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RESEARCH
Science
Biology
Findings in frog oocytes may
help study of chromosome physiology
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
8/14/03
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| Photo
by Bill Wiegand |
| Michel
Bellini, a professor of cell and structural biology
at Illinois, studies frog oocytes for answers to chromosome
packaging. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Researchers studying the nuclei of frog oocytes in early stages
of meiosis – the cell division that gives rise to germ cells –
have found that two key proteins remain apart at a crucial time before
condensation occurs. One of the proteins, they say, may be important
in the early organization of chromosomes and later may recruit the other.
In the August issue of the journal Chromosome Research, scientists at
the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign detail how they used
antibodies to the proteins, XCAP-E and XCAP-D2, and confocal laser scanning
microscopy to zero in on the proteins’ precise locations inside
the nuclei of gametes of the African frog Xenopus laevis.
The proteins are from two subcomplexes of chromosome condensation proteins
known as condensins. One group of the Xenopus Chromosome Associated
Proteins (XCAP), including XCAP-D2, consists of regulatory proteins,
while XCAP-E is among those directly involved in condensation.
“On the chromosomes, XCAP-D2 was only found associated with the
chromomeres,” said Michel Bellini, a professor of cell
and structural biology at Illinois. That location features highly
compacted chromatin, or fibers of DNA, suggesting XCAP-D2 is directly
involved early in meiotic chromatin organization.
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| Photo
courtesy of Michel Bellini |
| After
immunofluorescent staining with two antibodies, the
protein XCAP-D2 is evident in red on the lampbrush
chromosomes (green) in the nucleus of a frog oocyte.
The red signal is associated with highly condensed
but transcriptionally inactive regions, while the
green indicates long loops of intense transcription. |
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Immunofluorescent
staining showed XCAP-D2 proteins on the 18 easily recognizable chromosomes
of the frog oocyte. These extended chromosomes stretch out long loops
of chromatin – regions of extensive RNA synthesis – causing
them to resemble a lampbrush, and, more importantly, allowing for detailed
cytological studies of the major components implicated in both RNA transcription
and chromatin organization.
“When we looked for XCAP-E, we did not see it on the chromosomes,”
Bellini said. “Instead, it was accumulated in the nucleoli, small
organelles containing ribosomal DNA.”
“This discovery came as a big surprise for us,” he said.
“When you deal with chromosomal proteins, you expect them to be
found on the chromosomes.” Because the two proteins were segregated,
he added, there was no overlapping of signals.
The proteins have equivalents in other organisms, so the findings may
help other studies of chromosome physiology, especially the functional
aspects of these proteins, Bellini said. At the critical time of cell
division, chromosome packaging is vital. Genetic errors can result in
deformities, diseases such as cancer and/or the death of the organism.
Frog oocytes are large, allowing researchers to easily manipulate genetic
material. A nucleus, for example, is 400 microns in diameter. A human
red blood cell is 8-10 microns.
Bellini’s doctoral student Brent Beenders did much of the research,
which was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Cancer
Research Association of France.
“What we propose is that in the oocytes XCAP-E may not be required
in the very early stages of meiosis,” Bellini said. “XCAP-E
is there. The fact that it is in the nucleolus may be simply to prevent
its association with XCAP-D2 at this stage. Perhaps at this stage condensation
is not wanted but active transcription is necessary. This might be one
way to prevent condensation. The nucleolus is acting as a trap for this
nuclear protein’s action. It may be that XCAP-D2 calls in XCAP-E
when condensation is needed.”
Bellini’s team also found both proteins in the Cajal bodies –
small independently floating organelles – that are theorized to
be important in the assembly and modification of the RNA transcription
and processing machinery. “This finding suggests the exciting
possibility that Cajal bodies might also be implicated in the assembly
of chromatin remodeling complexes,” Bellini said.
Understanding how condensation proteins operate at the cellular level
will help scientists work to understand their molecular role in chromatin
condensation, he added.
Other contributors to the study were Erwan Watrin and Vincent Leganeux,
both of the National Center for Scientific Research in France, and Igor
Kireev of the department of cell and structural biology at Illinois
and Moscow State University in Russia.
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