scholarly journals Thylakoid membrane biogenesis in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 137+. II. Cell-cycle variations in the synthesis and assembly of pigment.

1982 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 411-416 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Janero ◽  
R Barrnett

Synthesis of the chlorophyll and the major carotenoid pigments and their assembly into thylakoid membrane have been studied throughout the 12-h light/12-h dark vegetative cell cycle of synchronous Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 137+ (wild-type). Pulse exposure of cells to radioactive acetate under conditions in which labeling accurately reflects lipogenesis, followed by cellular fractionation to purify thylakoid membrane, allowed direct analysis of the pigment synthesis and assembly attendant to thylakoid biogenesis. All pigments are synthesized and assembled into thylakoids continuously, but differentially, with respect to cell-cycle time. Highest synthesis and assembly rates are confined to the photoperiod (mid-to-late G1) and support chlorophyll and carotenoid accretion before M-phase. The lower levels at which these processes take place during the dark period (S, M, and early-to-mid G1) have been ascribed to pigment turnover. Within this general periodic pattern, pigment synthesis and assembly occur in a "multi-step" manner, i.e., by a temporally-ordered, stepwise integration of the various pigments into the thylakoid membrane matrix. The cell-cycle kinetics of pigment assembly at the subcellular level mirror the kinetics of pigment synthesis at the cellular level, indicating that pigment synthesis not only provides chlorophyll and carotenoid for thylakoid biogenesis but may also serve as a critical rate-determinant to pigment assembly.

1981 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
D R Janero ◽  
R Barrnett

The synthesis and assembly of thylakoid membrane polar glycerolipid (glycolipid, phospholipid, and ether lipid) have been monitored in synchronous cultures of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii 137+. A "pulse" protocol using radioactive acetate as the lipogenic precursor was devised to allow assessment of both processes during the 24-h (12-h light/12-h dark) vegetative cell cycle. Under these conditions, acetate incorporation into each chromatographically resolved lipid at the cellular level reliably reflects lipid synthesis, and the appearance of radiolabeled lipid in purified photosynthetic membrane is indicative of the lipid assembly attendant to thylakoid biogenesis. Our results demonstrate that polar glycerolipid is synthesized by the alga and is assembled into its thylakoid membrane continuously, but differentially, with respect to cell cycle time. Synthesis and assembly are most rapid during the photoperiod (mid-to-late G1), reach maximum rates at mid-photoperiod, and are comparatively negligible in the dark (S, M, and early-to-mid G1). The extent to which synthesis and assembly vary within this general kinetic pattern, though, is characteristic of each thylakoid lipid, suggesting that the processes take place in a multistep manner with some temporal coordination among the different lipid types. Parallelism between the cyclic patterns of polar lipid synthesis at the cellular level and of polar lipid assembly into photosynthetic membrane at the subcellular level indicates that lipid production is not only essential to continuing thylakoid biogenesis but is also the critical determinant of the kinetics of thylakoid lipid assembly.


1973 ◽  
Vol 138 (6) ◽  
pp. 1314-1330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph Van Furth ◽  
Martina M. C. Diesselhoff-den Dulk ◽  
Herman Mattie

The present communication concerns a quantitative study on the production and kinetics of mononuclear phagocytes during an acute inflammatory response as compared with the steady-state condition. During an acute inflammation induced by an intraperitoneal injection of NBCS, the peritoneal macrophages increase 2.5 times and there is a concomitant threefold increase of the monocytes in the peripheral blood. This increase of the peritoneal macrophages could be caused by a local proliferation of these cells or by the recruitment of monocytes from the circulation. The results of the in vitro and pulse-labeling studies demonstrate that the mitotic activity of the peritoneal macrophages is not increased during the inflammatory response, which indicates that the increase in the number of these cells is not due to local proliferation. Evidence is also presented that the small proportion (maximally 4%) of peritoneal macrophages that synthesize DNA are very recently arrived from the circulation. In agreement with this is the finding that a small number (less than 3%) of the peripheral blood monocytes are capable of synthesizing DNA. Since proof was obtained that the macrophages in the inflammatory peritoneal exudate originate from peripheral blood monocytes and the number of these cells in the circulation was also augmented, an increased formation of monocytes in the bone marrow was expected. Because increased monocyte production could be brought about by an increased number of promonocytes and/or an acceleration of the mitotic activity of the promonocytes, the various parameters of the cell cycle of these cells were determined. In normal mice the DNA-synthesis time of the promonocytes was 11.8 h, the cell cycle time 16.2 h, and the G1 + G2 + M phases 4.4 h. During the first 12 h of the inflammatory response a significantly shorter DNA-synthesis time (7.6 h) and cell cycle time (10.8 h) was found. At 24 h, these values approximated those found in normal mice. Next, both the total production and the rate of production of the monocytes were calculated and compared for both conditions. This computation showed that the total production of labeled monocytes during the first 48 h of an acute inflammation was 64% greater than in normal mice. The rate of production, calculated in two ways (i.e., from the data of the total production and also from the data of the cell cycle time together with the total number of promonocytes) complemented each other very well. During the first 12 h of the inflammatory response the production rate was increased 1.5 times and then leveled off, reaching almost the normal rate after 24 h. Furthermore, the excellent agreement between the results of the two methods of calculation for the normal steady state confirmed once more that the promonocyte is the direct precursor cell of the monocyte, giving rise to the two monocytes after each division. The kinetics of the monocytes in the peripheral blood was also altered during the inflammatory response. During the first 48 h, twice the normal number of labeled monocytes went from the bone marrow to the peripheral blood and twice the normal number also left the circulation. Furthermore, at least 70% of this increased number of labeled monocytes leaving the circulation migrated into the inflammatory exudate of the peritoneal cavity, leading to a roughly 11-fold increase of labeled peritoneal macrophages.


Development ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-14
Author(s):  
Par J. Signoret

The present work is based on the study of individual cell cycle times for a given category of cells. The material considered in detail is the Axolotl embryo during the eleventh cleavage cycle. In spite of the exceptional homogeneity of this population, individual cycle times show a remarkable variation from cell to cell, coinciding with a characteristic statistical distribution. To describe the kinetics of cell proliferation, we propose a model for which the theoretical distribution of cycle times fits with the distribution observed in our material. Numerous observations allow us to generalize the model to other types of populations. According to this concept the notion of cell cycle time disappears in favour of the notion of a statistical distribution of individual cycle times. This varïability is integral to the cell division process itself. We suggest that in the cycle there is a particular event the probability of occurrence of which is constant beginning with a critical state. The cells would therefore remain a certain time in this state, overcoming it at a characteristic rate. To this exponential distribution variability would be added the variability of other events whose cumulative effects would result in a normal distribution. The resultant of both factors conforms to the frequency distribution implicated in our kinetic model. Discussing in a more general way the distributions of the cycle times of each cell division during cleavage, we propose the following interpretation of this development. The introduction of new events in the cyclic process would imply the switching on of certain essential genetic activities. The final consequences would be the desynchronization and the lengthening of the cycles observed at the blastula stage. Thus considered, this period of embryonic development would be eminently suitable for the study of the factors of cell division control.


Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 861
Author(s):  
Veronika Kselíková ◽  
Vilém Zachleder ◽  
Kateřina Bišová

Extensive in vivo replacement of hydrogen by deuterium, a stable isotope of hydrogen, induces a distinct stress response, reduces cell growth and impairs cell division in various organisms. Microalgae, including Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a well-established model organism in cell cycle studies, are no exception. Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a green unicellular alga of the Chlorophyceae class, divides by multiple fission, grows autotrophically and can be synchronized by alternating light/dark regimes; this makes it a model of first choice to discriminate the effect of deuterium on growth and/or division. Here, we investigate the effects of high doses of deuterium on cell cycle progression in C. reinhardtii. Synchronous cultures of C. reinhardtii were cultivated in growth medium containing 70 or 90% D2O. We characterize specific deuterium-induced shifts in attainment of commitment points during growth and/or division of C. reinhardtii, contradicting the role of the “sizer” in regulating the cell cycle. Consequently, impaired cell cycle progression in deuterated cultures causes (over)accumulation of starch and lipids, suggesting a promising potential for microalgae to produce deuterated organic compounds.


2014 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 463a
Author(s):  
Carey K. Johnson ◽  
Kathrin Magerl ◽  
Katee Wyant ◽  
Ashley McDade ◽  
Will Newhart ◽  
...  

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