The regulation of cardiomyocyte proliferation is important for heart development and function. Proliferation levels of mouse cardiomyocytes are high during early embryogenesis and start to decrease at midgestation. Many cardiomyocytes undergo mitosis without cytokinesis, resulting in binucleated cardiomyocytes during early postnatal stages, following which the cell cycle arrests irreversibly. It remains unknown how the proliferation pattern is regulated, and how the irreversible cell cycle arrest occurs. To clarify the mechanisms, fundamental information about cell cycle regulators in cardiomyocytes and cell cycle patterns during embryonic and postnatal stages is necessary. Here, we show that the expression, complex formation, and activity of main cyclins and cyclindependent kinases (CDKs) changed in a synchronous manner during embryonic and postnatal stages. These levels decreased from midgestation to birth, and then showed one wave in which the peak was around postnatal day 5. Detailed analysis of the complexes suggested that CDK activities were inhibited before the protein levels decreased. Analysis of DNA content distribution patterns in mono-and binucleated cardiomyocytes after birth revealed changes in cell cycle distribution patterns and the transition from mono-to binucleated cells. These analyses indicated that the wave of cell cycle regulator expression or activities during postnatal stages mainly produced binucleated cells from mononucleated cells. The data obtained should provide a basis for the analysis of cell cycle regulation in cardiomyocytes during embryonic and postnatal stages.
Meiotic cells undergo two successive divisions without an intervening S phase. However, the mechanism of S-phase omission between the two meiotic divisions is largely unknown. Here we show that Wee1, a universal mitotic inhibitor, is absent in immature (but not mature)Xenopus oocytes, being down-regulated specifically during oogenesis; this down-regulation is most likely due to a translational repression. Even the modest ectopic expression of Wee1 in immature (meiosis I) oocytes can induce interphase nucleus reformation and DNA replication just after meiosis I. Thus, the presence of Wee1 during meiosis I converts the meiotic cell cycle into a mitotic-like cell cycle having S phase. In contrast, Myt1, a Wee1-related kinase, is present and directly involved in G2 arrest of immature oocytes, but its ectopic expression has little effect on the meiotic cell cycle. These results strongly indicate that the absence of Wee1 in meiosis I ensures the meiotic cell cycle in Xenopus oocytes. Based on these results and the data published previously in other organisms, we suggest that absence of Wee1 may be a well-conserved mechanism for omitting interphase or S phase between the two meiotic divisions.
Background: How cell cycle exit is maintained in adult mammalian cardiomyocytes is largely unknown. Results: Cyclin D1 expression causes cell cycle reentry in Ͼ40% of adult mouse cardiomyocytes. Conclusion: Silencing the cyclin D1 expression is necessary for the maintenance of the cell cycle exit. Significance: One of the mechanisms regulating cell cycle exit in mammalian cardiomyocytes has been uncovered.
Cyclin B, a regulatory subunit of maturation/M-phase promoting factor (MPF), has several subtypes in many vertebrate species. However, it is not known whether the different B-type cyclins have any different functions in vertebrate cells, although their subcellular localizations seem to differ largely from each other. To examine the roles of two major B-type cyclins, B1 and B2, in spindle formation in M phase, we overexpressed their N-termini in Xenopus oocytes; the N-termini of cyclins B1 and B2 contained a cytoplasmic retention signal (CRS), and hence their overexpressions were expected to competitively inhibit the subcellular localizations of the endogenous cyclins B1 and B2, respectively. Upon entry into meiosis I, oocytes overexpressing the cyclin B1 N-terminus formed an apparently normal bipolar spindle, but those oocytes overexpressing the cyclin B2 N-terminus formed a monopolar (or monoastral) spindle. This defect in bipolar spindle formation was observed only when the cyclin B2 N-terminus contained its own CRS sequence, and was able to be rescued by overexpression of full-length cyclin B2. These results suggest, for the first time, that the correct subcellular localization of cyclin B2, but not of cyclin B1, is essential for (the initiation of) bipolar spindle formation in Xenopus oocytes.
A phosphorylated protein with a molecular mass of 25 000 (pp25) previously purified from the cytosolic fraction of Xenopus laevis oocytes is an effective phosphate acceptor for casein kinases and protein kinase C. In this study, based on the partial amino acid sequence of pp25, a cDNA was isolated that encodes a new yolk precursor protein, Xenopus vitellogenin B1, which contained the sequence encoding pp25. Both mRNA and protein of vitellogenin B1 were expressed in all of the female organs examined. In agreement with a previous report, the amount of vitellogenin B1 protein in the liver increased after stimulation with estrogen. These results suggest that pp25 is a cytosolic non‐crystallized yolk protein nutrient source, but it might also play a role in rapid development.
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