Keifenheim Daniel, Sun Xi-Ming, D'Souza Edridge, Ohira Makoto J, Magner Mira, Mayhew Michael B, Marguerat Samuel, Rhind Nicholas
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 364 Plantation Street, Worcester, MA 01605, USA.
MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences (LMS), Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, UK; Institute of Clinical Sciences (ICS), Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Du Cane Road, London W12 0NN, UK.
Curr Biol. 2017 May 22;27(10):1491-1497.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.016. Epub 2017 May 4.
Proper cell size is essential for cellular function. Nonetheless, despite more than 100 years of work on the subject, the mechanisms that maintain cell-size homeostasis are largely mysterious [1]. Cells in growing populations maintain cell size within a narrow range by coordinating growth and division. Bacterial and eukaryotic cells both demonstrate homeostatic size control, which maintains population-level variation in cell size within a certain range and returns the population average to that range if it is perturbed [1, 2]. Recent work has proposed two different strategies for size control: budding yeast has been proposed to use an inhibitor-dilution strategy to regulate size at the G1/S transition [3], whereas bacteria appear to use an adder strategy, in which a fixed amount of growth each generation causes cell size to converge on a stable average [4-6]. Here we present evidence that cell size in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is regulated by a third strategy: the size-dependent expression of the mitotic activator Cdc25. cdc25 transcript levels are regulated such that smaller cells express less Cdc25 and larger cells express more Cdc25, creating an increasing concentration of Cdc25 as cells grow and providing a mechanism for cells to trigger cell division when they reach a threshold concentration of Cdc25. Because regulation of mitotic entry by Cdc25 is well conserved, this mechanism may provide a widespread solution to the problem of size control in eukaryotes.
合适的细胞大小对于细胞功能至关重要。尽管如此,尽管在该领域已经进行了100多年的研究,但维持细胞大小稳态的机制在很大程度上仍然是个谜[1]。生长群体中的细胞通过协调生长和分裂将细胞大小维持在狭窄范围内。细菌和真核细胞都表现出稳态大小控制,这将细胞大小的群体水平变化维持在一定范围内,并在受到干扰时将群体平均值恢复到该范围[1,2]。最近的研究提出了两种不同的大小控制策略:有人提出芽殖酵母在G1/S转换时使用抑制剂稀释策略来调节大小[3],而细菌似乎使用加法器策略,即每一代固定量的生长会使细胞大小收敛于一个稳定的平均值[4-6]。在这里,我们提供证据表明,裂殖酵母中的细胞大小受第三种策略调节:有丝分裂激活因子Cdc25的大小依赖性表达。cdc25转录水平受到调节,使得较小的细胞表达较少的Cdc25,而较大的细胞表达较多的Cdc25,随着细胞生长产生不断增加的Cdc25浓度,并为细胞在达到Cdc25阈值浓度时触发细胞分裂提供一种机制。由于Cdc25对有丝分裂进入的调节是高度保守的,这种机制可能为真核生物中大小控制问题提供一种广泛适用的解决方案。