Dissociation of centrosome replication events from cycles of DNA synthesis and mitotic division in hydroxyurea-arrested Chinese hamster ovary cells.
Open Access
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 130 (1), 105-115
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.130.1.105
Abstract
Relatively little is known about the mechanisms used by somatic cells to regulate the replication of the centrosome complex. Centrosome doubling was studied in CHO cells by electron microscopy and immunofluorescence microscopy using human autoimmune anticentrosome antiserum, and by Northern blotting using the cDNA encoding portion of the centrosome autoantigen pericentriolar material (PCM)-1. Centrosome doubling could be dissociated from cycles of DNA synthesis and mitotic division by arresting cells at the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle using either hydroxyurea or aphidicolin. Immunofluorescence micros-copy using SPJ human autoimmune anticentrosome antiserum demonstrated that arrested cells were able to undergo numerous rounds of centrosome replication in the absence of cycles of DNA synthesis and mitosis. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that the synthesis and degradation of the mRNA encoding PCM-1 occurred in a cell cycle-dependent fashion in CHO cells with peak levels of PCM-1 mRNA being present in G1 and S phase cells before mRNA amounts dropped to undetectable levels in G2 and M phases. Conversely, cells arrested at the G1/S boundary of the cell cycle maintained PCM-1 mRNA at artificially elevated levels, providing a possible molecular mechanism for explaining the multiple rounds of centrosome replication that occurred in CHO cells during prolonged hydroxyurea-induced arrest. The capacity to replicate centrosomes could be abolished in hydroxyurea-arrested CHO cells by culturing the cells in dialyzed serum. However, the ability to replicate centrosomes and to synthesize PCM-1 mRNA could be re-initiated by adding EGF to the dialyzed serum. This experimental system should be useful for investigating the positive and negative molecular mechanisms used by somatic cells to regulate the replication of centrosomes and for studying and the methods used by somatic cells for coordinating centrosome duplication with other cell cycle progression events.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unravelling the tangled web at the microtubule-organizing centerCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1993
- The identification of mammalian centrosomal antigens using human autoimmune anticentrosome antiseraCell Motility, 1991
- Movement and segregation of kinetochores experimentally detached from mammalian chromosomesNature, 1988
- Tubulin interaction with kinetochore proteins: analysis by in vitro assembly and chemical cross-linking.The Journal of cell biology, 1987
- The reproduction of centrosomes: nuclear versus cytoplasmic controls.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- Co-ordinate control of centrosomal separation and DNA synthesis by growth regulatorsExperimental Cell Research, 1984
- Centriole cycle in Chinese hamster ovary cells as determined by whole-mount electron microscopy.The Journal of cell biology, 1981
- Regulation of cell cycle stage-specific transcription of histone genes from chromatin by non-histone chromosomal proteinsNature, 1975
- INDEPENDENCE OF CENTRIOLE FORMATION AND DNA SYNTHESISThe Journal of cell biology, 1973
- THE CENTRIOLE CYCLE IN SYNCHRONIZED HELA CELLSThe Journal of cell biology, 1968