Pattern- and growth-linked cell cycles in Drosophila development
Autor: | B A, Edgar, J, Britton, A F, de la Cruz, L A, Johnston, D, Lehman, C, Martin-Castellanos, D, Prober |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Embryo
Nonmammalian Cell Cycle Gene Expression Regulation Developmental Cell Cycle Proteins E2F Transcription Factors DNA-Binding Proteins Drosophila melanogaster Genes Reporter Phosphoprotein Phosphatases Animals Drosophila Proteins Humans Protein Tyrosine Phosphatases Body Patterning Transcription Factors |
Zdroj: | Novartis Foundation symposium. 237 |
ISSN: | 1528-2511 |
Popis: | During Drosophila development the cell cycle is subject to diverse regulatory inputs. In embryos, cells divide in stereotypic patterns that correspond to the cell fate map. There is little cell growth during this period, and cell proliferation is regulated at G2/M transitions by patterned transcription of the Cdk1-activator, Cdc25/String. The string locus senses pattern information via a40 kb cis-regulatory region composed of many cell-type specific transcriptional enhancers. Later, in differentiated larval tissues, the cell cycle responds to nutrition via mechanisms that sense cellular growth. These larval cell cycles lack mitoses altogether, and are regulated at G/S transitions. Cells in developing imaginal discs exhibit a cycle that is regulated at both G1/S and G2/M transitions. G2/M progression in disc cells is regulated, as in the embryo, by string transcription and is thus influenced by the many transcription factors that interact with string's 'pattern-sensing' control region. G1/S progression in disc cells is controlled, at least in part, by factors that regulate cell growth such as Myc, Ras and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase. Thus G1/S progression appears to be growth-coupled, much as in the larval endocycles. The dual control mechanism used by imaginal disc cells allows integration of diverse inputs which operate in both cell specification and cell metabolism. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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