Author:
Day Margot L.,Winston Nicola,McConnell Josie L.,Cook David,Johnson Martin H.
Abstract
During embryogenesis cells make appropriately timed developmental decisions.
Both ‘hourglass-like’ and ‘clock-like’ mechanisms have
been demonstrated to act as timers in early development. The cell cycle
rhythm, using feedback circuits to drive cells unidirectionally through
checkpoints, is an example of a clock-like timer, but how it operates to time
developmental events is unclear. In other cell types, cyclic oscillations in K+ channel activity, which parallel cell cycle and
circadian rhythms, may be part of the timing mechanism. Changes in K+ oscillations accompany key developmental
transitions and oncogenic transformation. Channel blockade interferes
pharmaco-logically with cell cycle initiation or progression, whereas channel
over-expression can be oncogenic. K+ channel
activity also exists in early mouse oocytes through to at least the blastocyst
stage, and it oscillates in phase with the developmental cell cycles, being
high in M/G1 and low in S/G2. It resembles physiologically the activity of the K+ channels of the eag-
or erg-like families. Reverse
transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction of mouse oocytes has revealed
the presence of transcripts encoding both EAG- and ERG-like proteins
throughout preimplantation devel-opment. Channel activity continues to
oscillate with a cell cycle periodicity in embryos from which the nucleus has
been removed, or after inhibition by puromycin of the cyclin
B–cyclin-dependent kinase 1 driven component of the chromosomal cycle.
Channel oscillatory activity thus appears to be able to function autonomously
of the chromo-somal cycle and may represent a distinct oscillatory timing
activity with possible developmental significance.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
18 articles.
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