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Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging

Various stem cell niches of the brain have differential requirements for Cyclin A2. Cyclin A2 loss results in marked cerebellar dysmorphia, whereas forebrain growth is retarded during early embryonic development yet achieves normal size at birth. To understand the differential requirements of distin...

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Autores principales: Gygli, Patrick E., Chang, Joshua C., Gokozan, Hamza N., Catacutan, Fay P., Schmidt, Theresa A., Kaya, Behiye, Goksel, Mustafa, Baig, Faisal S., Chen, Shannon, Griveau, Amelie, Michowski, Wojciech, Wong, Michael, Palanichamy, Kamalakannan, Sicinski, Piotr, Nelson, Randy J., Czeisler, Catherine, Otero, José J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4993346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27425845
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.100990
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author Gygli, Patrick E.
Chang, Joshua C.
Gokozan, Hamza N.
Catacutan, Fay P.
Schmidt, Theresa A.
Kaya, Behiye
Goksel, Mustafa
Baig, Faisal S.
Chen, Shannon
Griveau, Amelie
Michowski, Wojciech
Wong, Michael
Palanichamy, Kamalakannan
Sicinski, Piotr
Nelson, Randy J.
Czeisler, Catherine
Otero, José J.
author_facet Gygli, Patrick E.
Chang, Joshua C.
Gokozan, Hamza N.
Catacutan, Fay P.
Schmidt, Theresa A.
Kaya, Behiye
Goksel, Mustafa
Baig, Faisal S.
Chen, Shannon
Griveau, Amelie
Michowski, Wojciech
Wong, Michael
Palanichamy, Kamalakannan
Sicinski, Piotr
Nelson, Randy J.
Czeisler, Catherine
Otero, José J.
author_sort Gygli, Patrick E.
collection PubMed
description Various stem cell niches of the brain have differential requirements for Cyclin A2. Cyclin A2 loss results in marked cerebellar dysmorphia, whereas forebrain growth is retarded during early embryonic development yet achieves normal size at birth. To understand the differential requirements of distinct brain regions for Cyclin A2, we utilized neuroanatomical, transgenic mouse, and mathematical modeling techniques to generate testable hypotheses that provide insight into how Cyclin A2 loss results in compensatory forebrain growth during late embryonic development. Using unbiased measurements of the forebrain stem cell niche, we parameterized a mathematical model whereby logistic growth instructs progenitor cells as to the cell-types of their progeny. Our data was consistent with prior findings that progenitors proliferate along an auto-inhibitory growth curve. The growth retardation in CCNA2-null brains corresponded to cell cycle lengthening, imposing a developmental delay. We hypothesized that Cyclin A2 regulates DNA repair and that CCNA2-null progenitors thus experienced lengthened cell cycle. We demonstrate that CCNA2-null progenitors suffer abnormal DNA repair, and implicate Cyclin A2 in double-strand break repair. Cyclin A2's DNA repair functions are conserved among cell lines, neural progenitors, and hippocampal neurons. We further demonstrate that neuronal CCNA2 ablation results in learning and memory deficits in aged mice.
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spelling pubmed-49933462016-08-26 Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging Gygli, Patrick E. Chang, Joshua C. Gokozan, Hamza N. Catacutan, Fay P. Schmidt, Theresa A. Kaya, Behiye Goksel, Mustafa Baig, Faisal S. Chen, Shannon Griveau, Amelie Michowski, Wojciech Wong, Michael Palanichamy, Kamalakannan Sicinski, Piotr Nelson, Randy J. Czeisler, Catherine Otero, José J. Aging (Albany NY) Research Paper Various stem cell niches of the brain have differential requirements for Cyclin A2. Cyclin A2 loss results in marked cerebellar dysmorphia, whereas forebrain growth is retarded during early embryonic development yet achieves normal size at birth. To understand the differential requirements of distinct brain regions for Cyclin A2, we utilized neuroanatomical, transgenic mouse, and mathematical modeling techniques to generate testable hypotheses that provide insight into how Cyclin A2 loss results in compensatory forebrain growth during late embryonic development. Using unbiased measurements of the forebrain stem cell niche, we parameterized a mathematical model whereby logistic growth instructs progenitor cells as to the cell-types of their progeny. Our data was consistent with prior findings that progenitors proliferate along an auto-inhibitory growth curve. The growth retardation in CCNA2-null brains corresponded to cell cycle lengthening, imposing a developmental delay. We hypothesized that Cyclin A2 regulates DNA repair and that CCNA2-null progenitors thus experienced lengthened cell cycle. We demonstrate that CCNA2-null progenitors suffer abnormal DNA repair, and implicate Cyclin A2 in double-strand break repair. Cyclin A2's DNA repair functions are conserved among cell lines, neural progenitors, and hippocampal neurons. We further demonstrate that neuronal CCNA2 ablation results in learning and memory deficits in aged mice. Impact Journals LLC 2016-07-13 /pmc/articles/PMC4993346/ /pubmed/27425845 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.100990 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Gygli http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Gygli, Patrick E.
Chang, Joshua C.
Gokozan, Hamza N.
Catacutan, Fay P.
Schmidt, Theresa A.
Kaya, Behiye
Goksel, Mustafa
Baig, Faisal S.
Chen, Shannon
Griveau, Amelie
Michowski, Wojciech
Wong, Michael
Palanichamy, Kamalakannan
Sicinski, Piotr
Nelson, Randy J.
Czeisler, Catherine
Otero, José J.
Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title_full Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title_fullStr Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title_full_unstemmed Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title_short Cyclin A2 promotes DNA repair in the brain during both development and aging
title_sort cyclin a2 promotes dna repair in the brain during both development and aging
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4993346/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27425845
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/aging.100990
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