Drosophila p115 is required for Cdk1 activation and G2/M cell cycle transition
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2017-04Metadata
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Ibar Valenzuela, María Consuelo
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Drosophila p115 is required for Cdk1 activation and G2/M cell cycle transition
Abstract
Golgi complex inheritance and its relationship with the cell cycle are central in cell biology. Golgi matrix proteins,
known as golgins, are one of the components that underlie the shape and functionality of this organelle. In mammalian
cells, golgins are phosphorylated during mitosis to allow fragmentation of the Golgi ribbon and they also
participate in spindle dynamics; both processes are required for cell cycle progression. Little is known about the
function of golgins during mitosis in metazoans in vivo. This is particularly significant in Drosophila, in which the
Golgi architecture is distributed in numerous units scattered throughout the cytoplasm, in contrast with mammalian
cells. We examined the function of the ER/cis-Golgi golgin p115 during the proliferative phase of the Drosophila
wing imaginal disc. Knockdown of p115 decreased tissue size. This phenotype was not caused by
programmed cell death or cell size reductions, but by a reduction in the final cell number due to an accumulation
of cells at the G2/M transition. This phenomenon frequently allows mitotic bypass and re-replication of DNA.
These outcomes are similar to those observed following the partial loss of function of positive regulators of
Cdk1 in Drosophila. In agreement with this, Cdk1 activation was reduced upon p115 knockdown. Interestingly,
these phenotypes were fully rescued by Cdk1 overexpression and partially rescued by Myt1 depletion, but not
by String (also known as Cdc25) overexpression. Additionally, we confirmed the physical interaction between
p115 and Cdk1, suggesting that the formation of a complex where both proteins are present is essential for the
full activation of Cdk1 and thus the correct progression of mitosis in proliferating tissues.
Patrocinador
FONDAP
15090007
PIA
ACT1401
FONDECYT
1140522
CONICYT Ph.D. Fellowship
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Mechanisms of Development 144 (2017) 191–200
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