The pebble gene is required for cytokinesis in Drosophila
Open Access
- 1 December 1992
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 103 (4) , 1021-1030
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.103.4.1021
Abstract
Cytokinesis is developmentally controlled during Drosophila embryogenesis. It is omitted during the initial nuclear division cycles. The nuclei of the resulting syncytium are then cellularized at a defined stage, and cytokinesis starts in somatic cells with mitosis 14. However, cytokinesis never occurs in somatic cells of embryos homozygous or transheterozygous for mutations in the pebble gene. Interestingly, the process of cellularization, which involves steps mechanistically similar to cytokinesis, is not affected. Moreover, all the nuclear aspects of mitosis (nuclear envelope breakdown, chromosome condensation, spindle assembly and function) proceed normally in pebble mutant embryos, indicating that pebble is specifically required for the coordination of mitotic spindle and contractile ring functions. The pebble phenotype is also observed, but only with very low penetrance, during the early divisions of the germ line progenitors (the pole cells). -Amanitin injection experiments indicate that these early pole cell divisions, the first cell divisions during embryogenesis, do not require zygotic gene expression. These divisions might therefore rely on maternally contributed pebble function. The maternal contribution from heterozygous mothers might be insufficient in rare cases for all the pole cell divisions.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Contractile Ring and Furrowing in Dividing CellsAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1990
- Transcripts of one of two Drosophila cyclin genes become localized in pole cells during embryogenesisNature, 1989
- Disruption of the Dictyostelium Myosin Heavy Chain Gene by Homologous RecombinationScience, 1987
- Cell cycle control by the nucleo-cytoplasmic ratio in early Drosophila developmentCell, 1986
- Localization of antigenic determinants in whole Drosophila embryosDevelopmental Biology, 1983
- Evidence that myosin does not contribute to force production in chromosome movement.The Journal of cell biology, 1982
- The effect of myosin antibody on the division of starfish blastomeresThe Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Scanning electron microscopy of Drosophila embryogenesisDevelopmental Biology, 1976
- Developmental defects of female-sterile mutants of Drosophila melanogasterDevelopmental Biology, 1975
- Localized defects of blastoderm formation in maternal effect mutants of DrosophilaDevelopmental Biology, 1975