National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Characterization of closed mitosis in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe with perturbed lipid metabolism
Hohoš, Patrik ; Převorovský, Martin (advisor) ; Cebecauer, Marek (referee)
[EN] The division of an eukaryotic cell is mediated by the process of mitosis. It is a complex cellular process which needs to be highly regulated. In contrast to the mammalian open type of mitosis when nuclear envelope is disassembled, fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe undergoes closed mitosis inside the intact nuclear compartment. Cell nucleus undergoes morphological changes as a common sphere-shaped nucleus stretches upon mitotic spindle activity forming typical dumbbell structure. Further tension results in the separation of two daughter nuclei. Such extensive changes in the nuclear envelope surface demand a sufficient supply of membrane phospholipids. Cells with perturbed lipid metabolism are unable to meet such a demand and the mitotic division in these cells usually results as a catastrophic mitotic event or CUT (Cell Untimely Torn) phenotype. Moreover, recent studies show genetic interactions between the deletions of the lipid gene regulator cbf11 and factors maintaining the centromere chromatin structure. Surprisingly, rescue of CUT phenotype has been recently reported after the deletion of several factors contributing to the centromeric H3K9 epigenetic modifications in the cells lacking the transcription factor Cbf11. Here we show no rescue of CUT phenotype after the deletion of...
Counterbalances: antagonistic regulation of fission yeast growth and proliferation under favourable conditions and stress
Hohoš, Patrik ; Převorovský, Martin (advisor) ; Groušl, Tomáš (referee)
Microorganisms come across dramatically changing conditions in the environment. It is important for them to be agile for a quick and effective response. Signal transduction pathways are essential for this ability. They can sense a broad spectrum of extracellular and intracellular stimuli and regulate a great number of processes in the cell. For unicellular microorganisms, the most essential ability is to sense environmental conditions for proliferation or abnormal stress conditions. One of the most popular model microorganisms, the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, is used for the signal transduction pathways research. Findings obtained by research on the fission yeast are applicable to other eukaryotic organisms, thanks to the high conservation of the signal transduction pathways between the fission yeast and other eukaryotic organisms. Proliferation-promoting signal transduction pathways promote cell proliferation, growth and mitotic cell cycle in fission yeast. The stress-response signal transduction pathways play an opposite role. They promote cellular defence against stress stimuli and promote the sexual differentiation process alongside meiotic cell cycle. At first sight, the whole machinery may look like a switch mechanism. There is, however, a more complex crosstalk mechanism...

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