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1.
Megakaryocytes are platelet precursor cells that undergo endomitosis. During this process, repeated rounds of DNA synthesis are characterized by lack of late anaphase and cytokinesis. Physiologically, the majority of the polyploid megakaryocytes in the bone marrow are cell cycle arrested. As previously reported, cyclin E is essential for megakaryocyte polyploidy; however, it has remained unclear whether up-regulated cyclin E is an inducer of polyploidy in vivo. We found that cyclin E is up-regulated upon stimulation of primary megakaryocytes by thrombopoietin. Transgenic mice in which elevated cyclin E expression is targeted to megakaryocytes display an increased ploidy profile. Examination of S phase markers, specifically proliferating cell nuclear antigen, cyclin A, and 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine reveals that cyclin E promotes progression to S phase and cell cycling. Interestingly, analysis of Cdc6 and Mcm2 indicates that cyclin E mediates its effect by promoting the expression of components of the pre-replication complex. Furthermore, we show that up-regulated cyclin E results in the up-regulation of cyclin B1 levels, suggesting an additional mechanism of cyclin E-mediated ploidy increase. These findings define a key role for cyclin E in promoting megakaryocyte entry into S phase and hence, increase in the number of cell cycling cells and in augmenting polyploidization.  相似文献   

2.
Megakaryocyte differentiation is marked by development of progressive polyploidy and accumulation of large nuclear mass and cytoplasmic volume. During differentiation, megakaryocytes undergo repeated incomplete cell cycles in which mitosis is aborted in late anaphase with failure of cytokinesis, termed endomitosis. Recent studies have postulated that failure of Aurora-B kinase to localize to the spindle midzone is responsible for endomitosis in megakaryocytes. In diploid cells, the translocation of Aurora-B kinase is critical for positioning of the cleavage furrow, in part through its phosphorylation of the Rho family GTPase activating protein MgcRacGAP which in turn alters activity of RhoA. However, we have previously demonstrated that Aurora-B kinase localizes to centromeres and is functional in endomitotic megakaryocytes. Here, we show that endomitotic megakaryocytes form midzone structures that recruit Aurora-B kinase and its substrate MgcRacGAP. Although many cells with polyploid anaphases showed cortical localization of Aurora-B kinase, we did not observe accumulation of RhoA in furrows or formation of an actin ring. When mitotic exit was induced by inhibition of cdk1, diploid control cells formed furrows exhibiting cortical RhoA but megakaryocytes exited endomitosis without evidence of furrowing. Therefore, localization of Aurora-B kinase to the midzone is normal in endomitotic megakaryocytes but furrowing is abnormal. These data suggest that endomitotic MKs fail to complete cytokinesis due to aberrant regulation of furrowing at a step subsequent to the localization of Aurora-B kinase, possibly involving the activation or localization of RhoA. This work explores the mechanism of a normally occurring furrowing defect in a non-malignant primary cell.  相似文献   

3.
Megakaryocytes (MK) undergo polyploidization through endomitosis, a mitotic process that ends prematurely due to aborted cytokinesis. To better understand this and other events associated with MK differentiation, we performed long-term and large-field live cell imaging of human MKs derived in cord blood (CB) and bone marrow (BM) CD34+ cell cultures. Polyploid level of imaged cells was evaluated using three complementary approaches; cell history, cell size and ploidy correlation and nuclei staining. This system and strategy enabled the direct observation of the development of a large number of MKs (n=4865) and to quantify their fates. The most significant finding of this study is that a considerable proportion of polyploid MKs could complete cytokinesis. This unexpected process gave rise to polyploid daughter cell(s) with normal fates and contributed significantly to the expansion of polyploid MKs. Further analyses revealed that the proliferation rate amongst polyploid MKs was inversely correlated to their ploidy level, and that this phenomenon was much more frequent in CB- than BM-derived MKs. Accordingly, endomitosis was identified as the dominant fate of polyploid BM-MKs, while this was less accentuated for polyploid CB-MKs. These findings explain partially why CB-derived MKs remain in lower ploidy class. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that the development of polyploid MK results from the failure and/or success of cytokinesis and brings a new paradigm to the field of megakaryopoiesis.  相似文献   

4.
Megakaryocyte endomitosis: a review   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
During the early stages of their differentiation, megakaryocytes become polyploid through repeated DNA replication and endomitotic cycles without cytokinesis. The molecular basis for the process of polyploidization remains unknown. This review summarizes available information on the cell biology of the process of endomitosis.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The pathways that regulate the S-phase events associated with the control of DNA replication are poorly understood. The bone marrow megakaryocytes are unique in that they leave the diploid (2C) state to differentiate, synthesizing 4 to 64 times the normal DNA content within a single nucleus, a process known as endomitosis. Human erythroleukemia (HEL) cells model this process, becoming polyploid during phorbol diester-induced megakaryocyte differentiation. The mitotic arrest occurring in these polyploid cells involves novel alterations in the cdk1/cyclin B1 complex: a marked reduction in cdk1 protein levels, and an elevated and sustained expression of cyclin B1. Endomitotic cells thus lack cdk1/cyclin B1-associated H1-histone kinase activity. Constitutive over-expression of cdk1 in endomitotic cells failed to re-initiate normal mitotic events even though cdk1 was present in a 10-fold excess. This was due to an inability of cyclin-B1 to physically associate with cdk1. Nonetheless, endomitotic cyclin B1 possesses immunoprecipitable H1-histone kinase activity, and specifically translocates to the nucleus. We conclude that mitosis is abrogated during endomitosis due to the absence of cdk1 and the failure to form M-phase promoting factor, resulting in a disassociation of mitosis from the completion of S-phase. Further studies on cyclin and its interacting proteins should be informative in understanding endomitosis and cell cycle control.  相似文献   

7.
Kostyak JC  Naik UP 《PloS one》2011,6(1):e14513
Endomitosis is a form of mitosis in which both karyokinesis and cytokinesis are interrupted and is a hallmark of megakaryocyte differentiation. Very little is known about how such a dramatic alteration of the cell cycle in a physiological setting is achieved. Thrombopoietin-induced signaling is essential for induction of endomitosis. Here we show that calcium- and integrin-binding protein 1 (CIB1), a known regulator of platelet integrin α(IIb)β(3) outside-in signaling, regulates endomitosis. We observed that CIB1 expression is increased in primary mouse megakaryocytes compared to mononuclear bone marrow cells as determined by Western blot analysis. Following PMA treatment of Dami cells, a megakaryoblastic cell line, we found that CIB1 protein expression increased concomitant with cell ploidy. Overexpression of CIB1 in Dami cells resulted in multilobated nuclei and led to increased time for a cell to complete cytokinesis as well as increased incidence of furrow regression as observed by time-lapse microscopy. Additionally, we found that surface expression of integrin α(IIb)β(3,) an important megakaryocyte marker, was enhanced in CIB1 overexpressing cells as determined by flow cytometry. Furthermore, PMA treatment of CIB1 overexpressing cells led to increased ploidy compared to PMA treated control cells. Interestingly, expression of Polo-like kinase 3 (Plk3), an established CIB1-interacting protein and a key regulator of the mitotic process, decreased upon PMA treatment of Dami cells. Furthermore, PMA treatment augmented the interaction between CIB1 and Plk3, which depended on the duration of treatment. These data suggest that CIB1 is involved in regulating endomitosis, perhaps through its interaction with Plk3.  相似文献   

8.
Physiological polyploidy is a characteristic of several cell types including themegakaryocytes (MK) that give rise to circulating blood platelets. MK achieve polyploidy byswitching from a normal to an endomitotic cell cycle characterized by the absence of late mitoticstages. During an endomitotic cycle, the cells enter into mitosis and proceed normally throughmetaphase and early anaphase. However, late anaphase, telophase and cytokinesis are aborted. Thisabortive mitosis is associated with atypical multipolar mitotic spindles and limited chromosomesegregation. Stathmin is a microtubule-depolymerizing protein that is important for the regulation ofthe mitotic spindle and interfering with its expression disrupts the normal mitotic spindle and leadsto aberrant mitotic exit. As cells enter mitosis, the microtubule depolymerizing-activity of stathminis switched-off, allowing microtubules to polymerize and assemble into a mitotic spindle.Reactivation of stathmin in the later stages of mitosis is necessary for the disassembly of the mitoticspindle and the exit from mitosis. Previous studies had shown that stathmin expression isdownregulated as MK become polyploid and inhibition of its expression in K562 cells increasestheir propensity to become polyploid. In this report, we describe our studies of the mechanism bywhich stathmin plays its role in MK polyploidization. We show that stathmin overexpressionprevents the transition from a mitotic cycle to an endomitotic cycle as determined by a decrease inthe number of multipolar mitotic spindles. These observations support a model in whichdownregulation of stathmin expression in megakaryocytes and other polyploid cells may be acritically important factor in endomitosis and polyploidy.  相似文献   

9.
Endomitosis in megakaryocytes (MKs) involves repeated DNA replication in the absence of cytokinesis and is a crucial part of MK development. However, chromosomal dynamics have never been observed in living MKs. We developed a new transgenic mouse model in which the expression of human histone H2B fused in-frame to green fluorescent protein is targeted to MKs. Ex vivo time-lapse microscopy analysis indicated that chromosomal condensation occurs at early mitosis in all MKs. In high ploidy MKs (≥ 8N), late anaphase was marked by a ring-type alignment of chromosomes with multiple territories formed between them. By contrast, in low ploidy MKs mitotic chromosomes segregated to form two groups separated by a clear space before re-joining to one cluster. This is the first study to document chromosomal segregation patterns during endomitosis ex vivo and to indicate their potential differential regulation in low and high ploidy cells.  相似文献   

10.
Megakaryocyte (MK) differentiation is marked by the development of progressive polyploidy, due to repeated incomplete cell cycles in which mitosis is aborted during anaphase, a process termed endomitosis. We have postulated that anaphase in endomitotic MKs diverges from diploid mitosis at a point distal to the assembly of the midzone, possibly involving impaired cleavage furrow progression. To define the extent of furrow initiation and ingression in endomitosis, we performed time-lapse imaging of MKs expressing yellow fluorescent protein (YFP)-tubulin and monitored shape change as they progressed through anaphase. We found that in early endomitotic cells that have a bipolar spindle, cleavage furrows form that can undergo significant ingression, but furrows regress to produce polyploid cells. Compared to cells that divide, cells that exhibit furrow regression have a slower rate of furrow ingression and do not furrow as deeply. More highly polyploid MKs undergoing additional endomitotic cycles also show measurable furrowing that is followed by regression, but the magnitude of the shape change is less than seen in the early MKs. This suggests that in the earliest endomitotic cycles when there is formation of a bipolar spindle, the failure of cytokinesis occurs late, following assembly and initial constriction of the actin/myosin ring, whereas in endomitotic MKs that are already polyploid there is secondary inhibition of furrow progression. This behavior of furrow ingression followed by regression may explain why midbody remnants are occasionally observed in polyploid MKs. This finding has important implications for the potential mechanisms for cytokinesis failure in endomitosis.  相似文献   

11.
Megakaryocytes undergo a unique differentiation program, becoming polyploid through repeated cycles of DNA synthesis without concomitant cell division. However, the mechanism underlying this polyploidization remains totally unknown. It has been postulated that polyploidization is due to a skipping of mitosis after each round of DNA replication. We carried out immunohistochemical studies on mouse bone marrow megakaryocytes during thrombopoietin- induced polyploidization and found that during this process megakaryocytes indeed enter mitosis and progress through normal prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, and up to anaphase A, but not to anaphase B, telophase, or cytokinesis. It was clearly observed that multiple spindle poles were formed as the polyploid megakaryocytes entered mitosis; the nuclear membrane broke down during prophase; the sister chromatids were aligned on a multifaced plate, and the centrosomes were symmetrically located on either side of each face of the plate at metaphase; and a set of sister chromatids moved into the multiple centrosomes during anaphase A. We further noted that the pair of spindle poles in anaphase were located in close proximity to each other, probably because of the lack of outward movement of spindle poles during anaphase B. Thus, the reassembling nuclear envelope may enclose all the sister chromatids in a single nucleus at anaphase and then skip telophase and cytokinesis. These observations clearly indicate that polyploidization of megakaryocytes is not simply due to a skipping of mitosis, and that the megakaryocytes must have a unique regulatory mechanism in anaphase, e.g., factors regulating anaphase such as microtubule motor proteins might be involved in this polyploidization process.  相似文献   

12.
Polyploidization can precede the development of aneuploidy in cancer. Polyploidization in megakaryocytes (Mks), in contrast, is a highly controlled developmental process critical for efficient platelet production via unknown mechanisms. Using primary cells, we demonstrate that the guanine exchange factors GEF-H1 and ECT2, which are often overexpressed in cancer and are essential for RhoA activation during cytokinesis, must be downregulated for Mk polyploidization. The first (2N-4N) endomitotic cycle requires GEF-H1 downregulation, whereas subsequent cycles (>4N) require ECT2 downregulation. Exogenous expression of both GEF-H1 and ECT2 prevents endomitosis, resulting in proliferation of 2N Mks. Furthermore, we have shown that the mechanism by which polyploidization is prevented in Mks lacking Mkl1, which is mutated in megakaryocytic leukemia, is via elevated GEF-H1 expression; shRNA-mediated GEF-H1 knockdown alone rescues this ploidy defect. These mechanistic insights enhance our understanding of normal versus malignant megakaryocytopoiesis, as well as aberrant mitosis in aneuploid cancers.  相似文献   

13.
A role for cyclin D3 in the endomitotic cell cycle.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
Platelets, essential for thrombosis and hemostasis, develop from polyploid megakaryocytes which undergo endomitosis. During this cell cycle, cells experience abrogated mitosis and reenter a phase of DNA synthesis, thus leading to endomitosis. In the search for regulators of the endomitotic cell cycle, we have identified cyclin D3 as an important regulatory factor. Of the D-type cyclins, cyclin D3 is present at high levels in megakaryocytes undergoing endomitosis and is markedly upregulated following exposure to the proliferation-, maturation-, and ploidy-promoting factor, Mpl ligand. Transgenic mice in which cyclin D3 is overexpressed in the platelet lineage display a striking increase in endomitosis, similar to changes seen following Mpl ligand administration to normal mice. Electron microscopy analysis revealed that unlike such treated mice, however, D3 transgenic mice show a poor development of demarcation membranes, from which platelets are believed to fragment, and no increase in platelets. Thus, while our model supports a key role for cyclin D3 in the endomitotic cell cycle, it also points to the unique role of Mpl ligand in priming megakaryocytes towards platelet fragmentation. The role of cyclin D3 in promoting endomitosis in other lineages programmed to abrogate mitosis will need further exploration.  相似文献   

14.
In sexually reproducing plants, the meiocyte-producing archesporal cell lineage is maintained at the diploid state to consolidate the formation of haploid gametes. In search of molecular factors that regulate this ploidy consistency, we isolated an Arabidopsis thaliana mutant, called enlarged tetrad2 (et2), which produces tetraploid meiocytes through the stochastic occurrence of premeiotic endomitosis. Endomitotic polyploidization events were induced by alterations in cell wall formation, and similar cytokinetic defects were sporadically observed in other tissues, including cotyledons and leaves. ET2 encodes GLUCAN SYNTHASE-LIKE8 (GSL8), a callose synthase that mediates the deposition of callose at developing cell plates, root hairs, and plasmodesmata. Unlike other gsl8 mutants, in which defects in cell plate formation are seedling lethal, cytokinetic defects in et2 predominantly occur in flowers and have little effect on vegetative growth and development. Similarly, mutations in STEROL METHYLTRANSFERASE2 (SMT2), a major sterol biosynthesis enzyme, also lead to weak cytokinetic defects, primarily in the flowers. In addition, SMT2 allelic mutants also generate tetraploid meiocytes through the ectopic induction of premeiotic endomitosis. These observations demonstrate that appropriate callose and sterol biosynthesis are required for maintaining the ploidy level of the premeiotic germ lineage and that subtle defects in cytokinesis may lead to diploid gametes and polyploid offspring.  相似文献   

15.
Megakaryocytes (MKs) develop from diploid progenitor cells via successive rounds of DNA synthesis in the absence of cell division, a process termed endomitosis (EnM). While the mechanism underlying EnM is not known, studies in yeast and leukemic cell lines have suggested that it may be due to reduced levels of cyclin B1 or cdc2, leading to a decrease in mitotic kinase activity. Using flow cytometry to study EnM highly purified marrow-derived MK precursors, we found that: (1) on average, 36% of 8N-32N MKs expressed abundant cyclin B during G2/M. The percentage of cells in G2/M decreased in >64N MKs, suggesting the limit of EnM, (2) the level of cyclin B per G2/M MK increased linearly with ploidy, (3) cyclin B expression oscillated normally in polyploid MKs, (4) MPM-2, a phosphoepitope created by the action of mitotic kinases and specific to M-phase cells, was expressed in a significant fraction of polyploid MKs, and (5) there was an apparent increase of cyclin B in G1-phase in polyploid MKs. This study provides the first qualitative kinetic data regarding the cell cycle status of MKs within individual ploidy classes. It also demonstrates the feasibility of using anti-cyclin B antibody and flow cytometry to resolve G1 from G2/M populations in polyploid MKs. Finally, these findings establish that neither a relative nor absolute deficiency of mitotic kinase components is responsible for EnM, suggesting that the departure from normal cell division kinetics seen in polyploid MKs is likely due to alterations in other cell cycle regulators.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Roads to polyploidy: the megakaryocyte example.   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Polyploidy, recognized by multiple copies of the haploid chromosome number, has been described in plants, insects, and in mammalian cells such as, the platelet precursors, the megakaryocytes. Several of these cell types reach high ploidy via a different cell cycle. Megakaryocytes undergo an endomitotic cell cycle, which consists of an S phase interrupted by a gap, during which the cells enter mitosis but skip anaphase B and cytokinesis. Here, we review the mechanisms that lead to this cell cycle and to polyploidy in megakaryocytes, while also comparing them to those described for other systems in which high ploidy is achieved. Overall, polyploidy is associated with an orchestrated change in expression of several genes, of which, some may be a result of high ploidy and hence a determinant of a new cell physiology, while others are inducers of polyploidization. Future studies will aim to further explore these two groups of genes.  相似文献   

18.
Endoreplication     
Developmentally programmed polyploidy occurs by at least four different mechanisms, two of which (endoreduplication and endomitosis) involve switching from mitotic cell cycles to endocycles by the selective loss of mitotic cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity and bypassing many of the processes of mitosis. Here we review the mechanisms of endoreplication, focusing on recent results from Drosophila and mice.Eukaryotic cells proliferate by undergoing a sequence of events termed the “mitotic cell cycle” in which the genome is duplicated once and only once between cell divisions. The result is a population of cells with two copies of each chromosome (diploid, or 2C). Agents that interfere with the mechanisms that govern genome duplication frequently induce reinitiation of nuclear DNA replication during S phase. This phenomenon, termed “DNA rereplication,” is an aberrant event that produces a population of cells with a heterogeneous DNA content that reflects incomplete chromosome duplication, stalled replication forks, and DNA damage. In most cells, these events can lead to inducing the cell’s DNA damage response and can lead to apoptosis (Lee et al. 2010).Remarkably, some cells are developmentally programmed to exit their mitotic cell cycle in response either to environmental signals or to injury or stress, and then differentiate into nonproliferating, viable, polyploid cells. This phenomenon, termed “developmentally programmed polyploidy,” is a normal part of animal and plant development that occurs frequently in ferns, flowering plants, mollusks, arthropods, amphibians, and fish, although rarely in mammals. In contrast to DNA rereplication, developmentally programmed polyploidy produces cells with a DNA content of >4C, but in integral multiples of 4C (e.g., 8C, 16C, 32C, etc.), consistent with multiple S phases in the absence of cytokinesis. These cells typically stop proliferating but remain viable in a terminally differentiated state that may serve to regulate tissue size or organization, to trigger cell differentiation or morphogenesis, to increase the number of genes dedicated to tissue-specific functions without increasing the number of cells, or to adapt to environmental conditions. Mitotic divisions of polyploid cells are common for plant species, but they are rarely found in animals. Although known for decades, polyploid mitosis in insects remained mostly unstudied until it was recently shown that the cells of the rectal papilla in Drosophila undergo mitosis after executing two or more endocycles (Fox et al. 2010). Thus, polyploidy is not an irreversible process, although the benefit of this cell cycle variant remains to be elucidated.Developmentally programmed polyploidy occurs by at least four different mechanisms (Ullah et al. 2009). Proliferating cells in the syncytial blastoderm of Drosophila embryos and some hepatocytes in the postnatal liver of mammals become multinucleated and therefore polyploid by failing to undergo cytokinesis after mitosis (“acytokinetic mitosis”). Differentiation of skeletal muscle myoblasts into myotubes, monocytes into osteoclasts, and formation of placental syncytiotrophoblasts involves “cell fusion” to produce multinucleated, terminally differentiated cells that are similarly polyploid. Alternatively, cells may exit their mitotic cell cycle by arresting mitosis during anaphase and failing to undergo cytokinesis. This phenomenon, termed “endomitosis,” produces cells with a single giant nucleus that may subsequently fragment into a multinuclear appearance. Endomitosis occurs in mammals when megakaryoblasts differentiate into megakaryocytes (Bluteau et al. 2009), and in some plant cells (Weingartner et al. 2004). However, the primary mechanism for developmentally programmed polyploidy in arthropods (Smith and Orr-Weaver 1991; Edgar and Orr-Weaver 2001), plants (de la Paz Sanchez et al. 2012), and possibly mammals (Ullah et al. 2009) is “endoreplication” (also referred to as “endoreduplication”). Endoreplication occurs when a cell exits the mitotic cell cycle in G2 phase and undergoes multiple S phases without entering mitosis and undergoing cytokinesis. The result is a giant cell with a single, enlarged, polyploid nucleus.  相似文献   

19.
Megakaryocytes (Mks) are unique cells in the human body in that they carry a single and polyploid nucleus. It is therefore of interest to understand their nuclear ultrastructure. PML oncogenic domains (PODs) were described in several types of eukaryotic cells using human autoantibodies which recognize nuclear antigens with a specific speckled pattern (dots) in indirect immunofluorescence (IF). Two main antigens, PML and Sp 100, usually colocalize and concentrate in these nuclear subdomains. We investigated the presence of PODs using IF and immunoelectron microscopy (IEM) in cells from megakaryocytic lineage: the HEL cell line and human cultured Mks. Antibodies against PML, Sp100, and anti-nuclear dots were used in single and double labeling. PODs were identified in HEL cells and in human Mks, and their ultrastructure was characterized. We then used IF to quantify PODs within Mks and showed that their number increased proportionally to nuclear lobularity. In summary, we report the identification of PODs in human Mks at an ultrastructural level and an increase in PODs number in parallel with Mk ploidy. We show that endomitosis not only leads to DNA increase but also to the multiplication of at least one of the associated nuclear structures.  相似文献   

20.
Cytological analysis of different carrot cell lines in culture has shown various cytogenetic anomalies generating new levels of ploidy and novel chromosome numbers. Polyploidy may be considered a reservoir of variability that can be released in the form of distinct new segregants of different ploidy. Mechanisms alternative to mitosis (reductional grouping, prophase chromosome reduction) operate from a polyploid state (possibly reached by means of endopolyploidy, endomitosis, nuclear fusion, or restitution nuclei) to generate new levels of ploidy and novel chromosome numbers necessary for selection to operate in vitro. The segregational phenomena require chromosome recognition in haploid set complements and abnormal behaviour of mitoses; the resulting chromosome variability suggests that chromosomes are arranged, in the resting nuclei, in an orderly and predictable manner.The knowledge of the molecular events governing these mechanisms, and how to control them, would be of great help for future applications of plant cell culture.  相似文献   

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