Abstract

Progression through the cell cycle in eukaryotes is regulated on multiple levels. The main driver of the cell cycle progression is the periodic activity of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) complexes. In parallel, transcription during the cell cycle is regulated by a transcriptional program that ensures the just-in-time gene expression. Many core cell cycle regulators are widely conserved in eukaryotes, among them cyclins and CDKs; however, periodic transcriptional programs are divergent between distantly related species. In addition, many otherwise conserved cell cycle regulators have been lost and independently evolved in yeast, a widely used model organism for cell cycle research. For a better understanding of the evolution of the cell cycle regulation in opisthokonts, we investigated the transcriptional program during the cell cycle of the filasterean Capsaspora owczarzaki, a unicellular species closely related to animals. We developed a protocol for cell cycle synchronization in Capsaspora cultures and assessed gene expression over time across the entire cell cycle. We identified a set of 801 periodic genes that grouped into five clusters of expression over time. Comparison with datasets from other eukaryotes revealed that the periodic transcriptional program of Capsaspora is most similar to that of animal cells. We found that orthologues of cyclin A, B and E are expressed at the same cell cycle stages as in human cells and in the same temporal order. However, in contrast to human cells where these cyclins interact with multiple CDKs, Capsaspora cyclins likely interact with a single ancestral CDK1-3. Thus, the Capsaspora cyclin-CDK system could represent an intermediate state in the evolution of animal-like cyclin-CDK regulation. Overall, our results demonstrate that Capsaspora could be a useful unicellular model system for animal cell cycle regulation.

Highlights

  • The cell cycle is an essential and fundamental biological process that underpins the cell division and proliferation of all cells

  • Many of the regulators in these systems are present across all eukaryotes, such as cyclin and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK), or the E2F-Rb

  • In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae one single CDK sequentially binds to nine cyclins in three temporal waves [16,17]: Cln1-2 are expressed in G1 and mark the commitment to a new cycle [18,19,20,21], Clb5,6 promote DNA replication at S phase [22,23], and Clb1-4 drive progression through mitosis [24,25]

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Summary

Introduction

The cell cycle is an essential and fundamental biological process that underpins the cell division and proliferation of all cells. The main regulatory networks that govern the transitions between cell cycle stages are broadly conserved in eukaryotes, both on the level of individual regulators [2], as well as on the level of network topology [3]. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae one single CDK sequentially binds to nine cyclins in three temporal waves [16,17]: Cln are expressed in G1 and mark the commitment to a new cycle [18,19,20,21], Clb promote DNA replication at S phase [22,23], and Clb drive progression through mitosis [24,25]. A single CDK-Cyclin complex can drive progression through the entire cell cycle in this species [30]

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