| Literature DB >> 12669066 |
Barry H Paw1, Alan J Davidson, Yi Zhou, Rong Li, Stephen J Pratt, Charles Lee, Nikolaus S Trede, Alison Brownlie, Adriana Donovan, Eric C Liao, James M Ziai, Anna H Drejer, Wen Guo, Carol H Kim, Babette Gwynn, Luanne L Peters, Marina N Chernova, Seth L Alper, Agustin Zapata, Sunitha N Wickramasinghe, Matthew J Lee, Samuel E Lux, Andreas Fritz, John H Postlethwait, Leonard I Zon.
Abstract
Most eukaryotic cell types use a common program to regulate the process of cell division. During mitosis, successful partitioning of the genetic material depends on spatially coordinated chromosome movement and cell cleavage. Here we characterize a zebrafish mutant, retsina (ret), that exhibits an erythroid-specific defect in cell division with marked dyserythropoiesis similar to human congenital dyserythropoietic anemia. Erythroblasts from ret fish show binuclearity and undergo apoptosis due to a failure in the completion of chromosome segregation and cytokinesis. Through positional cloning, we show that the ret mutation is in a gene (slc4a1) encoding the anion exchanger 1 (also called band 3 and AE1), an erythroid-specific cytoskeletal protein. We further show an association between deficiency in Slc4a1 and mitotic defects in the mouse. Rescue experiments in ret zebrafish embryos expressing transgenic slc4a1 with a variety of mutations show that the requirement for band 3 in normal erythroid mitosis is mediated through its protein 4.1R-binding domains. Our report establishes an evolutionarily conserved role for band 3 in erythroid-specific cell division and illustrates the concept of cell-specific adaptation for mitosis.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 12669066 DOI: 10.1038/ng1137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330