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Analysis of the Early Embryonic Cell Cycles of Xenopus - Regulation of Cell Cycle Length By Xe-Wee1 and Mos

  1. Author:
    Murakami, M. S.
    Vande Woude, G. F.
    1. Year: 1998
  1. Journal: Development
    1. 125
    2. 2
    3. Pages: 237-248
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    In Xenopus, cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation is detected in the first 60-75 minute cell cycle but not in the next eleven cell cycles (cycles 2-12) which are only 30 minutes long, Here we report that the wee1/cdc25 ratio increases before the first mitotic interphase, We show that the Xe-wee1 protein is absent in stage VI oocytes and is expressed from meiosis II until gastrulation, A dominant negative form of Xe-wee1 (KM wee1) reduced the level cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation and length of the first cycle, However, the ratio of wee1/cdc25 did not decrease after the first cycle and therefore did not explain the lack of cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation in, nor the rapidity of, cycles 2-12, Furthermore, there was no evidence for a wee1/myt1 inhibitor in cycles 2-12, We examined the role of Mos in the first cycle because it is present during the first 20 minutes of this cycle. We arrested the rapid embryonic cell cycle (cycle 2 or 3) with Mos and restarted the cell cycle with calcium ionophore; the 30 minute cycle was converted into a 60 minute cycle, with cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation, In addition, the injection of a non-degradable Mos (MBP-Mos) into the first cycle resulted in a dramatic elongation of this cycle (to 140 minutes), MBP-Mos did not delay DNA replication or the translation of cyclins A or B; it did, however, result in the marked accumulation of tyrosine phosphorylated cdc2, Thus, while the wee1/cdc25 ratio changes during development, these changes may not be responsible for the variety of cell cycles observed during early Xenopus embryogenesis, Our experiments indicate that Mos/MAPK can also contribute to cell cycle length. [References: 76]

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