AI Article Synopsis

  • Early embryonic cell cycles typically switch between S and M phases, often lacking gap phases, but the timing of gap phase introduction during development is unclear.
  • Researchers created fluorescence ubiquitin cell cycle indicators (FUCCI) to study this, using time-lapse 3D imaging to track cell cycle phases throughout embryogenesis.
  • Their findings show that only two common embryonic cells exhibit distinct G1 and G2 phases, while most others appear to divide without a noticeable G1 phase, providing insights into the introduction of gap phases in early development.

Article Abstract

Early embryonic cell cycles usually alternate between S and M phases without any gap phase. When the gap phases are developmentally introduced in various cell types remains poorly defined especially during embryogenesis. To establish the cell-specific introduction of gap phases in embryo, we generate multiple fluorescence ubiquitin cell cycle indicators (FUCCI) in . Time-lapse 3D imaging followed by lineal expression profiling reveals sharp and differential accumulation of the FUCCI reporters, allowing the systematic demarcation of cell cycle phases throughout embryogenesis. Accumulation of the reporters reliably identifies both G1 and G2 phases only in two embryonic cells with an extended cell cycle length, suggesting that the remaining cells divide either without a G1 phase, or with a brief G1 phase that is too short to be picked up by our reporters. In summary, we provide an initial picture of gap phase introduction in a metazoan embryo. The newly developed FUCCI reporters pave the way for further characterization of developmental control of cell cycle progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9641140PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2022.978962DOI Listing

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