scholarly journals INITIATION OF MITOSIS IN RELATION TO THE CELL CYCLE FOLLOWING FEEDING OF STARVED CHICKENS

1964 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan L. Cameron ◽  
Günter Cleffmann

Cellular proliferation of newly hatched chickens was depressed by starving them for 2.5 to 3.5 days. Starvation may hold proliferative cells in different parts of the cell cycle. In order to find where in the cell cycle these cells are held, the animals were fed and the following events were measured as a function of time after the start of feeding: (1) the mitotic index, and (2) the DNA synthetic index (number of cells in DNA synthesis 1 hour after injection of H3-thymidine). The duration of the cell's DNA synthetic period (S) was measured, permitting a more exact description of the cell cycle. Analysis of the duodenal and esophageal epithelia shows that feeding initiates cell division by stimulating cells from the G1 part of the mitotic cycle in the duodenum. In the esophagus some of the cells were either stopped or slowed down in G1, and another group of cells in G2. Feeding simultaneously stimulates both cell groups; the former moves into S, the latter into mitosis. The S period in starved animals is a little longer than that in normally fed animals but the extension can be attributed to a slightly decreased body temperature.

1982 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 938-949 ◽  
Author(s):  
I A Vorobjev ◽  
Chentsov YuS

A study was made of the structure of the centrosome in the cell cycle in a nonsynchronous culture of pig kidney embryo (PE) cells. In the spindle pole of the metaphase cell there are two mutually perpendicular centrioles (mother and daughter) which differ in their ultrastructure. An electron-dense halo, which surrounds only the mother centriole and is the site where spindle microtubules converge, disappears at the end of telophase. In metaphase and anaphase, the mother centriole is situated perpendicular to the spindle axis. At the beginning of the G1 period, pericentriolar satellites are formed on the mother centriole with microtubules attached to them; the two centrioles diverge. The structures of the two centrioles differ throughout interphase; the mother centriole has appendages, the daughter does not. Replication of the centrioles occurs approximately in the middle of the S period. The structure of the procentrioles differs sharply from that of the mature centriole. Elongation of procentrioles is completed in prometaphase, and their structure undergoes a number of successive changes. In the G2 period, pericentriolar satellites disappear and some time later a fibrillar halo is formed on both mother centrioles, i.e., spindle poles begin to form. In the cells that have left the mitotic cycle (G0 period), replication of centrioles does not take place; in many cells, a cilium is formed on the mother centriole. In a small number of cells a cilium is formed in the S and G2 periods, but unlike the cilium in the G0 period it does not reach the surface of the cell. In all cases, it locates on the centriole with appendages. At the beginning of the G1 period, during the G2 period, and in nonciliated cells in the G0 period, one of the centrioles is situated perpendicular to the substrate. On the whole, it takes a mature centriole a cycle and a half to form in PE cells.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 378-378
Author(s):  
Piers EM Patten ◽  
Charles C Chu ◽  
Rajendra N Damle ◽  
Steven L. Allen ◽  
Jonathan E Kolitz ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 378 During the course of CLL, ongoing genetic changes occur within the leukemic clone and such changes associate with disease progression. Activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), the enzyme required for IGV gene somatic hypermutation and isotype class switching in B cells, is a candidate enzyme for causing such changes. Depending upon the detection method, circulating CLL cells express mRNA for AID in 40 – 100% of patients, although at any point only a very small percentage of cells within the clone express this message. Because B lymphocytes must be in the cell cycle for AID-induced DNA changes to occur, we hypothesized that AID protein would be contained within recently divided CLL cells and that these cells would exhibit new IGV mutations and/or class switching. Using appropriate markers for recently divided cells, we found that AID mRNA is enriched in/limited to this subset. Furthermore, because dividing cells in CLL are principally found within bone marrow and secondary lymphoid tissues, we analyzed such cells in lymph nodes (LNs) for AID protein expression and activity. In 50% of LNs infiltrated with CLL (n=10), AID protein was detected in large cells expressing a CLL phenotype; these cells were predominantly in the cell cycle. Nevertheless, even in those cases where CLL cells expressed AID, most cycling cells were AID protein negative. FACS analysis of dispersed LN cells confirmed the presence of AID protein-expressing cells and such cells had the phenotype of recently divided cells. To demonstrate that AID protein was functionally competent, we co-cultured peripheral blood CLL cells with anti-CD40 mAb and IL-4 in the presence of irradiated CD32-transfected fibroblasts, a model that mimics the tissue microenvironment. In 16 patients, we showed that peripheral blood leukemic cells could express AID protein, although the degree of upregulation was highly variable between cases. Using the dye CFSE to track CD5+CD19+ cell division, we found that AID protein always occurred when multiply divided cells were present. Some cases showed immediate AID production prior to division, while others exhibited no or little expression until passing through several cell cycles. AID protein causes double strand breaks (DSBs) within DNA, for example in IG switch regions during class switch recombination. We therefore used confocal microscopy to detect the presence of phospho-histone H2A.X (pH2AX), which localizes to DSBs, in CFSE-labeled cells stimulated for 14 days by the conditions mentioned above. At least 10 × 60 magnification images from 3 cultures showing cell division and AID upregulation were obtained, and the fluorescent signals for CFSE and pH2AX quantified from greater than 250 CD23+ CLL cells in each case. A mean of 20.4% of cells (range 10.4 – 38.2%) showed increased fluorescence with anti-pH2AX compared to unstimulated cells. Moreover, stimulated cultures demonstrated increased anti-pH2AX signal in a significantly greater number of cells with diminished CFSE intensity, which are the most divided cells, as compared to less/undivided cells with higher CFSE intensity (p<0.0001 in all cases analyzed, Fisher's exact test). In addition, 20 cell aliquots of unstimulated CLL cells and stimulated CFSE-labeled CLL cells were sorted after culture, yielding pure populations of either undivided cells or cells that had undergone 5 – 6 divisions. While all sorted populations yielded unswitched mu IG transcripts (≥75% wells positive in all groups), switched gamma transcripts with the same V-D-J rearrangement as the leukemic clone were only obtained from divided cells (range 4–9% wells positive), and not present in either undivided or unstimulated cells (0% wells positive). Taken together, the presence of heightened numbers of DSBs in the most divided cells compared to no/minimally divided cells and evidence of IG class switching in the former, indicate that AID protein was functional in these activated CLL peripheral blood cultures. In all, these data demonstrate that in CLL functional AID protein predominates in cells that are dividing or have a recently divided phenotype, although cases vary in the number of cells expressing AID as well as the relative amounts of enzyme expression. Differential AID activity between discrete CLL cases may relate to the development of new DNA mutations leading to clonal evolution and the variable nature of disease progression seen in this disease. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 735-752 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcin Samiec ◽  
Maria Skrzyszowska ◽  
Michał Bochenek

Abstract The study was undertaken to examine whether various strategies, including contact inhibition and serum starvation, that were used for artificial synchronization of mitotic cycle of porcine fibroblast cell lines affect differently the distribution of cell cycle stage frequencies and the occurrence of apoptotic cell death in the analysed cell samples. In vitro cultured (contact-inhibited or serumstarved) somatic cells were subjected to flow cytometric diagnostics of mitotic cycle together with the detection of late-apoptotic cell fractions with hypodiploid number of nuclear DNA molecules. Moreover, impact of the methods applied to synchronize the cell division cycle of different types of nuclear donor fibroblast cells (adult cutaneous and foetal fibroblasts) on the preimplantation developmental outcomes of cloned pig embryos was investigated. The developmental capabilities of nuclear-transferred (NT) embryos that were reconstituted with contact-inhibited or serum-depleted adult cutaneous fibroblast cells to reach the morula and blastocyst stages remained at the levels of 169/278 (60.8%) and 76/278 (27.3%) or 121/265 (45.7%) and 46/265 (17.4%), respectively. The proportions of NT embryos originating from contact-inhibited or serum-deprived foetal fibroblast cells that completed their development to the morula and blastocyst stages were 223/296 (75.3%) and 108/296 (36.5%) or 165/261 (63.2%) and 67/261 (25.7%), respectively. In conclusion, the flow cytometric analysis of cultured porcine adult cutaneous and foetal fibroblast cells revealed the high efficiency of the artificial synchronization of mitotic cycle at the G0/G1 stages as a consequence of applying the methods of either contact inhibition or serum deprivation. For both types of fibroblast cells used to reconstruct the enucleated oocytes, the strategies that were utilized to synchronize the cell division cycle of nuclear donor cells considerably influenced the in vitro developmental abilities of NT pig embryos. Developmental competencies to reach the morula/blastocyst stages for cloned embryos that had been reconstructed with contact-inhibited or serum-starved foetal fibroblast cell nuclei were significantly higher than those for embryos that had been reconstructed with contact-inhibited or serum-starved adult cutaneous fibroblast cell nuclei.


1976 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra L. Bell ◽  
O. J. Schwarz ◽  
Karen W. Hughes

Vicia faba root tips were exposed to concentrations of paraquat ranging from 10−3M to 10−6M. There was a statistically significant inhibition in 3H-thymidine incorporation, and, therefore, presumably of DNA synthesis by all concentrations of paraquat studied. All concentrations of paraquat also had a statistically significant effect on the percentage of cells in division at various hours following paraquat treatment. At 10−3M and 10−4M paraquat there was an almost total inhibition in the number of cells moving from the S period and through the G2 period and into division. Cells treated with 10−6M paraquat, however, did move through the G2 period and into division. A concentration of 10−4M paraquat did not result in an increase in chromosome aberrations.


1974 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 461-473
Author(s):  
C. DE LATORRE ◽  
M. E. FERNANDEZ-GOMEZ ◽  
G. GIMENEZ-MARTIN ◽  
A. GONZALEZ-FERNANDEZ

The effect of α-amanitin on the cell cycle in Allium cepa meristematic cells was studied: the G1 and G2 periods are prolonged respectively to 1.9 and 1.7 times the normal duration; the S-period is lengthened very little; and the prophase of mitosis is increased to twice the normal duration. It is postulated that real differences in the activity of the non-nucleolar RNA poly-merase might exist in the course of the cell division cycle and that they would account for the higher sensitivities shown by G1, G2 and prophase. On the other hand, the interphase nucleolus responds by segregation in the first few hours of α-amanitin treatment, but recovers its normal structure in continued presence of the drug; and nucleolar reorganization is inhibited in the first few hours in recently formed cells, but the process is subsequently speeded up to attain the same value 4 h after the treatment was begun as in untreated cells.


1972 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 624-634 ◽  
Author(s):  
William R. Jeffery

The mechanism of coordination between DNA replication and cell division was studied in Tetrahymena pyriformis GL-C by manipulation of the timing of these events with heat shocks and inhibition of DNA synthesis. Preliminary experiments showed that the inhibitor combination methotrexate and uridine (M + U) was an effective inhibitor of DNA synthesis. Inhibition of the progression of DNA synthesis with M + U in exponentially growing cells, in which one S period usually occurs between two successive divisions, or in heat-shocked cells, when successive S periods are known to occur between divisions, resulted in the complete suppression of the following division. In further experiments in which the division activities were reassociated with the DNA synthetic cycle by premature termination of the heat-shock treatment, it was shown that (a) the completion of one S period during the treatment was sufficient for cell division, (b) the beginning of division events suppressed the initiation of further S periods, and (c) if further S periods were initiated while the heat-shock treatment was continued, division preparations could not begin until the necessary portion of the S period was completed, even though DNA had previously been duplicated. It was concluded that a temporal incompatibility exists between DNA synthesis and division which may reflect a coupling mechanism which insures their coordination during the normal cell cycle.


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A103-A103
Author(s):  
X CHEN ◽  
D JOHNS ◽  
D GEIMAN ◽  
E MARBAN ◽  
V YANG

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