Publication | Open Access
Mitotic partitioning and selective reorganization of tissue-specific transcription factors in progeny cells
93
Citations
37
References
2003
Year
Cell CycleQuantitative Image AnalysisCell SpecializationSubnuclear OrganizationTranscriptional RegulationPostmitotic Gene ExpressionProgeny CellsCell DivisionMorphogenesisNuclear OrganizationGene ExpressionCell BiologyTranscription RegulationChromatin FunctionChromatinMitotic PartitioningCell LineageDevelopmental BiologyChromatin StructureLineage PlasticityChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesCell Fate DeterminationSelective ReorganizationMedicine
Postmitotic gene expression requires restoration of nuclear organization and assembly of regulatory complexes. The hematopoietic and osteogenic Runx (Cbfa/AML) transcription factors are punctately organized in the interphase nucleus and provide a model for understanding the subnuclear organization of tissue-specific regulatory proteins after mitosis. Here we have used quantitative in situ immunofluorescence microscopy and quantitative image analysis to show that Runx factors undergo progressive changes in cellular localization during mitosis while retaining a punctate distribution. In comparison, the acetyl transferase p300 and acetylated histone H4 remain localized with DNA throughout mitosis while the RNA processing factor SC35 is excluded from mitotic chromatin. Subnuclear organization of Runx foci is completely restored in telophase, and Runx proteins are equally partitioned into progeny nuclei. In contrast, subnuclear organization of SC35 is restored subsequent to telophase. Our results show a sequential reorganization of Runx and its coregulatory proteins that precedes restoration of RNA processing speckles. Thus, mitotic partitioning and spatiotemporal reorganization of regulatory proteins together render progeny cells equivalently competent to support phenotypic gene expression.
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