How Can Daughter Cells Be So Unlike Their Mothers? Print E-mail
Science - Biological Sciences
Written by TS-Si News Service   
Tuesday, 26 August 2008 16:30
Saccharomyces Cerevisiae: Budding Yeast
TS-Si Biological Sciences
Evanston, IL, USA. A less specialized cell becomes a more specialized cell type during a process called cellular differentiation. The ultimate fate of the cell (its cell fate) is determined by the specific program each cell follows to a differentiated cell. The mechanisms for cell fate determination are of great interest to developmental biologists.
 
A research team has discovered a new mechanism for cell fate determination. The team examined how mother and daughter cells can they have the same genetic material, but the daughters can differ in how they express their genes.
 

The NDR/LATS Family Kinase Cbk1 Directly Controls Transcriptional Asymmetry. Emily Mazanka, Jess Alexander, Brian J. Yeh, Patrick Charoenpong, Drew M. Lowery, Michael Yaffe, Eric L. Weiss. PLoS Biology 6(8) e203. doi: 10.1371 / journal.pbio.0060203  [ Download PDF ]

 
The entire genome is known for yeast, a venerable model organism, enabling scientists to learn the basics of cell division and apply that knowledge to the human system. Many of the fundamental mechanisms for cell division in yeast are conserved, or very similar, to those in mammals. Many of the proteins involved in human birth conditions and disease are related to proteins that are involved in yeast cell division.
 
Eric L. Weiss.jpg

Eric L. Weiss is an assistant professor of biochemistry, molecular biology and cell biology in Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. He led a research team that included scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). The team published their findings in PLoS Biology.

 
The new knowledge about cell fate determination could lead to a better understanding of healthy human cells, what goes awry, and how human stem cells and germ cells work.
 
For instance: "Cancer may reflect a partial and aberrant loss of differentiated character, in which cells that were formerly specified to perform a specific task 'forget' that, and become more like the rapidly dividing stem cells from which they came," said Weiss.
 
"Understanding how differentiated states are specified might help us figure out how to remind cancer cells to go back to their original tasks or fates — or, more likely, die."
 
Yeast cells. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.When a yeast cell divides it produces a mother cell and a smaller, different daughter cell. The daughter cell is the one that actually performs the final act of separation, cutting its connection to the mother cell. And the daughter takes longer than the mother to begin the next cycle of division, since it needs time to grow up.
 
The key to the researchers' discovery of how this differentiation works is the gene regulator Ace2, a protein that directly turns genes on.
 
The researchers found that the protein gets trapped in the nucleus of the daughter cell, turning on genes that make daughter different from mother.
 
The team is the first to show that the regulator is trapped because a signaling pathway (a protein kinase called Cbk1) turns on and blocks Ace2 from interacting with the cell's nuclear export machinery. Without this specific block, the machinery would move the regulator out of the nucleus, and the daughter cell would be more motherlike — not as different.
 
"Daughter-cell gene expression is special, and now we know why," said Weiss.
 
The researchers also found that the differentiation of the mother cell and daughter cell — this trapping of the regulator in the daughter nucleus — occurs while the two cells are still connected.
 


[N1] This research was funded by (1) a Research Scholar grant to Eric L. Weiss from the American Cancer Society; Brian J. Yeh is a Damon Runyon Fellow supported by the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation.

[N2] In addition to Eric L. Weiss, other authors of the paper are Emily Mazanka (lead author), Brian J. Yeh and Patrick Charoenpong, from Northwestern University; and Jes Alexander, Drew M. Lowery and Michael Yaffee, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

[N3] Abbreviations. CDK, cyclin-dependent kinase; ChIP, chromatin immunoprecipitation; GMC, ganglion mother cells; LMB, leptomycin B; NES, nuclear export sequence; RAM, Regulation of Ace2 and Morphogenesis; RT-PCR, real-time polymerase chain reaction.

 


The NDR/LATS Family Kinase Cbk1 Directly Controls Transcriptional Asymmetry. Emily Mazanka, Jess Alexander, Brian J. Yeh, Patrick Charoenpong, Drew M. Lowery, Michael Yaffe, Eric L. Weiss. PLoS Biology 6(8) e203. doi: 10.1371 / journal.pbio.0060203  [ Download PDF ]

Abstract

Cell fate can be determined by asymmetric segregation of gene expression regulators. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the transcription factor Ace2 accumulates specifically in the daughter cell nucleus, where it drives transcription of genes that are not expressed in the mother cell. The NDR/LATS family protein kinase Cbk1 is required for Ace2 segregation and function. Using peptide scanning arrays, we determined Cbk1's phosphorylation consensus motif, the first such unbiased approach for an enzyme of this family, showing that it is a basophilic kinase with an unusual preference for histidine -5 to the phosphorylation site. We found that Cbk1 phosphorylates such sites in Ace2, and that these modifications are critical for Ace2's partitioning and function. Using proteins marked with GFP variants, we found that Ace2 moves from isotropic distribution to the daughter cell nuclear localization, well before cytokinesis, and that the nucleus must enter the daughter cell for Ace2 accumulation to occur. We found that Cbk1, unlike Ace2, is restricted to the daughter cell. Using both in vivo and in vitro assays, we found that two critical Cbk1 phosphorylations block Ace2's interaction with nuclear export machinery, while a third distal modification most likely acts to increase the transcription factor's activity. Our findings show that Cbk1 directly controls Ace2, regulating the transcription factor's activity and interaction with nuclear export machinery through three phosphorylation sites. Furthermore, Cbk1 exhibits a novel specificity that is likely conserved among related kinases from yeast to metazoans. Cbk1 is functionally restricted to the daughter cell, and cannot diffuse from the daughter to the mother. In addition to providing a mechanism for Ace2 segregation, these findings show that an isotropically distributed cell fate determinant can be asymmetrically partitioned in cytoplasmically contiguous cells through spatial segregation of a regulating protein kinase.

Author Summary

Cells can differentiate by segregating molecules that direct expression of specific sets of genes to one of the two cells produced by division. This generally occurs by direct mechanical movement or asymmetric anchoring of these molecules, which act after division to influence gene expression. In this study, we define a different mechanism by which the budding yeast transcription regulator Ace2 is asymmetrically partitioned. We show that Ace2 moves from uniform distribution to strong accumulation in the daughter nucleus while mother and daughter cells are still connected, and that the enzyme Cbk1 directly controls this segregation by attaching phosphate to specific sites on Ace2. We also demonstrate that Cbk1 is restricted to the daughter cell. Using both biochemical and live-cell experiments, we show that the Cbk1-mediated modifications activate Ace2 and block its interaction with nuclear export machinery, trapping it in the daughter cell nucleus. In addition to demonstrating Cbk1's remarkable biochemical similarity to related enzymes in multicellular organisms, our analysis shows that a uniformly distributed regulator of gene expression can be made asymmetrically active in connected cells through the direct action of a localized modifying enzyme.

 
Ms. Evangelina Carters.Ms. Evangelina Carters was corrected in 1984. She has been happily married for 12 years. All of Ms. Carters' signed articles contain her own personal opinions and do not necessarily convey an official position of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates.
 
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 26 August 2008 15:07