Scientific News Biology Unicellular microorganisms ALL RBS ARE NOT ALIKE: INSIGHT INTO RB IN THE PLANT CELL CYCLE
ALL
RBS ARE NOT ALIKE: INSIGHT INTO RB IN THE PLANT CELL CYCLE
By
identifying and functionally characterizing an RB homolog in a simple green
algae, scientists have shed a surprising new light on the potential role of
RB-like proteins in the plant cell cycle.
The
retinoblastoma protein (RB) is an intensely studied protein, owing to its role
as a tumor suppressor in humans. RB-like proteins exist in plants, and their
function has been base on the mechanism of action in animal cells. Published in
Genes& Development, this work provides an alternative model of RB action.
In
mammalian cells, RB is a key checkpoint regulator of cell cycle progression.
Under certain conditions, RB prevents the cell cycle transition from G1 phase to
S phase (when DNA replication takes place) and can thereby help to prevent cells
from becoming cancerous. When Dr. Goodenough and colleagues discovered an RB
homolog in the unicellular green algae, Chlamydomonas, even they were surprised
at its effects.
Despite
close sequence similarities, these RBs are not alike. The RB homolog in algae
does function in cell division regulation, but not as a negative regulator of S
phase transition. Dr. Goodenough and colleagues found that the RB homolog
functions in algae as a size-dependent repressor of cell cycle progression.
The
Chlamydomonas cellular life cycle entails a prolonged G1 phase during which the
cell grows to many times its original size, followed by multiple rounds of
alternating S phase and cell division (mitosis). This multiple fission mechanism
results in multiple daughter cells of uniform size. Implicit in this process are
two fundamental cellular decisions: when to divide and how many round of
division to undergo. Dr. Goodenough and colleagues demonstrate that cells
deficient in this RB homolog make bad decisions.
Mutant
algae cells begin dividing when they are at a premature size, and undergo an
excessive number of cell divisions, producing abnormally small daughter cells.
However, unlike mammalian RB mutants, these algae cells do not have a shortened
G1 phase or duplicate their DNA prematurely.
This
work represents the first discovery of an RB homolog in a unicellular organism,
as well as the initial demonstration of how the widely used multiple fission
mechanism is regulated. By discovering this unprecedented role for an RB homolog
in member of the land plant lineage, Dr. Goodenough and colleagues have provided
preliminary evidence to suggest that plant RBs may be less familiar than were
originally suspected.
Contact:
Nora Poppito; poppito@cshl.org; Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory
Source
of the given news and the copyrights belong to a
Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory
Publishing date: July 18, 2001
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