scholarly journals Collapse of Ribosome Biogenesis Induces Rapid Erythroblast Differentiation

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 2671-2671
Author(s):  
Anna Raimbault ◽  
Celia Floquet ◽  
Boris Guyot ◽  
Ulku Cuhadar ◽  
Olivier Kosmider ◽  
...  

Abstract Genetic insults of ribosomal protein (RP) genes including heterozygous mutations in Diamond Blackfan Anemia (DBA) or RPS14 haploinsufficiency in acquired 5q- syndrome selectively impair erythropoiesis suggesting that the integrity of ribosome biogenesis (RB) is fully required for the production of 10e11erythrocytes per day in humans. Defective RB consecutive to RPL5, RPL11 mutation or RPS14 deletion is thought to induce cell cycle arrest and a various degree of apoptosis in erythroblasts (EB). However, recent data showed that, loss of RPL5/RPL11neither induces apoptosis nor arrests cell cycle, but hampers the progression through the G1 phase, in primary fibroblasts. Furthermore, RB coordinates cell cycle to cell growth for the maintenance of constant cell size. In this work, we investigate the role of RB in erythroid cell differentiation and cell size regulation. We first analyzed the renewal of ribosome during in vitro differentiation of human EB derived from cytapheresis CD34+ cells and mouse erythroblasts derived from mouse fetal liver by a pulsed SILAC (Stable Isotopic Labeling by Amino acids in Culture cell) riboproteomic assay. Ribosome biogenesis dramatically decreases with the disappearance of proEB and basophilic EB and the onset of poly- and ortho-chromatophilic EB. Importantly, inhibition of RNA polI by CX-5461 in proEB forced them to enter the final maturation steps with an increase of glycophorin A (GPA) expression. To study the effect of RPS14 heterozygous deletion on RB, UT7/EPO cell line was infected by a lentivirus containing an inducible GFP-shRNA RPS14. After a 48-h treatment with doxycyclin, Rps14 protein expression was reduced by half and sorted GFP-positive cells had an altered ribosome profile devoid of 40S small subunit or 80S entire particle. Consistently, RB inhibition induced a cell size reduction. Second, we compared RB level in cells responsive to SCF+EPO or EPO alone. RB was optimal when EB responded to SCF+EPO and this was correlated with cell size being higher in SCF+EPO-responsive cells compared to EPO-responsive cells. Both cytokines additively activate the cell growth regulator, p70S6K1. Third, inhibition of p70S6K1 by rapamycin, or a specific chemical S6K1 inhibitor significantly reduced RB as shown by a 50% decrease of ribosome renewal in pulsed-SILAC. Inhibition of RB by rapamycin led to a size reduction and to GPA acquisition, which are the features of erythroid cell differentiation. Our data shows that the collapse of RB due to the loss of c-Kit and reduced activation of p70S6K1 is a key step for cell growth inhibition and induction of terminal differentiation in human or mouse erythroblasts. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

Toxicology ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 300 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 57-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sara Finaurini ◽  
Nicoletta Basilico ◽  
Yolanda Corbett ◽  
Sarah D’Alessandro ◽  
Silvia Parapini ◽  
...  

1975 ◽  
Vol 250 (15) ◽  
pp. 6054-6058
Author(s):  
F Ramirez ◽  
R Gambino ◽  
G M Maniatis ◽  
R A Rifkind ◽  
P A Marks ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgeny Zatulovskiy ◽  
Daniel F. Berenson ◽  
Benjamin R. Topacio ◽  
Jan M. Skotheim

Cell size is fundamental to function in different cell types across the human body because it sets the scale of organelle structures, biosynthesis, and surface transport1,2. Tiny erythrocytes squeeze through capillaries to transport oxygen, while the million-fold larger oocyte divides without growth to form the ~100 cell pre-implantation embryo. Despite the vast size range across cell types, cells of a given type are typically uniform in size likely because cells are able to accurately couple cell growth to division3–6. While some genes whose disruption in mammalian cells affects cell size have been identified, the molecular mechanisms through which cell growth drives cell division have remained elusive7–12. Here, we show that cell growth acts to dilute the cell cycle inhibitor Rb to drive cell cycle progression from G1 to S phase in human cells. In contrast, other G1/S regulators remained at nearly constant concentration. Rb is a stable protein that is synthesized during S and G2 phases in an amount that is independent of cell size. Equal partitioning to daughter cells of chromatin bound Rb then ensures that all cells at birth inherit a similar amount of Rb protein. RB overexpression increased cell size in tissue culture and a mouse cancer model, while RB deletion decreased cell size and removed the inverse correlation between cell size at birth and the duration of G1 phase. Thus, Rb-dilution by cell growth in G1 provides a long-sought cell autonomous molecular mechanism for cell size homeostasis.


2014 ◽  
Vol 204 (3) ◽  
pp. 359-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jessica Zapata ◽  
Noah Dephoure ◽  
Tracy MacDonough ◽  
Yaxin Yu ◽  
Emily J. Parnell ◽  
...  

Cell size checkpoints ensure that passage through G1 and mitosis occurs only when sufficient growth has occurred. The mechanisms by which these checkpoints work are largely unknown. PP2A associated with the Rts1 regulatory subunit (PP2ARts1) is required for cell size control in budding yeast, but the relevant targets are unknown. In this paper, we used quantitative proteome-wide mass spectrometry to identify proteins controlled by PP2ARts1. This revealed that PP2ARts1 controls the two key checkpoint pathways thought to regulate the cell cycle in response to cell growth. To investigate the role of PP2ARts1 in these pathways, we focused on the Ace2 transcription factor, which is thought to delay cell cycle entry by repressing transcription of the G1 cyclin CLN3. Diverse experiments suggest that PP2ARts1 promotes cell cycle entry by inhibiting the repressor functions of Ace2. We hypothesize that control of Ace2 by PP2ARts1 plays a role in mechanisms that link G1 cyclin accumulation to cell growth.


1989 ◽  
Vol 223 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshiko Yasuda ◽  
Hiroyoshi Konishi ◽  
Takuya Matsuo ◽  
Takashi Tanimura

2013 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 98-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Orawan Sarakul ◽  
Phantip Vattanaviboon ◽  
Yuka Tanaka ◽  
Suthat Fucharoen ◽  
Yasunobu Abe ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Pickering ◽  
Lauren Nicole Hollis ◽  
Edridge D’Souza ◽  
Nicholas Rhind

ABSTRACTHow the rate of cell growth is influenced by cell size is a fundamental question of cell biology. The simple model that cell growth is proportional to cell size, based on the proposition that larger cells have proportionally greater synthetic capacity than smaller cells, leads to the predication that the rate of cell growth increases exponentially with cell size. However, other modes of cell growth, including bilinear growth, have been reported. The distinction between exponential and bilinear growth has been explored in particular detail in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. We have revisited the mode of fission yeast cell growth using high-resolution time-lapse microscopy and find, as previously reported, that these two growth models are difficult to distinguish both because of the similarity in shapes between exponential and bilinear curves over the two-fold change in length of a normal cell cycle and because of the substantial biological and experimental noise inherent to these experiments. Therefore, we contrived to have cells grow more than two fold, by holding them in G2 for up to eight hours. Over this extended growth period, in which cells grow up to 5.5-fold, the two growth models diverge to the point that we can confidently exclude bilinear growth as a general model for fission yeast growth. Although the growth we observe is clearly more complicated than predicted by simple exponential growth, we find that exponential growth is a robust approximation of fission yeast growth, both during an unperturbed cell cycle and during extended periods of growth.


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