| Literature DB >> 10613895 |
S J Vidwans1, M L Wong, P H O'Farrell.
Abstract
Centrosome duplication is marked by discrete changes in centriole structure that occur in lockstep with cell cycle transitions. We show that mitotic regulators govern steps in centriole replication in Drosophila embryos. Cdc25(string), the expression of which initiates mitosis, is required for completion of daughter centriole assembly. Cdc20(fizzy), which is required for the metaphase-anaphase transition, is required for timely disengagement of mother and daughter centrioles. Stabilization of mitotic cyclins, which prevents exit from mitosis, blocks assembly of new daughter centrioles. Common regulation of the nuclear and centrosome cycles by mitotic regulators may ensure precise duplication of the centrosome.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10613895 PMCID: PMC2174235 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.147.7.1371
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 5Centrosome, centriole, and nuclear cycles in Drosophila embryos. Schematic showing chromatin in blue, centrosomes in red, and centrioles as segmented cylinders. Activation of Cdc20-dependent degradation triggers the metaphase-anaphase transition and allows exit from mitosis. As cells progress through mitosis, mother and daughter centrioles disengage and separate and centrosomes split into two. Unlike mammalian cells, each interphase cell contains two centrosomes. The postblastoderm mitoses (of cycles 14 and 15) are followed immediately by the S phase, during which procentrioles form. G2 cells enter mitosis upon developmentally controlled expression of Cdc25. Completion of daughter centriole assembly occurs as cells progress to metaphase. Our results show that Cdc25 is required for completion of daughter centriole assembly, Cdc20 is required for timely centriole disengagement and mitotic cyclin/Cdk1 needs to be downregulated for procentriole formation.
Figure 2Arrest of centriole maturation in string embryos. Embryos are oriented anterior to the left and dorsal up, and are stained for β-tubulin (A–C), or for DNA (Hoechst) and γ-tubulin (D). (A) A wild-type embryo, in which interphase cells show cytoplasmic staining, whereas mitotic cells show a clear cytoplasm and dense spindle staining. Most cells are interphase of cycle 16. (B) A string embryo in which cells are arrested in G2 of cycle 14. (C) A string embryo after induction of a Cdc25 transgene shows synchronous mitoses after a 3-h arrest in G2. By this time, cells in wild-type embryos have undergone mitosis 14. The spindles in these induced mitoses are bipolar (99.4%, n = 1,350). (D) Preanaphase (metaphase shown) figures in this induced mitosis have one centrosome at each spindle pole. (E) Centriole pairs in arrested string embryos have an incomplete daughter centriole (21/22 serially sectioned centrioles from two embryos). The immature daughter is bracketed in the examples shown. Compare the immature daughter centrioles in string mutant embryos to the daughter centrioles of wild-type centriole pairs in mitosis (Fig. 1).
Figure 1Centriole duplication cycle. (A) A schematic of Drosophila centrioles, which are 105 nm in diameter (measured as the distance between the complete inner tubules) and ∼110 nm in length (measured as the length of the tubules), and separated by a distance of 46–58 nm. (B) EM longitudinal and cross-sectioned centrioles obtained from high pressure frozen Drosophila embryos. Note that the strongly staining aspect of a centriole in longitudinal thin section appears as parallel lines representing the opposite sides of the cylindrical centriole. (C) The centriole pair undergoes discrete transitions during the cell cycle. Mother and daughter centrioles disengage and move apart as cells exit metaphase. Centriole appearance of a procentriole coincides with entry into S phase, and this daughter (brackets) is complete only upon entry into mitosis.
| Mutant/perturbation | Embryonic phenotype | Centriolar phenotype |
|---|---|---|
|
| Cells arrest in G2 of cycle 14 | Two centriole pairs per cell: >95% |
| Cdc25 | while development continues well | of pairs have incompletely |
| after the time of mitosis 14 | assembled daughters ( | |
|
| <5% of cells in VE in metaphase (late stage 11) | Centriole pairs disengage after metaphase |
| Wild type (late stage 11) | ||
| Cdc20 | >80% of cells in VE held up in metaphase | 62% of centriole pairs at the spindle poles are engaged ( |
| Cdc20 | >95% of cells in VE in mitosis | 100% centriole pairs disengaged |
| Cdc20 | >95% of cells in VE in mitosis | 100% centriole pairs disengaged |
|
| Most epidermal cells arrested in mitosis 14 | 100% centriole pairs disengaged ( |
| Heat shock promoter driven ectopic | beyond their normal time of mitotic exit | and 100% centrioles not associated with |
| expression of stable cyclins, A and B | procentrioles ( | |
| Control wild-type embryos exposed | Development and cell cycle progression continues | Procentriole formation not perturbed |
| to heat shock |
Figure 3Centriole disengagement is delayed in fizzy mutant embryos. fizzy and wild-type (sevelen) embryos stained for β-tubulin are tilted (dorsal away) slightly for visualization of arrested (ventral) cells. (A and C) late stage 11 fizzy embryos have >80% of ventral epidermis (VE) cells in metaphase versus <5% in wild-type embryos shown in B and D. (E and F) early (E), and midstage 12 (F) fizzy embryos have most VE cells in mitosis, whereas there are virtually no mitotic cells in the epidermis of wild-type embryos at stage 12 (not shown). G–I show examples of centrioles in the fizzy mutant at late stage 11 (G), early stage 12 (H), and midstage 12 (I). During late stage 11, 62% of serially sectioned and reconstructed centriole pairs were orthogonal (n = 21, from two embryos), while at the later stages, 100% of centriole pairs were disengaged. At midstage 12, they had separated slightly.
Figure 4Procentriole formation is inhibited during mitotic arrest induced by expression of stable cyclins A and B. (A and B) β-tubulin–stained embryos. (A) An embryo fixed 2 h after induced expression of stable versions of cyclins A and B. Most epidermal cells are arrested in mitosis. (B) A wild-type embryo at a similar stage of development. (C) High magnification view of cell arrested by expression of stable cyclins. The centrosomes are highlighted by staining for γ-tubulin (green) and DNA is in red. These mitotic cells revealed no more than two centrosomes at each pole (n = 51) (see text). Serial sections reconstruction of these centrosomes (n = 17) by EM revealed that centrioles had disengaged and were not associated with a procentriole (n = 39). As an example, C shows two singlet centrioles from one pole of a stable cyclin arrested mitotic spindle. Note that the pair of strongly staining lines represent the tubules at the opposite wall of one centriole, as is depicted in the cartoon on the right.