle. Here we describe the method that allows synchronizing and keeping yeast cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle with the mating pheromone, α-factor. Only MATa cells can be synchronized with α-factor which is produced by MATα cells. It is highly recommended to use a MATa deletion strain. The gene encodes for an extracellular protease that inactivates α-factor by cleaving it (MacKay , 1988). To counteract the Bar1 protease activity when using cells, 100-1,000 times more α-factor is needed as compared to deletion cells (α-factor is quite expensive!), and still the synchrony will be transient. In contrast, deletion cells can be kept in G1 phase with α-factor for several hours, and the degree of synchronization is usually higher than using a strain. Moreover, deletion cells can be synchronized even at high cell density, whereas cells, due to the activity of the secreted Bar1 protease, only at low cell density.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5660610PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.21769/BioProtoc.1273DOI Listing

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