Publication | Open Access
Isolation of Drosophila cyclin D, a protein expressed in the morphogenetic furrow before entry into S phase.
91
Citations
36
References
1996
Year
Drosophila Cyclin DGeneticsMolecular GeneticsCell CycleS PhaseDrosophila DevelopmentMorphogenetic FurrowCell SignalingCell PolarityCell DivisionDevelopmental GeneticsDrosophila CyclinsMorphogenesisCell BiologyBiologyDevelopmental BiologyEye DiscCell Fate DeterminationMedicineCell Development
During Drosophila development, nuclear and cell divisions are coordinated in response to developmental signals. In yeast and mammalian cells, signals that control cell division regulate the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) through proteins such as cyclins that interact with the Cdks. Here we describe two Drosophila cyclins identified from a set of Cdk-interacting proteins. One, cyclin J, is of a distinctive sequence type; its exclusive maternal expression pattern suggests that it may regulate oogenesis or the early nuclear divisions of embryogenesis. The other belongs to the D class of cyclins, previously identified in mammalian cells. We show that Drosophila cyclin D is expressed in early embryos and in imaginal disc cells in a pattern that anticipates cell divisions. Expression in the developing eye disc at the anterior edge of the morphogenetic furrow suggests that cyclin D acts early, prior to cyclin E, in inducing G1-arrested cells to enter S phase. Our results also suggest that, although cyclin D may be necessary, its expression alone is not sufficient to initiate the events leading to S phase.
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