1 MCD Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA
2 Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, USA
3 Institute of Molecular Biology, Academia Sinica, Nankang, Taipei, Taiwan
*Author for correspondence (e-mail: tin.su{at}colorado.edu)
Accepted June 10, 2001
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SUMMARY |
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Key words: Drosophila, Cell Cycle, Checkpoint, Mitosis, 14-3-3
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INTRODUCTION |
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In contrast to other systems, studies of 14-3-3 proteins in Drosophila have focused primarily on their roles in RAS/MAPK signaling and in neuronal differentiation (Chang and Rubin 1997; Kockel et al., 1997; Li et al., 1997; Skoulakis and Davis 1998). Drosophila 14-3-3, for example, is required for Sevenless signaling during photoreceptor differentiation in the adult eye, whereas 14-3-3
(Leonardo) functions in Torso signaling during the differentiation of the embryonic termini.
Because of conserved roles for 14-3-3 proteins in cell cycle regulation in yeast and human, we asked whether Drosophila 14-3-3 and 14-3-3
also have roles in cell cycle regulation, in addition to their function in signaling. To this end, we analyzed the localization of 14-3-3 proteins during the cell cycle and tested whether mutation of 14-3-3
and 14-3-3
results in cell division defects. Our results suggest that 14-3-3 proteins function both during interphase (to time the entry into mitosis) and in mitosis (to facilitate chromosome separation). Moreover, these functions are required for progression through unperturbed cell cycles as well as in response to irradiation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Irradiation and heat shock
For irradiation, embryos were collected for 2 hours on grape agar plates at 25°C and aged for 2 hours to reach cycle 14. Embryos were irradiated at 2.2 rad sec-1 in a TORREX120D X-ray generator (Astrophysics Research, Long Beach, CA) by placing agar plates facing up on shelf 6. The generator was set at 5 mA and 115 kV. Embryos were fixed as described below.
For the induction of stable cyclins A and B, embryos were collected for 30 minutes and aged for 2 hours 45 minutes at 25°C. Embryos were heat shocked by floating the grape-agar plates on water in a 37°C water bath for 30 minutes. Embryos were allowed to recover for 1 hour 15 minutes at 25°C before fixing.
For the analysis of stg mutants, embryos were collected for 2 hours and aged for 2 hours at 25°C before fixing. The stg homozygous mutants were identified by the lack of mitotic cells. To heat shock Cdk1AF in a stg mutant background, embryos were collected for 2 hours and aged for 4 hours at 25°C before being heat shocked as described above. The longer aging time before heat shock allows cells in the stg homozygous embryos to remain arrested in cell cycle 14, whereas cells of their siblings have progressed through two additional divisions. This results in a cell size difference that allows us to identify stg homozygous embryos. Heat-shocked embryos were allowed to rest for 30 minutes at 25°C before fixing.
Fixing and staining
Embryos were dechorionated with 50% bleach for 2 minutes and fixed for 20 minutes in a bilayer of heptane:PBS + 5% formaldehyde. For stable cyclin experiments, embryos were first incubated for 30 seconds in a bilayer of heptane:PBS + 5 µM Taxol before formaldehyde was added to reach 5% of the PBS layer. Fixed embryos were blocked in PBT + 3% normal goat serum for at least 1 hour before staining with antibodies. PBT is PBS (140 mM NaCl; 2.6 mM KCl; 10 mM Na2HPO4; 1.8 mM KH2PO4; pH7.4) + 0.2% Tween. Primary antibodies were used at the following dilutions: affinity-purified rabbit anti-14-3-3 antibody (Tien et al., 1999), 1:200 1:300; purified rabbit IgG against 14-3-3 proteins (Catalog # SC-629; Santa Cruz Biotechnologies), 1:300; affinity-purified rabbit polyclonal anti-phospho-histone H3 (Upstate Biotechnologies), 1:1000. SC-629 antibody was generated against the sequence DKSELVQKAKLAEQAERY. The corresponding regions in Drosophila proteins are DKEELVQKAKLAEQSERY (
) and ERENNVYKAKLAEQAERY (
). Primary antibodies were detected by staining with FITC- or rhodamine-conjugated secondary antibodies (Jackson) diluted 1:500 and pre-absorbed against a large volume of fixed embryos to reduce non-specific binding. Embryos were also stained with 10 µg ml-1 bizbenzimide (Hoechst33258) in PBT for 10 minutes to visualize DNA. In some cases, embryos were stained with 500 ng ml-1 FITC- or rhodamine-conjugated wheat-germ agglutinin (WGA; Molecular Probes) in PBT, to visualize the nuclear envelope.
Live observations
Embryos were collected on grape-juice agar plates, dechorionated with 50% bleach for 2 minutes, rinsed thoroughly with ddH2O, and placed on a glass coverslip using a soft brush. Excess water was removed and a thin layer of Halocarbon 700 oil (Sigma) was placed on embryos. The coverslip was inverted and placed over a hole in the center of a microscope slide such that oil-covered embryos were otherwise exposed to air. Time-lapsed pictures were taken using a 10x or a 20x objective on a Leica DMR scope and a Sensicam CCD camera.
Image analysis
All images except Fig. 2D were collected on a Leica DMR fluorescence microscope attached to a Sensicam CCD camera, using Slidebook software (Intelligent Imaging Innovations). Images were compiled using Photoshop. Data in Fig. 2D were captured on an Olympus fluorescence microscope using Deltavision software. Optical sections were then deconvolved to exclude out-of-focus information using the same software, and flattened into a two-dimensional projection for presentation.
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RESULTS |
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Embryogenesis in Drosophila begins with 13 synchronous nuclear divisions that occur in a common cytoplasm, a syncytium (Foe et al., 1993). Staining of fixed syncytial-stage Drosophila embryos with an affinity-purified antibody to 14-3-3 shows dispersed staining in interphase and predominantly nuclear staining at entry into mitosis (Fig. 1E; Fig. 2A). Because the antibody detects no staining in 14-3-3
mutants (Tien et al., 1999), this staining reflects the distribution of 14-3-3
protein. The antigen remains concentrated near chromosomes throughout metaphase, in the absence of an intact nuclear envelope (Fig. 1F). This behavior is different from that of nuclear proteins such as replication factors, which disperse into the cytoplasm when the nuclear envelope is disrupted in metaphase (Su and OFarrell 1997). Our observations instead suggest a sequestration of 14-3-3
around chromosomes, rather than localization by nuclear import and retention by the nuclear envelope. The antigen remains in the proximity of chromosomes in early anaphase and disperses in late anaphase/telophase as cells exit mitosis (Fig. 1H). These data reveal a cycle of localization of 14-3-3
that includes perichromosomal location in mitosis.
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To determine whether the second Drosophila 14-3-3 homolog, 14-3-3, also localizes in a similar manner, we stained embryos with a commercial antibody that recognizes 14-3-3
and to a lesser extent 14-3-3
(Skoulakis and Davis 1998) (T.T.S., unpublished; see also Materials and Methods). This antibody detected a changing pattern of localized staining that paralleled the pattern detected by the 14-3-3
-specific antibody. For example, Fig. 1F,G shows metaphase staining with 14-3-3
-specific antibody and commercial 14-3-3 antibody, respectively. We conclude that the two 14-3-3 proteins have similar programs of localization during the cell cycle. The cycle of localization of 14-3-3 proteins, and their perichromosomal location in mitosis suggests that they have roles in mitotic progression.
Cdk1 activity and mitotic progression dictates 14-3-3 localization
Localization of 14-3-3 and 14-3-3
to the nucleus occurs during prophase, and is thus temporally correlated with the activation of mitotic kinase, Cdk1. To test whether this localization is coupled to Cdk1 activation, we examined 14-3-3
localization in string mutants. The stg gene encodes a homolog of Cdc25, a phosphatase that is required for activation of Cdk1 and entry into mitosis. In homozygous stg mutant embryos from heterozygous mothers, 13 syncytial cycles are driven by maternally deposited stg. Following cellularization, cells arrest in G2 of cycle 14 because embryonic stg is required to activate Cdk1 at entry into M14 (Edgar and OFarrell, 1989). In G2-arrested cells of stg mutant embryos, 14-3-3
remains excluded from the nucleus (Fig. 2A,B). We conclude that stg activity is required, either directly or indirectly, for relocalization of 14-3-3
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To distinguish whether it is stg or consequent Cdk1 activity that promotes 14-3-3 relocalization, we induced a mutant form of Cdk1, Cdk1AF, in stg mutants. Cdk1AF has substitutions in amino acid residues that are normally dephosphorylated by Stg and can therefore bypass the requirement for stg (Sprenger et al., 1997). Expression of Cdk1AF in stg mutants drives G2-arrested cells into mitosis (N. Yakubovich and P.H.O., unpublished). We found that 14-3-3 localizes to the nucleus and to regions near metaphase chromosomes in Cdk1AF-induced mitoses (Fig. 2C), just like in wild-type mitoses. Although the concentration of antigen near the chromosomes is qualitatively similar to that of the wild type, it is not as robust. This is consistent with previous observations that mitotic induction by Cdk1AF is less robust than in the wild type, as indicated by slower kinetics (N. Yakubovich and P.H.O., unpublished). These data suggest that, although Cdk1 activity drives the localization of 14-3-3
to chromosomes, stg is dispensable for this process.
The failure of nuclear 14-3-3 to disperse upon disruption of the nuclear membrane during mitosis could be due to anchoring of 14-3-3 or could simply reflect slow dispersal and a rapid mitosis. We tested these possibilities by arresting mitotic progression with stable cyclins. Drosophila mitotic cyclins A and B, both partners of Cdk1, are degraded during metaphase and anaphase, respectively (Sigrist et al., 1995). Introduction of cyclin mutants that are refractory to degradation arrests cells at specific points within mitosis, at metaphase in the case of stable cyclin A (As) and in early anaphase in the case of stable cyclin B (Bs) (Sigrist et al., 1995; Su and OFarrell, 1997). In these arrests, 14-3-3 was found to be concentrated around chromosomes, just as in wild-type metaphase and early anaphase (Fig. 2D). Thus, stabilization of Cdk1 activity in this experimental context is sufficient to stabilize 14-3-3
localization near chromosomes. These data further suggest that the dispersal of 14-3-3
we see at the end of mitosis in wild-type embryos requires a decline in Cdk1 activity, and argues that 14-3-3
is specifically localized during mitosis, although the structural identity of the site of localization is mysterious.
In embryos that have been exposed to DNA-damaging agents such as ionizing radiation, cells delay entry into mitosis. Previous data indicate that this delay is achieved by inhibition of Cdk1 activity (Su et al., 2000). If Cdk1 activity is required for the nuclear localization of 14-3-3 proteins, as suggested by stg mutants, we would expect this movement to be blocked in irradiated embryos. This was indeed the case: 14-3-3 remained excluded from nuclei after irradiation (Fig. 2E). Collectively these data suggest that the dynamic mitotic cycle of 14-3-3 localization is coupled to the cycle of Cdk1 activation and inactivation that occurs at entry into and exit from mitosis, respectively.
14-3-3 regulates the entry into mitosis in Drosophila embryos
Although the localization data suggest that 14-3-3 proteins have a role in mitosis, it is only correlative evidence. To test for cell cycle roles of 14-3-3 proteins more directly, we examined previously described mutants in 14-3-3 and 14-3-3
, paying particular attention to embryonic cell cycles. 14-3-3
is dispensable for viability (Chang and Rubin 1997) and so we were able to generate homozygous mutant adults and analyze their embryos (see Materials and Methods). The 14-3-3
mutant embryos progressed through the first 13 mitotic cycles and cellularized without obvious defect. We compared the timing of the mitosis 14 in these mutant embryos to the timing in wild-type embryos. Unlike the earlier synchronous divisions, the time of entry into mitosis 14 is spatially programmed in wild-type embryos so that local cohorts of cells called mitotic domains enter mitosis according to a stereotyped schedule (Foe et al., 1993). Concurrent gastrulation movements change the shape of the embryo. Thus, in wild-type embryos at a particular stage in gastrulation (i.e. exhibiting a specific morphology), specific cells are in mitosis (Foe, 1989). For example, in the embryo in Fig. 3A, germ-band elongation (a major morphogenetic event at this stage) has barely begun and pole cells are still near the posterior end of the embryo. Very few cells are in mitosis at this time. By contrast, in 14-3-3
mutants at the same stage in gastrulation (Fig. 3B), cells of mitotic domains 1-5 are seen to be entering mitosis, indicating an advancement of mitosis in 14-3-3
mutants. This pattern of divisions is seen in wild-type embryos of more advanced gastrulation (Fig. 3C), indicating that the relative programs of mitoses are conserved. Similar observations are made at later stages in gastrulation also. Thus, the division pattern of 14-3-3
mutant embryo in Fig. 3D is more advanced than in wild-type embryos of similar gastrulation (Fig. 3C) but is similar to wild-type embryos of more advanced gastrulation (Fig. 3E). These data indicate a premature entry of 14-3-3
mutant cells into mitosis relative to gastrulation; moreover, the mutation advances the entire schedule of mitosis without disrupting the relative order of mitosis in different positions within the embryo.
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In wild-type embryos, the time of entry into mitosis 14 is delayed following treatment with DNA-damaging agents (Su et al., 2000); this is detected by the failure of particular mitotic domains to divide at the expected stage of gastrulation (Fig. 3F). To determine whether 14-3-3 is required for this delay of mitosis, we examined 14-3-3
mutant embryos after exposure to X-rays. We found that irradiated 14-3-3
embryos showed mitotic cells in all domains and that each mitotic domain made its appearance at the same stage of embryogenesis as is did in non-irradiated 14-3-3
mutant embryos (Fig. 3D,G). We conclude that 14-3-3
mutant embryos are unable to delay mitosis fully and infer that 14-3-3
normally functions to delay mitosis after DNA damage. However, the number of mitotic cells in irradiated 14-3-3
mutants might be lower than that in non-irradiated mutant embryos. Thus, the loss of mitotic regulation in irradiated 14-3-3
mutants might be partial.
14-3-3 is required for syncytial divisions
In contrast to 14-3-3, 14-3-3
is required for viability (Skoulakis and Davis, 1996). Homozygous embryos from heterozygous parents die before hatching. These embryos, however, appear to have intact mitotic regulation: all progeny from heterozygous parents show no apparent defects in the timing of M14, and these embryos also delayed mitosis after irradiation (data not shown). We cannot, however, rule out the possibility that maternal 14-3-3
from heterozygous mothers persists through the three post-blastoderm divisions. Therefore, we made attempts to remove the maternal supply by creating genetic mosaics.
We used standard techniques to create mosaics in the germ line of heterozygous 14-3-3 mutant females (Chou and Perrimon, 1996). In this technique, recombination events in the mother create 14-3-3
homozygous mutant cells in the ovary (and elsewhere in the body). A dominant mutation that disrupts oogenesis is present on the homolog with a functional 14-3-3
gene and so all eggs that are produced lack this chromosome and are therefore deficient in maternally supplied 14-3-3
gene product (14-3-3
-deficient embryos). Analysis of such embryos revealed an essential role for 14-3-3
in syncytial divisions, in agreement with a previous study (Li et al., 1997). This previous study, however, focused on a fraction of embryos that progressed beyond syncytial cycles in order to study the role of 14-3-3 proteins in the differentiation of cellularized embryos. We focus here on defects seen during syncytial cycles.
In a 24 hour collection, most 14-3-3-deficient embryos (69±9% from three separate collections) fail to cellularize. To examine cell division defects in these embryos, we fixed and stained 0-3-hour-old embryos (a population enriched in syncytial stages) with a DNA dye and an antibody to
-tubulin (to visualize microtubules). We noted division defects in almost all (54 of 59) 14-3-3
-deficient embryos examined. The defects include DNA bridges between telophase sister nuclei, pronounced asynchrony in division within a single embryo, free microtubule-organizing centers (MTOC) that are not associated with nuclei, loss of nuclei from the cortical monolayer of nuclei and larger than normal yolk DNA masses (Fig. 4; and data not shown).
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Analysis of older syncytial embryos, in which the superficial location of nuclei allows the visualization of microtubules, suggested that mitotic spindles formed. Moreover, these spindles appear to be functional as judged by the segregation of chromosome masses that are still linked by DNA bridges to opposite spindle poles (Fig. 4C,F,G). What appear to be attempts at forming mid-bodies are also visible between segregating nuclei despite the presence of chromosome bridges (Fig. 4C,F,G). These observations suggest that 14-3-3-deficient embryos retain spindle function but chromosome segregation often does not go to completion because DNA masses cannot be fully resolved.
If the inability to separate and segregate chromosomes fully during the earliest mitoses is the primary defect in 14-3-3-deficient embryos, this can explain the pleiotropic defects seen later. Incomplete chromosome separation would invariably lead to aneuploid or damaged nuclei. Such nuclei in the Drosophila syncytium are culled by exile into the center of the embryo and become incorporated into yolk, whereas their centrosomes are left behind (Debec et al., 1996); abandoned centrosomes could account for free MTOCs we observed. Culling during cortical syncytial cycles (cycles 10-13, which occur after nuclei have finished migrating to the embryo cortex) would lead to a loss of nuclei from the cortical layer, whereas the addition of culled nuclei to the central pool of DNA would account for larger than normal yolk DNA masses we observed. The remarkable ability of syncytial embryos to adjust to early mitotic defects (Debec et al., 1996) might account for the fraction of embryos that successfully progress to later stages.
As noted above, 30% of embryos progressed beyond syncytial cycles and cellularized. We see severe gastrulation defects in these, as described before (Li et al., 1997). Therefore, these embryos are unsuitable for studies of mitotic timing such as that in Fig. 3.
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DISCUSSION |
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One striking set of data presented here concern the localization of 14-3-3 proteins to the neighborhood of chromosomes in mitosis. Although the perinuclear localization of Drosophila 14-3-3 proteins is unprecedented, the interphase location and activity are consistent with reports from other systems. S. pombe Rad24 remains exclusively cytoplasmic throughout the cell cycle and this localization appears to be important for blocking mitosis upon checkpoint activation (Lopez-Girona et al., 1999). Similarly, it has been proposed that cytoplasmic human 14-3-3 inhibits mitosis by retaining Cdk1/cyclin B in the cytoplasm (Chan et al., 1999). Like their homologs in other systems, Drosophila 14-3-3 proteins are cytoplasmic in interphase, and our analysis of mutations suggests that Drosophila 14-3-3
also inhibits entry into mitosis in response to activation of DNA damage checkpoint in embryos. This is in agreement with its proposed role in other species and consistent with a recent report of a role for 14-3-3
in preventing mitosis after DNA damage in Drosophila larvae (Brodsky et al., 2000).
Role for 14-3-3 in normal cell cycle progression
In addition, our observations indicate a role for 14-3-3 in the normal timing of embryonic mitoses. The precise schedule of mitotic times of cells in various positions in the Drosophila embryo allows us to detect deviations from normal timing that are as small as a few minutes. Defects can occur in the normally rigid stereotypical order with which different regions of the embryo progress into mitosis. For example, recent reports described the premature mitosis of mesodermal cells, normally domain 10, in a mutant tribbles (Grosshans and Wieschaus, 2000; Mata et al., 2000; Seher and Leptin, 2000). When we examined embryos deficient in 14-3-3
, we found a different type of timing defect. The normal order of the mitotic domains was retained, but the entire schedule of mitosis was advanced relative to germ-band extension, a major morphological marker of developmental progression. Because there was no detectable slowing of germ-band extension in 14-3-3
mutant embryos, we infer that mitosis is advanced in embryos that lack 14-3-3
. Thus, 14-3-3
might set physiologically relevant thresholds for entry into mitosis in Drosophila, and this activity might be amplified in response to irradiation. S. pombe mutants in a 14-3-3 homolog show smaller cell size at division; because cellular growth in this organism occurs mainly in G2, it has been proposed that G2 is shorter in these 14-3-3 mutants (Ford et al., 1994), although precise measurements of this period have not been reported. Thus, it remains to be seen whether 14-3-3 proteins have a similar ability to set the threshold for normal mitosis in other species where only its checkpoint function has been detected.
Mutations in 14-3-3 uncover an early role for 14-3-3 proteins
We find that 14-3-3 mutants show defective mitoses in the syncytium, indicating a requirement for this protein in syncytial divisions. Embryos that lack checkpoint functions such as Grapes (Chk1 homolog) and Mei-41 (an ATR homolog) also show mitotic defects, and it has been proposed that these defects are secondary to entry into mitosis with unreplicated DNA (Sibon et al., 2000; Yu et al., 2000). However, loss of 14-3-3
functions affects early cycles. By contrast, the dramatic phenotypes of checkpoint defects occur at later syncytial stages (around cycle 12) when checkpoints are thought to become essential to postpone mitosis as S phase takes longer to complete. Thus, the early phenotype of 14-3-3
mutant embryos suggests that 14-3-3
has roles beyond its likely function in the checkpoint. Perhaps, like 14-3-3
, 14-3-3
might contribute to the normal timing of mitosis even when checkpoints are not operating. Alternatively, incomplete separation of chromosomes in 14-3-3
mutants could indicate a more direct involvement of 14-3-3
in mitotic progression, an idea that is supported by the localization of the proteins around the mitotic chromosomes and their dispersal after chromosome separation. A direct test of these models will require specific inactivation of 14-3-3
in mitosis (as opposed to interphase), for which we lack the means at present.
Drosophila 14-3-3 and 14-3-3
have documented roles in RAS signaling. Recent data implicate a MAP kinase pathway in cell cycle control in Xenopus (Chau and Shibuya, 1999; Guadagno and Ferrell, 1998; Takenaka et al., 1998), raising the possibility that Drosophila 14-3-3 proteins function through a MAPK pathway to affect their cell cycle roles. We think that this is unlikely because treatment of Drosophila embryos with pharmacological inhibitors of MAPK pathway did not phenocopy either 14-3-3
or 14-3-3
mutations (N. Ahn and T.T.S., unpublished).
Regardless of the mechanism of action of 14-3-3, it is notable that it has essential cell cycle roles in the absence of perturbations that normally provoke checkpoint responses. This reinforces other findings in Drosophila and in mammals that suggest that functions normally considered to be checkpoint functions have essential roles in regulating the cell cycle early in development (Brown and Baltimore, 2000; de Klein et al., 2000; Fogarty et al., 1994; Liu et al., 2000; Sibon et al., 1999).
Model for the interplay of cyclin/Cdk1 activity and 14-3-3 protein function
Based on the cytoplasmic localization of 14-3-3 and cyclin/Cdk1 during interphase (Fig. 4) (Sigrist et al., 1995), we propose that 14-3-3
acts to keep Cdk1 in check during interphase. As Cdk1 becomes active (owing to the accumulation of its activator Stg or after recovery from DNA damage) and cells enter mitosis, accumulating cyclin/Cdk1 activity promotes and maintains, probably indirectly, 14-3-3 protein localization near chromosomes. Upon the transition to anaphase, the localized 14-3-3 proteins can contribute to chromosome separation. The decline in Cdk1 activity allows 14-3-3 proteins to return to their interphase distribution. Thus, during interphase, 14-3-3
can act to keep Cdk1 inactive in the cytoplasm but, once Cdk1 is active, it can act in turn to localize 14-3-3 proteins in preparation for their action during the exit from mitosis (Fig. 5). We failed to detect a physical interaction between 14-3-3 proteins and Drosophila homologs of cell cycle regulators known to interact with 14-3-3 proteins in other systems (Cdc25string and cyclin B) under several experimental conditions (A.P. and T.T.S., unpublished). Thus, understanding the mechanism of 14-3-3 action might require the identification of novel target molecules.
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Conclusions
In summary, three lines of data indicate that Drosophila 14-3-3 proteins function in normal cell cycle progression, in addition to checkpoint regulation. These are: (1) cell cycle stage specific localization, which is dictated by Cdk1; (2) advancement of mitotic entry in 14-3-3 mutants; and (3) defective mitoses in 14-3-3
mutants. To our knowledge, this is the first clear evidence for the requirement for 14-3-3 proteins in normal mitosis in a eukaryote. Furthermore, the fact that mutations in two 14-3-3 proteins lead to different outcomes and at different stages in embryogenesis indicates that these proteins are not functionally redundant. Instead, our results provide strong evidence that, during metazoan development, cell division and its regulation might have different requirements for two members of the 14-3-3 family.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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