Cell division genes promote asymmetric interaction between Numb and Notch in the Drosophila CNS

Development ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 126 (12) ◽  
pp. 2759-2770 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Wai ◽  
B. Truong ◽  
K.M. Bhat

Cell intrinsic and cell extrinsic factors mediate asymmetric cell divisions during neurogenesis in the Drosophila embryo. In the NB4-2->GMC-1->RP2/sib lineage, one of the well-studied neuronal lineages in the ventral nerve cord, the Notch (N) signaling interacts with the asymmetrically localized Numb (Nb) to specify sibling neuronal fates to daughter cells of GMC-1. In this current study, we have investigated asymmetric cell fate specifications by N and Nb in the context of cell cycle. We have used loss-of-function mutations in N and nb, cell division mutants cyclinA (cycA), regulator of cyclin A1 (rca1) and string/cdc25 phosphatase (stg), and the microtubule destabilizing agent, nocodazole, to investigate this issue. We report that the loss of cycA, rca1 or stg leads to a block in the division of GMC-1, however, this GMC-1 exclusively adopts an RP2 identity. While the loss of N leads to the specification of RP2 fates to both progeny of GMC-1 and loss of nb results in the specification of sib fates to these daughter cells, the GMC-1 in the double mutant between nb and cycA assumes a sib fate. These epistasis results indicate that both N and nb function downstream of cell division genes and that progression through cell cycle is required for the asymmetric localization of Nb. In the absence of entry to metaphase, the Nb protein prevents the N signaling from specifying sib fate to the RP2/sib precursor. These results are also consistent with our finding that the sib cell is specified as RP2 in N; nb double mutants. Finally, our results show that nocodazole-arrested GMC-1 in wild-type embryos randomly assumes either an RP2 fate or a sib fate. This suggests that microtubules are involved in mediating the antagonistic interaction between Nb and N during RP2 and sib fate specification.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (23) ◽  
pp. 10315-10328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yukinori Minoshima ◽  
Tetsuya Hori ◽  
Masahiro Okada ◽  
Hiroshi Kimura ◽  
Tokuko Haraguchi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT We identified CENP-50 as a novel kinetochore component. We found that CENP-50 is a constitutive component of the centromere that colocalizes with CENP-A and CENP-H throughout the cell cycle in vertebrate cells. To determine the precise role of CENP-50, we examined its role in centromere function by generating a loss-of-function mutant in the chicken DT40 cell line. The CENP-50 knockout was not lethal; however, the growth rate of cells with this mutation was slower than that of wild-type cells. We observed that the time for CENP-50-deficient cells to complete mitosis was longer than that for wild-type cells. Centromeric localization of CENP-50 was abolished in both CENP-H- and CENP-I-deficient cells. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed that CENP-50 interacted with the CENP-H/CENP-I complex in chicken DT40 cells. We also observed severe mitotic defects in CENP-50-deficient cells with apparent premature sister chromatid separation when the mitotic checkpoint was activated, indicating that CENP-50 is required for recovery from spindle damage.



1979 ◽  
Vol 81 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
N Agabian ◽  
M Evinger ◽  
G Parker

An essential event in developmental processes is the introduction of asymmetry into an otherwise undifferentiated cell population. Cell division in Caulobacter is asymmetric; the progeny cells are structurally different and follow different sequences of development, thus providing a useful model system for the study of differentiation. Because the progeny cells are different from one another, there must be a segregation of morphogenetic and informational components at some time in the cell cycle. We have examined the pattern of specific protein segregation between Caulobacter stalked and swarmer daughter cells, with the rationale that such a progeny analysis would identify both structurally and developmentally important proteins. To complement the study, we have also examined the pattern of protein synthesis during synchronous growth and in various cellular fractions. We show here, for the first time, that the association of proteins with a specific cell type may result not only from their periodicity of synthesis, but also from their pattern of distribution at the time of cell division. Several membrane-associated and soluble proteins are segregated asymmetrically between progeny stalked and swarmer cells. The data further show that a subclass of soluble proteins becomes associated with the membrane of the progeny stalked cells. Therefore, although the principal differentiated cell types possess different synthetic capabilities and characteristic proteins, the asymmetry between progeny stalked and swarmer cells is generated primarily by the preferential association of specific soluble proteins with the membrane of only one daughter cell. The majority of the proteins which exhibit this segregation behavior are synthesized during the entire cell cycle and exhibit relatively long, functional messenger RNA half-lives.



Author(s):  
Caroline S. Simon ◽  
Vanessa S. Stürmer ◽  
Julien Guizetti

Regulating the number of progeny generated by replicative cell cycles is critical for any organism to best adapt to its environment. Classically, the decision whether to divide further is made after cell division is completed by cytokinesis and can be triggered by intrinsic or extrinsic factors. Contrarily, cell cycles of some species, such as the malaria-causing parasites, go through multinucleated cell stages. Hence, their number of progeny is determined prior to the completion of cell division. This should fundamentally affect how the process is regulated and raises questions about advantages and challenges of multinucleation in eukaryotes. Throughout their life cycle Plasmodium spp. parasites undergo four phases of extensive proliferation, which differ over three orders of magnitude in the amount of daughter cells that are produced by a single progenitor. Even during the asexual blood stage proliferation parasites can produce very variable numbers of progeny within one replicative cycle. Here, we review the few factors that have been shown to affect those numbers. We further provide a comparative quantification of merozoite numbers in several P. knowlesi and P. falciparum parasite strains, and we discuss the general processes that may regulate progeny number in the context of host-parasite interactions. Finally, we provide a perspective of the critical knowledge gaps hindering our understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying this exciting and atypical mode of parasite multiplication.



Development ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 121 (9) ◽  
pp. 3035-3043 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.T. Bissen

The identifiable cells of leech embryos exhibit characteristic differences in the timing of cell division. To elucidate the mechanisms underlying these cell-specific differences in cell cycle timing, the leech cdc25 gene was isolated because Cdc25 phosphatase regulates the asynchronous cell divisions of postblastoderm Drosophila embryos. Examination of the distribution of cdc25 RNA and the zygotic expression of cdc25 in identified cells of leech embryos revealed lineage-dependent mechanisms of regulation. The early blastomeres, macromeres and teloblasts have steady levels of maternal cdc25 RNA throughout their cell cycles. The levels of cdc25 RNA remain constant throughout the cell cycles of the segmental founder cells, but the majority of these transcripts are zygotically produced. Cdc25 RNA levels fluctuate during the cell cycles of the micromeres. The levels peak during early G2, due to a burst of zygotic transcription, and then decline as the cell cycles progress. These data suggest that cells of different lineages employ different strategies of cell cycle control.



Development ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 117 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Govind ◽  
L. Brennan ◽  
R. Steward

The maternal-effect gene dorsal encodes the ventral morphogen that is essential for elaboration of ventral and ventrolateral fates in the Drosophila embryo. Dorsal belongs to the rel family of transcription factors and controls asymmetric expression of zygotic genes along the dorsoventral axis. The dorsal protein is cytoplasmic in early embryos, possibly because of a direct interaction with cactus. In response to a ventral signal, dorsal protein becomes partitioned into nuclei of cleavage-stage syncytial blastoderms such that the ventral nuclei have the maximum amount of dorsal protein, and the lateral and dorsal nuclei have progressively less protein. Here we show that transgenic flies containing the dorsal cDNA, which is driven by the constitutively active hsp83 promoter, exhibits rescue of the dorsal- phenotype. Transformed lines were used to increase the level of dorsal protein. Females with dorsal levels roughly twice that of wild-type produced normal embryos, while a higher level of dorsal protein resulted in phenotypes similar to those observed for loss-of-function cactus mutations. By manipulating the cactus gene dose, we found that in contrast to a dorsal/cactus ratio of 2.5 which resulted in fully penetrant weak ventralization, a cactus/dorsal ratio of 3.0 was acceptable by the system. By manipulating dorsal levels in different cactus and dorsal group mutant backgrounds, we found that the relative amounts of ventral signal to that of the dorsal-cactus complex is important for the elaboration of the normal dorsoventral pattern. We propose that in a wild-type embryo, the activities of dorsal and cactus are not independently regulated; excess cactus activity is deployed only if a higher level of dorsal protein is available. Based on these results we discuss how the ventral signal interacts with the dorsal-cactus complex, thus forming a gradient of nuclear dorsal protein.



2005 ◽  
Vol 79 (4) ◽  
pp. 2597-2603 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoon-Jae Song ◽  
Mark F. Stinski

ABSTRACT The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) IE86 protein induces the human fibroblast cell cycle from G0/G1 to G1/S, where cell cycle progression stops. Cells with a wild-type, mutated, or null p53 or cells with null p21 protein were transduced with replication-deficient adenoviruses expressing HCMV IE86 protein or cellular p53 or p21. Even though S-phase genes were activated in a p53 wild-type cell, IE86 protein also induced phospho-Ser15 p53 and p21 independent of p14ARF but dependent on ATM kinase. These cells did not enter the S phase. In human p53 mutant, p53 null, or p21 null cells, IE86 protein did not up-regulate p21, cellular DNA synthesis was not inhibited, but cell division was inhibited. Cells accumulated in the G2/M phase, and there was increased cyclin-dependent kinase 1/cyclin B1 activity. Although the HCMV IE86 protein increases cellular E2F activity, it also blocks cell division in both p53+/+ and p53−/− cells.



1995 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 587-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
K A Winans ◽  
C Hashimoto

Dorsoventral polarity of the Drosophila embryo is established by a signal transduction pathway in which the maternal transmembrane protein Toll appears to function as the receptor for a ventrally localized extracellular ligand. Certain dominant Toll alleles encode proteins that behave as partially ligand-independent receptors, causing embryos containing these proteins to become ventralized. In extracts of embryos derived from mothers carrying these dominant alleles, we detected a polypeptide of approximately 35 kDa in addition to full-length Toll polypeptides with antibodies to Toll. Our biochemical analyses suggest that the smaller polypeptide is a truncated form of Toll lacking extracellular domain sequences. To assay the biological activity of such a shortened form of Toll, we synthesized RNA encoding a mutant polypeptide lacking the leucine-rich repeats that comprise most of Toll's extracellular domain and injected this RNA into embryos. The truncated Toll protein elicited the most ventral cell fate independently of the wild-type Toll protein and its ligand. These results support the view that Toll is a receptor whose extracellular domain regulates the intrinsic signaling activity of its cytoplasmic domain.



Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 1236-1236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Ewerth ◽  
Andrea Schmidts ◽  
Birgit Kuegelgen ◽  
Dagmar Wider ◽  
Julia Schüler ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1236 Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) and multipotent progenitor cells continuously maintain hematopoiesis by self-renewal and differentiation to all types of blood lineages. These unique processes are regulated by intrinsic and extrinsic signals (e.g. cytokines, cell-cell contacts) and strongly connects stem cell fate with the cell cycle. The ubiquitin-proteasome system regulates spatial and temporal abundance of proteins in the cell. During cell cycle, the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) with its co-activators Cdc20 and Cdh1 marks proteins for proteasomal degradation and thus controls their activity. Known targets of Cdh1, namely Skp2 and Id2, are involved in regulation of self-renewal and granulopoiesis (Wang et al., Blood 2011; Buitenhuis et al., Blood 2005). This raises the hypothesis that Cdh1 may be a critical upstream regulator of HSC differentiation. The analysis of human bone marrow cell subsets (CD34+, lymphoid and myeloid cells) revealed highest protein level of Cdh1 in CD34+ cells, lower expression in more mature lymphoid subsets (CD3+, CD19+) and only marginal expression in mature myeloid cells (CD41a+, CD11b+). These data suggest that Cdh1 is important to induce differentiation, but dispensable for maintaining the differentiated state. In vitro cultivation of G-CSF mobilized peripheral blood CD34+ cells under conditions resulting in either self-renewal (SCF, TPO, Flt3-l) or differentiation/granulopoiesis (SCF, G-CSF) showed downregulation of Cdh1 during culture compared to d0. Western blots did not only reveal decreasing levels of Cdh1, but also its inactivation by its specific inhibitor Emi1 which stabilized the ubiquitin ligase Skp2 and promoted cell cycle entry and proliferation by degrading the cyclin-dependent-kinase inhibitor p27. In addition, the APC/CCdh1 target cyclin B was upregulated. These data indicate that initial Cdh1 downregulation is required to promote cell cycle entry and proliferation of CD34+ HSCs under conditions mediating both self-renewal as well as differentiation. To analyze cell division/proliferation and self-renewal versus differentiation more closely, we used the fluorescent dye CFSE as an indicator of cell division in combination with CD34 to indicate the differentiation status. When cultured under self-renewal conditions using SCF, TPO and Flt3-l, CD34+cells showed enhanced proliferation with increased cells in higher generations, whereas using SCF and G-CSF to induce granulopoiesis, cells within lower generations were more prominent. These experiments also revealed a rapid decrease of CD34 expression in granulopoiesis after 3 cell divisions in contrast to a moderate decline under self-renewal conditions. This is consistent with more symmetric divisions into CD34+ daughter cells under self-renewal conditions and gradual cell cycle exit and differentiation under conditions that induce granulopoiesis. To further elucidate the role of Cdh1 for stem/progenitor cell fate, we used a lentiviral knockdown of Cdh1 in CD34+ cells. After 4 days of transduction and cell sorting, the cells were cultivated for 1 week in medium containing SCF, TPO and Flt3-l. Cdh1 depleted cells showed enhanced proliferation compared to the empty vector control and a higher expression of CD34. In colony forming unit (CFU) assays, we observed that CD34+ cells with Cdh1-knockdown were less efficient to differentiate to CFU-G, CFU-M and BFU-E. A higher potential to self-renew was validated by replating of these colonies, where the number with Cdh1-knockdown increased during serial replating. To validate our results in vivo, we have established a NOD/SCID/IL-2Rγ chain−/− (NSG) xenotransplant mouse model. The evaluation of engraftment capacity and differentiation potential of human Cdh1 depleted CD34+ cells in this model is ongoing. Our data establish the central cell cycle regulator APC/CCdh1 as a novel regulator of self-renewal and differentiation in CD34+ HSCs. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.



Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 105 (8) ◽  
pp. 3109-3116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward F. Srour ◽  
Xia Tong ◽  
Ki Woong Sung ◽  
P. Artur Plett ◽  
Susan Rice ◽  
...  

AbstractWhether cytokines can modulate the fate of primitive hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) through successive in vitro cell divisions has not been established. Single human marrow CD34+CD38–/lo cells in the G0 phase of cell cycle were cultured under 7 different cytokine combinations, monitored for proliferation on days 3, 5, and 7, then assayed for long-term culture-initiating cell (LTC-IC) function on day 7. LTC-IC function was then retrospectively correlated with prior number of in vitro cell divisions to determine whether maintenance of LTC-IC function after in vitro cell division is dependent on cytokine exposure. In the presence of proliferation progression signals, initial cell division was independent of cytokine stimulation, suggesting that entry of primitive HPCs into the cell cycle is a stochastic property. However, kinetics of proliferation beyond day 3 and maintenance of LTC-IC function were sensitive to cytokine stimulation, such that LTC-IC underwent an initial long cell cycle, followed by more synchronized shorter cycles varying in length depending on the cytokine combination. Nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency (NOD/SCID) transplantation studies revealed analogous results to those obtained with LTC-ICs. These data suggest that although exit from quiescence and commitment to proliferation might be stochastic, kinetics of proliferation, and possibly fate of primitive HPCs, might be modulated by extrinsic factors.



1992 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 789-803 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Preuss ◽  
J Mulholland ◽  
A Franzusoff ◽  
N Segev ◽  
D Botstein

The membrane compartments responsible for Golgi functions in wild-type Saccharomyces cerevisiae were identified and characterized by immunoelectron microscopy. Using improved fixation methods, Golgi compartments were identified by labeling with antibodies specific for alpha 1-6 mannose linkages, the Sec7 protein, or the Ypt1 protein. The compartments labeled by each of these antibodies appear as disk-like structures that are apparently surrounded by small vesicles. Yeast Golgi typically are seen as single, isolated cisternae, generally not arranged into parallel stacks. The location of the Golgi structures was monitored by immunoelectron microscopy through the yeast cell cycle. Several Golgi compartments, apparently randomly distributed, were always observed in mother cells. During the initiation of new daughter cells, additional Golgi structures cluster just below the site of bud emergence. These Golgi enter daughter cells at an early stage, raising the possibility that much of the bud's growth might be due to secretory vesicles formed as well as consumed entirely within the daughter. During cytokinesis, the Golgi compartments are concentrated near the site of cell wall synthesis. Clustering of Golgi both at the site of bud formation and at the cell septum suggests that these organelles might be directed toward sites of rapid cell surface growth.



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