the effect of a dna damaging agent on embryonic cell cycles of the cnidarian hydractinia echinatadna损伤剂的影响胚胎的细胞周期cnidarian hydractinia echinata.pdf
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The Effect of a DNA Damaging Agent on Embryonic Cell
Cycles of the Cnidarian Hydractinia echinata
Tin Tin Su*
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America
Abstract
The onset of gastrulation at the Mid-Blastula Transition can accompany profound changes in embryonic cell cycles including
the introduction of gap phases and the transition from maternal to zygotic control. Studies in Xenopus and Drosophila
embryos have also found that cell cycles respond to DNA damage differently before and after MBT (or its equivalent, MZT, in
Drosophila). DNA checkpoints are absent in Xenopus cleavage cycles but are acquired during MBT. Drosophila cleavage
nuclei enter an abortive mitosis in the presence of DNA damage whereas post-MZT cells delay the entry into mitosis.
Despite attributes that render them workhorses of embryonic cell cycle studies, Xenopus and Drosophila are hardly
representative of diverse animal forms that exist. To investigate developmental changes in DNA damage responses in a
distant phylum, I studied the effect of an alkylating agent, Methyl Methanesulfonate (MMS), on embryos of Hydractinia
echinata. Hydractinia embryos are found to differ from Xenopus embryos in the ability to respond to a DNA damaging
agent in early cleavage but are similar to Xenopus and Drosophila embryos in acquiring stronger DNA damage responses
and greater resistance to killing by MMS after the onset of gastrulation. This represents the first study of DNA damage
responses in the phylum Cnidaria.
Citation: Su TT (2010) The Effect of a DNA Damaging Agent on Embryonic Cell Cycles of the Cnidarian Hydractinia echinata. PLoS ONE 5(7): e11760. doi:10.1371/
journal.pone.0011760
Editor: Andreas Bergmann, University of Texas
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