4.7 Article

Development of mice expressing a single D-type cyclin

Journal

GENES & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 16, Issue 24, Pages 3277-3289

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS
DOI: 10.1101/gad.1023602

Keywords

cell cycle; D-cyclins; mouse development; cell proliferation

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01 CA085296, 1R01CA85296] Funding Source: Medline

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D-cyclins (cyclins D1, D2, and D3) are components of the core cell cycle machinery. To directly test the ability of each D-cyclin to drive development of various lineages, we generated mice expressing only cyclin D1, or only cyclin D2, or only cyclin D3. We found that these single-cyclin embryos develop normally until late gestation. Our analyses revealed that in single-cyclin embryos, the tissue-specific expression pattern of D-cyclins was lost. Instead, mutant embryos ubiquitously expressed the remaining D-cyclin. These findings suggest that the functions of the three D-cyclins are largely exchangeable at this stage. Later in life, single-cyclin mice displayed focused abnormalities, resulting in premature mortality. Cyclin D1-only mice developed severe megaloblastic anemia, cyclin D2-only mice presented neurological abnormalities, and cyclin D3-only mice lacked normal cerebella. Analyses of the affected tissues revealed that these compartments failed to sufficiently up-regulate the remaining, intact D-cyclin. In particular, we found that in cerebellar granule neuron precursors, the N-myc transcription factor communicates with the cell cycle machinery via cyclins D1 and D2, but not D3, explaining the inability of D3-only mice to up-regulate cyclin D3 in this compartment. Hence, the requirement for a particular cyclin in a given tissue is likely caused by specific transcription factors, rather than by unique properties of cyclins.

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