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Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium

BACKGROUND: During mitosis most nucleolar proteins redistribute to other locales providing an opportunity to study the relationship between nucleolar protein localization and function. Dictyostelium is a model organism for the study of several fundamental biological processes and human diseases but...

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Autores principales: Catalano, Andrew, O’Day, Danton H
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3637376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23587254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1747-1028-8-4
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author Catalano, Andrew
O’Day, Danton H
author_facet Catalano, Andrew
O’Day, Danton H
author_sort Catalano, Andrew
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: During mitosis most nucleolar proteins redistribute to other locales providing an opportunity to study the relationship between nucleolar protein localization and function. Dictyostelium is a model organism for the study of several fundamental biological processes and human diseases but only two nucleolar proteins have been studied during mitosis: NumA1 and Snf12. Both of them are linked to the cell cycle. To acquire a better understanding of nucleolar protein localization and dynamics in Dictyostelium we studied the nucleolar localization of two additional proteins during mitosis: Snf12-linked forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA), which is involved in the cell cycle, and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a), which is a binding partner of NumA1. METHODS: Polyclonal antibodies were produced in-house. Cells were fixed and probed with either anti-FhkA or anti-CBP4a in order to determine cellular localization during interphase and throughout the stages of mitosis. Colocalization with DAPI nuclear stain allowed us to determine the location of the nucleus and nucleolus while colocalization with anti-α-tubulin allowed us to determine the cell cycle stage. RESULTS: Here we verify two novel nucleolar proteins, Rad53 homologue FhkA which localized around the edge of the nucleolus and CBP4a which was detected throughout the entire nucleolus. Treatment with the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA (5 mM) showed that the nucleolar localization of CBP4a is Ca(2+)-dependent. In response to actinomycin D (0.05 mg/mL) CBP4a disappeared from the nucleolus while FhkA protruded from the nucleus, eventually pinching off as cytoplasmic circles. FhkA and CBP4a redistributed differently during mitosis. FhkA redistributed throughout the entire cell and at the nuclear envelope region from prometaphase through telophase. In contrast, during prometaphase CBP4a relocated to many large, discrete “CBP4a islands” throughout the nucleoplasm. Two larger “CBP4a islands” were also detected specifically at the metaphase plate region. CONCLUSIONS: FhkA and CBP4a represent the sixth and seventh nucleolar proteins that have been verified to date in Dictyostelium and the third and fourth studied during mitosis. The protein-specific distributions of all of these nucleolar proteins during interphase and mitosis provide unique insight into nucleolar protein dynamics in this model organism setting the stage for future work.
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spelling pubmed-36373762013-04-27 Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium Catalano, Andrew O’Day, Danton H Cell Div Research BACKGROUND: During mitosis most nucleolar proteins redistribute to other locales providing an opportunity to study the relationship between nucleolar protein localization and function. Dictyostelium is a model organism for the study of several fundamental biological processes and human diseases but only two nucleolar proteins have been studied during mitosis: NumA1 and Snf12. Both of them are linked to the cell cycle. To acquire a better understanding of nucleolar protein localization and dynamics in Dictyostelium we studied the nucleolar localization of two additional proteins during mitosis: Snf12-linked forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA), which is involved in the cell cycle, and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a), which is a binding partner of NumA1. METHODS: Polyclonal antibodies were produced in-house. Cells were fixed and probed with either anti-FhkA or anti-CBP4a in order to determine cellular localization during interphase and throughout the stages of mitosis. Colocalization with DAPI nuclear stain allowed us to determine the location of the nucleus and nucleolus while colocalization with anti-α-tubulin allowed us to determine the cell cycle stage. RESULTS: Here we verify two novel nucleolar proteins, Rad53 homologue FhkA which localized around the edge of the nucleolus and CBP4a which was detected throughout the entire nucleolus. Treatment with the Ca(2+) chelator BAPTA (5 mM) showed that the nucleolar localization of CBP4a is Ca(2+)-dependent. In response to actinomycin D (0.05 mg/mL) CBP4a disappeared from the nucleolus while FhkA protruded from the nucleus, eventually pinching off as cytoplasmic circles. FhkA and CBP4a redistributed differently during mitosis. FhkA redistributed throughout the entire cell and at the nuclear envelope region from prometaphase through telophase. In contrast, during prometaphase CBP4a relocated to many large, discrete “CBP4a islands” throughout the nucleoplasm. Two larger “CBP4a islands” were also detected specifically at the metaphase plate region. CONCLUSIONS: FhkA and CBP4a represent the sixth and seventh nucleolar proteins that have been verified to date in Dictyostelium and the third and fourth studied during mitosis. The protein-specific distributions of all of these nucleolar proteins during interphase and mitosis provide unique insight into nucleolar protein dynamics in this model organism setting the stage for future work. BioMed Central 2013-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3637376/ /pubmed/23587254 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1747-1028-8-4 Text en Copyright © 2013 Catalano and O’Day; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Catalano, Andrew
O’Day, Danton H
Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title_full Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title_fullStr Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title_full_unstemmed Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title_short Rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase A (FhkA) and Ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (CBP4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in Dictyostelium
title_sort rad53 homologue forkhead-associated kinase a (fhka) and ca(2+)-binding protein 4a (cbp4a) are nucleolar proteins that differentially redistribute during mitosis in dictyostelium
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3637376/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23587254
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1747-1028-8-4
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