Abstract
Class I of phosphoinositide 3-kinases (PI3Ks) is characterized as a group of intracellular signal proteins possessing both protein and lipid kinase activities. Recent studies implicate class I of PI3Ks acts as indispensable mediators in early development of mouse embryos, but the molecular mechanisms are poorly defined. In this paper, mouse one-cell embryos were used to investigate a possible contribution of the catalytic subunit of PI3K, p110 alpha, to cell cycle progression. The expression level of p110 alpha was determined in four phases of one-cell embryos. Silencing of p110 alpha by microinjection of p110 alpha shRNA into one-cell embryos resulted in a G2/M arrest and prevented the activation of Akt and M-phase promoting factor (MPF). Further, microinjection of the synthesized mRNA coding for a constitutively active p110 alpha into one-cell embryos induced cell cleavage more effectively than microinjection of wild-type p110 alpha mRNA, whereas microinjection of mRNA of kinase-deficient p110 alpha delayed the first mitotic cleavage. Taken together, this study demonstrates that p110 alpha is significant for G2/M transition of mouse one-cell embryos and further emphasizes the importance of Akt in PI3K pathway.
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