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1.
Liu XL  Shen Y  Chen EJ  Zhai ZH 《Cell research》2000,10(2):127-137
Incubation of dinoflagellate Crythecodinium cohnii chromosomes in cytoplasmic extracts of unfertilized Xenopus laevis eggs resulted in chromosomes decondensation and recondensation,nuclear envelope assembly,and nuclear reconstitution.Dinoflagellate Crythecodinium cohnii is a kind of primitive eukaryote which possesses numerous permanently condensed chromosomes and discontinuous double-layered nuclear membrane throughout the cell cycle.The assembled nuclei,being surrounded by a continuous double membrane containing nuclear pores and the uniformly dispersed chromatin fibers are morphologically distinguishable from that of Dinoflagellate Crythecodinium cohnii.However,incubation of dinoflagellate Cyrthecodinium cohnii chromosomes in the extracts from dinoflagellate Crythecodinium cohnii cells does not induce nuclear reconstitution.  相似文献   

2.
Dinoflagellate chromosomes are permanently condensed and lack nucleosomes. These features suggest that dinoflagellate chromosomes must have an altered structural arrangement when compared to other eukaryotes and some modified DNA replication machinery to accommodate it. To investigate this possibility, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), an essential component of the DNA replication machinery, was chosen for closer examination. A protein in the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii Biecheler was found to react specifically with two monoclonal antibodies raised against PCNA. The observed band had a size of 55 kDa, which is far in excess of what has been described previously. Another dinoflagellate, Gymnodinium catenatum Bravo, also displayed a band of this size; however, a third species Amphidinium carterae Hulburt, had a band of lower molecular weight. The putative PCNA homolog in C. cohnii showed a nonconstitutive expression pattern. A time-course western blot using cells from a synchronized G1 population showed that protein levels peak during S phase of the cell cycle. Both C. cohnii and A. carterae displayed a strong nuclear localization as determined by immunofluorescence microscopy. The signal was present in a subpopulation of cells, supporting a cell-cycle-specific expression pattern. It is possible that the larger size of this protein in some dinoflagellates reflects the unusual cell cycle and DNA arrangement of this group.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Human glioblastoma-derived cell line, T98G, is arrested in the G1 phase of the cell cycle when serum is deprived. Using this cell line, we investigated the relation between the cell cycle and DNA single-stranded breaks, "nicks," by an in situ nick-translation method. When T98G cells were cultured without serum for 60 h, many small cells with condensed chromatin and scanty cytoplasm appeared. These small cells that were immunohistochemically considered to be in the G0 or early G1 phase had many nicks in DNA. When serum was added, these small cells with nicks disappeared within 1 to 4 h. VP-16, a DNA topoisomerase II inhibitor, delayed the disappearance of these small cells with nicks. This indicated that the action of DNA topoisomerase II on the chromatin is required to repair nicks in T98G glioma cells and to promote the progression from the quiescent to the proliferating phase.  相似文献   

5.
Dinoflagellates are a major group of organisms with an extranuclear spindle. As the purpose of the spindle checkpoint is to ensure proper alignment of the chromosomes on the spindle, dinoflagellate cell cycle control may be compromised to accomodate the extranuclear spindle. In the present study, we demonstrated that nocodazole reversibly prolonged the G2 + M phase of the dinoflagellate cell cycle, in both metaphase and anaphase. The regulation of the spindle checkpoint involves the activation and inhibition of the anaphase promoting complex (APC), which in turn degrades specific cell cycle regulators in the metaphase to anaphase transition. In Crypthecodinium cohnii, nocodazole was also able to induce a prolongation of the degradation of mitotic cyclins and a delay in the inactivation of p13(suc1)-associated histone kinase activities. In addition, cell extracts prepared from C. cohnii in G1 phase and G2/M phase (or nocodazole treated) were able to activate and inhibit, respectively, the degradation of exogenous human cyclin B1 in vitro. The present study thus demonstrated the presence of the spindle checkpoint and APC-mediated cyclin degradation in dinoflagellates. This is discussed in relation to a possible role of the nuclear membrane in mitosis in dinoflagellates.  相似文献   

6.
The presence of myosin in dinoflagellates was tested using an anti-Acanthamoeba castellanii myosin II polyclonal antibody on the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii Seligo. Western blots revealed the presence of a unique band of 80 kDa in total protein extracts and after immunoprecipitation. Expression of this 80 kDa protein appeared constant during the different phases of the cell cycle. In protein extracts from various other dinoflagellates, this 80 kDa protein was detected only in the autotrophic species Prorocentrum micans Ehr. Screening of a C. cohnii cDNA expression library with this antibody revealed a cDNA coding for an amino acid sequence without homology in the databases. However, particular regions were detected: - a polyglutamine repeat domain in the N-terminal part of the protein, - four peptide sequences associated with GTP-binding sites, - a sequence with slight homology to the rod tail of Caenorhabditis elegans myosin II, -a sequence with homology to a human kinesin motor domain. Immunocytolocalization performed on C. cohnii thin sections with a polyclonal antibody raised against the recombinant protein showed p80 to be present both within the nucleus and in the cytoplasm. Labelling was widespread in the nucleoplasm and more concentrated at the periphery of the permanently condensed chromosomes. In the cytoplasm, labelling appeared in a punctate region close to the nucleus and in the flagellum. Potential functions of this novel protein are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
8.
We have used C3H 10T1/2 cells to examine the regulation of topoisomerase activities during cell proliferation and the cell cycle. The specific activity of topoisomerase I was about 4-fold greater in proliferating (log phase) cells than in non-proliferating (confluent) cells. In synchronized cells, the bulk of the increased activity occurred during or just prior to S phase, depending upon the method of synchronization. A smaller increase in activity also occurred during G1 phase. The increase in activity during S phase was not altered by a hydroxyurea block at the G1/S phase boundary indicating that it is not directly coupled to DNA synthesis and is not the result of topoisomerase I gene dosage. The increase was inhibited by blocking cells at mid-G1 phase using isoleucine deprivation. Thus, the increase in activity during S phase is dependent on events occurring during mid- to late G1 phase. In contrast to the changes in topoisomerase I levels, the specific activity of topoisomerase II showed no detectable difference in proliferating vs non-proliferating cells. In addition, no detectable difference in topoisomerase II specific activity was seen in G1, S and M phases of the cell cycle. The differences in the activity profiles of the topoisomerases I and II during the cell cycle suggest that the two activities are regulated independently and may be required for different functions.  相似文献   

9.
DNA topoisomerase II is required for mitotic chromosome condensation and segregation. Here we characterize the effects of inhibiting DNA topoisomerase II activity in plant cells using the non-DNA damaging topoisomerase II inhibitor ICRF-193. We report that ICRF-193 abrogated chromosome condensation in cultured alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabaccum L.) mitoses and led to bridged chromosomes at anaphase. Moreover, ICRF-193 treatment delayed entry into mitosis, increasing the frequency of cells having a pre-prophase band of microtubules, a marker of late G2 and prophase, and delaying the activation of cyclin-dependent kinase. These data suggest the existence of a late G2 checkpoint in plant cells that is activated in the absence of topoisomerase II activity. To determine whether the checkpoint-induced delay was a result of reduced cyclindependent kinase activity, mitotic cyclin B2 was ectopically expressed. Cyclin B2 bypassed the ICRF-193-induced delay before mitosis, and correspondingly, reduced the frequency of interphase cells with a pre-prophase band. These data provide evidence that plant cells possess a topoisomerase II-dependent G2 cell cycle checkpoint that transiently inhibits mitotic CDK activation and entry into mitosis, and that is overridden by raising the level of CDK activity through the ectopic expression of a plant mitotic cyclin.  相似文献   

10.
M Charron  R Hancock 《Biochemistry》1990,29(41):9531-9537
To study the biochemical processes which DNA topoisomerase II carries out in mammalian cells, which have not been identified, we have examined the effects on chromosome replication in Chinese hamster ovary cells of an agent which traps molecules of topoisomerase II when they are covalently integrated into DNA during their reaction. This agent, 4'-demethylepipodophyllotoxin 9-(4,6-O-thenylidene-beta-D-glucopyranoside) (VM-26), targets this enzyme specifically according to a compelling body of evidence. Using synchronously growing cells, we found that VM-26 at a cytotoxic concentration (0.08 microM) did not affect DNA replication during the S phase. The formation of mitotic chromosomes was delayed by 4 h, and its rate was reduced thereafter, causing a delay in mitosis of greater than 14 h in 65% of the cells; in some cells, the chromatin was aberrantly condensed, forming diffuse chromosomes or particles. Chromosome formation was completely inhibited at 0.32 microM VM-26. DNA fragments derived from topoisomerase II molecules covalently integrated in DNA and trapped by VM-26 were detected by FIGE analysis in the G2 period, but not during the S phase. The delay of chromosome formation appeared to be caused by two factors: first, a delay in the completion of DNA replication, because progress of some cells to mitosis after removal of VM-26 was prevented by aphidicolin, an inhibitor of DNA polymerases alpha and delta; and second, a delay of chromosome formation in cells which had apparently completed DNA replication. The observations reported here show that topoisomerase II carries out reactions which are essential for formation of mitotic chromosomes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
Although dinoflagellates are eucaryotes, they possess many bacterial nuclear traits. For this reason they are thought by some to be evolutionary intermediates. Dinoflagellates also possess some unusual nuclear traits not seen in either bacteria or higher eucaryotes, such as a very large number of identical appearing, permanently condensed chromosomes suggesting polyteny or polyploidy. We have studied the DNA of the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii with respect to DNA per cell, chromosome counts, and renaturation kinetics. The renaturation kinetic results tend to refute extreme polyteny and polyploidy as the mode of nuclear organization. This organism contains 55-60% repeated, interspersed DNA typical of higher eucaryotes. These results, along with the fact that dinoflagellate chromatin contains practically no basic protein, indicate that dinoflagellates may be organisms with a combination of both bacterial and eucaryotic traits.  相似文献   

12.
Topoisomerase II is a multifunctional protein required during DNA replication, chromosome disjunction at mitosis, and other DNA-related activities by virtue of its ability to alter DNA supercoiling. The enzyme is encoded by two similar but nonidentical genes: the topoisomerase IIalpha and IIbeta genes. In HeLa cells synchronized by mitotic shake-off, topoisomeraseII alpha mRNA levels were found to vary as a function of cell cycle position, being 15-fold higher in late S phase (14 to 18 h postmitosis) than during G1 phase. Also detected was a corresponding increase in topoisomerase IIalpha protein synthesis at 14 to 18 h postmitosis which resulted in significantly higher accumulation of the protein during S and G2 phases. Topoisomerase IIalpha expression was not dependent on DNA synthesis during S phase, which could be inhibited without effect on the timing or level of mRNA expression. Mechanistically, topoisomerase IIalpha expression appears to be coupled to cell cycle position mainly through associated changes in mRNA stability. When cells are in S phase and mRNA levels are maximal, the half-life of topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA was determined to be approximately 30 min. A similar decrease in mRNA stability was also induced by two external factors known to delay cell cycle progression. Treatment of S-phase cells, at the time of maximum topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA stability, with either ionizing radiation (5 Gy) or heat shock (45 degrees C for 15 min) caused the accumulated topoisomerase IIalpha mRNA to decay. This finding suggests a potential relationship between stress-induced decreases in topoisomerase IIalpha expression and cell cycle progression delays in late S/G2.  相似文献   

13.
DNA topoisomerase II is required for mitotic chromosome condensation and segregation. Here we characterize the effects of inhibiting DNA topoisomerase II activity in plant cells using the non-DNA damaging topoisomerase II inhibitor ICRF-193. We report that ICRF-193 abrogated chromosome condensation in cultured alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) and tobacco (Nicotiana tabaccum L.) mitoses and led to bridged chromosomes at anaphase. Moreover, ICRF-193 treatment delayed entry into mitosis, increasing the frequency of cells having a pre-prophase band of microtubules, a marker of late G2 and prophase, and delaying the activation of cyclin-dependent kinase. These data suggest the existence of a late G2 checkpoint in plant cells that is activated in the absence of topoisomerase II activity. To determine whether the checkpoint-induced delay was a result of reduced cyclin-dependent kinase activity, mitotic cyclin B2 was ectopically expressed. Cyclin B2 bypassed the ICRF-193-induced delay before mitosis, and correspondingly, reduced the frequency of interphase cells with a pre-prophase band. These data provide evidence that plant cells possess a topoisomerase II-dependent G2 cell cycle checkpoint that transiently inhibits mitotic CDK activation and entry into mitosis, and that is overridden by raising the level of CDK activity through the ectopic expression of a plant mitotic cyclin.

Key Words:

Plant cyclin B2, Topoisomerase II, ICRF-193, G2 checkpoint, Microtubules  相似文献   

14.
Dinoflagellates have a unique and interesting intracellular architecture such as permanently condensed chromosomes throughout the cell cycle. However the study of dinoflagellate chromosomes is not amendable because of the unusually higher number of chromosomes and problems in sample preparation. The species of Pyrocystis spend most of their life cycle as vegetative cyst forms and have been used as experimental organisms for bioluminescence and circadian rhythms. Here, we documented the content of DNA in different life stages and the chromosome karyology in a marine non-motile dinoflagellate Pyrocystis lunula, through light and fluorescent microscopy, serial ultra-thin sectioning, and three dimension (3D) modeling. The DNA content doubles during DNA synthesis and in the end of the cell division two separate daughter cells have the approximately same fluorescent values for the mother cells. Using serial ultra-thin sectioning and 3D modeling, we report the first ultrastructural karyogram. The cells chosen were at the end of karyokinesis. A total of 98 chromosomes were counted and assigned to 49 pairs. In this species, DNA synthesis appears to occur before, or during asexual division and P. lunula lives a diplontic life cycle.  相似文献   

15.
DNA topoisomerase II (Topo II) is an essential enzyme that catalyzes topological changes of DNA and consists of a major member of mitotic chromosomes. To investigate the dynamic localization of Topo II in nuclei, we engineered the strain of Aspergillus nidulans expressing Topo II fused with green fluorescent protein (GFP). Time-lapse microscopy revealed that the distribution of Topo II-GFP in nuclei varied depending on the cell cycle. In interphase, Topo II-GFP distributed evenly in the nucleoplasm and at the onset of G2 phase became concentrated into nucleolus. During mitosis, Topo II-GFP accumulated on chromosomes, when the chromosomes condensed. In the early mitosis, the Topo II also showed a single or two brighter spots among the fluorescence of clumped chromosomes. The spots once divided into several spots and then concentrated again into a spot per nucleus in the dividing nuclei of anaphase. Along with the subsequent decondensation of chromosomes, Topo II diffused back into nucleoplasm.  相似文献   

16.
Topoisomerase IIα is an essential enzyme that resolves topological constraints in genomic DNA. It functions in disentangling intertwined chromosomes during anaphase leading to chromosome segregation thus preserving genomic stability. Here we describe a previously unrecognized mechanism regulating topoisomerase IIα activity that is dependent on the F-box protein Fbxo28. We find that Fbxo28, an evolutionarily conserved protein, is required for proper mitotic progression. Interfering with Fbxo28 function leads to a delay in metaphase-to-anaphase progression resulting in mitotic defects as lagging chromosomes, multipolar spindles and multinucleation. Furthermore, we find that Fbxo28 interacts and colocalizes with topoisomerase IIα throughout the cell cycle. Depletion of Fbxo28 results in an increase in topoisomerase IIα?dependent DNA decatenation activity. Interestingly, blocking the interaction between Fbxo28 and topoisomerase IIα also results in multinucleated cells. Our findings suggest that Fbxo28 regulates topoisomerase IIα decatenation activity and plays an important role in maintaining genomic stability.  相似文献   

17.
The second messenger cAMP is a key regulator of growth in many cells. Previous studies showed that cAMP could reverse the growth inhibition of indoleamines in the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii Biecheler. In the present study, we measured the level of intracellular cAMP during the cell cycle of C. cohnii . cAMP peaked during the G1 phase and decreased to a minimum during S phase. Similarly, cAMP-dependent protein kinase activities peaked at both G1 and G2+M phases of the cell cycle, decreasing to a minimum at S phase. Addition of N6, O2'-dibutyryl (Bt2)-cAMP directly stimulated the growth of C. cohnii . Flow cytometric analysis of synchronized C. cohnii cells suggested that 1 mM cAMP shortened the cell cycle, probably at the exit from mitosis. The size of Bt2-cAMP treated cells at G1 was also larger than the control cells. The present study demonstrated a regulatory role of cAMP in the cell cycle progression in dinoflagellates.  相似文献   

18.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(5):1753-1762
We have examined the effects of topoisomerase inhibitors on the phosphorylation of histones in chromatin during the G2 and the M phases of the cell cycle. Throughout the G2 phase of BHK cells, addition of the topoisomerase II inhibitor VM-26 prevented histone H1 phosphorylation, accompanied by the inhibition of intracellular histone H1 kinase activity. However, VM-26 had no inhibitory effect on the activity of the kinase in vitro, suggesting an indirect influence on histone H1 kinase activity. Entry into mitosis was also prevented, as monitored by the absence of nuclear lamina depolymerization, chromosome condensation, and histone H3 phosphorylation. In contrast, the topoisomerase I inhibitor, camptothecin, inhibited histone H1 phosphorylation and entry into mitosis only when applied at early G2. In cells that were arrested in mitosis, VM-26 induced dephosphorylation of histones H1 and H3, DNA breaks, and partial chromosome decondensation. These changes in chromatin parameters probably reverse the process of chromosome condensation, unfolding condensed regions to permit the repair of strand breaks in the DNA that were induced by VM- 26. The involvement of growth-associated histone H1 kinase in these processes raises the possibility that the cell detects breaks in the DNA through their effects on the state of DNA supercoiling in constrained domains or loops. It would appear that histone H1 kinase and topoisomerase II work coordinately in both chromosome condensation and decondensation, and that this process participates in the VM-26- induced G2 arrest of the cell.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Kalihinol F, a naturally occurring diterpene from a marine sponge, Acanthella sp., inhibited chromosome separation in fertilized starfish (Asterina pectinifera) eggs but allows the first cleavage to occur, thereby forming unseparated metaphase chromosomes which were elongated between the two daughter cells. The chromosomes were eventually torn off in the embryonic cells. Most of the cells gradually lost the chromosomes during the cell cycle progression. The embryonic development halted at the morula stage just before the onset of blastulation. The mitotic failure occurred when kalihinol F was applied to a fertilized egg during the second meiotic process, but not after the completion of the second meiotic division. Kalihinol F inhibited topoisomerase I activity in vitro, but had no effects on activities of DNA polymerases alpha, beta, and gamma, and of topoisomerase II. These results suggest that the topoisomerase I plays an essential role in meiosis II in this species.  相似文献   

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