Publication | Open Access
Maternally recruited Aurora C kinase is more stable than Aurora B to support mouse oocyte maturation and early development
96
Citations
42
References
2012
Year
OocyteAurora C KinaseAurora BCell CycleMouse Oocyte MaturationReproductive BiologyAurora Kinase IsoformsEmbryologyTranscriptional RegulationCell RegulationAurora CGerm Cell DevelopmentAurora KinasesCell SignalingGerm Cell FateCell DivisionMeiosisEmbryonic DevelopmentGene ExpressionCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyGerm CellOogenesisMedicineCell Development
Aurora kinases are highly conserved, essential regulators of cell division. Two Aurora kinase isoforms, A and B (AURKA and AURKB), are expressed ubiquitously in mammals, whereas a third isoform, Aurora C (AURKC), is largely restricted to germ cells. Because AURKC is very similar to AURKB, based on sequence and functional analyses, why germ cells express AURKC is unclear. We report that Aurkc(-/-) females are subfertile, and that AURKB function declines as development progresses based on increasing severity of cytokinesis failure and arrested embryonic development. Furthermore, we find that neither Aurkb nor Aurkc is expressed after the one-cell stage, and that AURKC is more stable during maturation than AURKB using fluorescently tagged reporter proteins. In addition, Aurkc mRNA is recruited during maturation. Because maturation occurs in the absence of transcription, posttranscriptional regulation of Aurkc mRNA, coupled with the greater stability of AURKC protein, provides a means to ensure sufficient Aurora kinase activity, despite loss of AURKB, to support both meiotic and early embryonic cell divisions. These findings suggest a model for the presence of AURKC in oocytes: that AURKC compensates for loss of AURKB through differences in both message recruitment and protein stability.
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