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Cell Cycle: Synchronization at Various Stages Sharon Tate, Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, Cambridge, UK Introductory article Article Contents . Overview of the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle . Synchronization Methods . Future Directions Paul Ko Ferrigno, Hutchison/MRC Research Centre, Cambridge, UK . Conclusions Progression through, and exit from, the cell cycle are tightly coupled processes that are key to the development and health of multicellular organisms. Synchronization is a technique commonly used to enrich cell populations at a single cell-cycle stage, enabling the study of cell-cycle-specific regulation. Overview of the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle The four phases of the eukaryotic cell cycle The eukaryotic cell cycle can be divided into four distinct phases, G1, S, G2 and M (Figure 1). G1 and G2 are growth phases, preparing the cells for the subsequent phases of DNA synthesis (S phase) and division (mitotic or M phase) of the cell cycle. It is imperative for the survival of the doi: 10.1038/npg.els.0002570 daughter cells produced by division that each phase of the cell cycle occurs in the correct sequence, is completed before the next begins, and that each phase is faithfully carried out. Crucially, three events that must be fully completed in each cell cycle are: (1) duplication of all the genomic DNA, once and only once; (2) faithful segregation of one complete set of chromosomes to each daughter cell; (3) separation of daughter cells with equal distribution of their organelles. G0 M G1 Restriction point G2 S (a) Mitosis Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokinesis (b) Figure 1 (a) Cells in G1 may decide to exit the cell cycle to enter a quiescent G0 phase or pass the restriction point, progressing through the cell cycle. Cells duplicate their DNA before entering mitosis. (b) Cells in mitosis undergo a series of distinct morphological changes. In prophase, chromatin condenses forming visible chromosomes, centrosomes begin to form the mitotic spindle. During metaphase, chromosomes attach to each pole of the mitotic spindle by connecting their kinetochores to microtubules. In anaphase, the spindle poles begin to move apart separating the chromosomes. Chromosome separation is completed in telophase and cells are separated into two daughters by cytokinesis. ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES & 2005, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. www.els.net 1 Cell Cycle: Synchronization at Various Stages Master controllers of the cell cycle Ordered progression through the cell cycle is controlled by temporal and sequential production and degradation of cyclins. Cyclins activate cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). CDKs regulate cell cycle events by phosphorylating and activating or deactivating effector proteins. Cell-cycle checkpoints Molecular mechanisms known as checkpoints are in place throughout the cell cycle, checking that events are taking place with the utmost accuracy, maintaining the integrity of the cell. Many synchronization methods work by activating cell-cycle checkpoints to arrest cell-cycle progression. The most studied checkpoints regulate G1/S and G2/M, preventing entry into these phases until conditions are optimal, but mechanisms are in place throughout the cycle to arrest cells should problems arise. For example, the spindle checkpoint monitors the alignment of chromosomes on the mitotic spindle prior to their separation into the two daughter cells, and can detect if any chromosome kinetochores are not attached to the spindle. Should this happen, a signal feeds back into the mitotic machinery, arresting mitosis until all kinetochores are attached and chromosomes aligned. Synchronizing cells Cell populations divide asynchronously. Thus, at any given moment, a dish of tissue culture cells will comprise individual cells that are in each phase of the cell cycle. Current technologies do not allow us to perform biochemical analysis on individual cells, so the study of specific phases or transient events in the cell cycle requires that we enrich the population in cells transiting a specific phase. This can be achieved by synchronizing cells at a particular point in the cell cycle, so that the population cycles in phase when released from the block. Deciding when to induce a cell-cycle arrest is probably the biggest consideration for researchers. A number of considerations when deciding on how cells will be synchronized are: (1) the number of cells required for the experimental investigation; (2) the phase in which cells are to be synchronized; (3) whether to use a chemical or an alternative method. The question of which phase to synchronize in is usually dictated by the experiment. As a general rule it is best to synchronize in a phase before the one you are interested in studying, as cells do not maintain a high degree of synchrony over several rounds of division. If a large number of cells are required chemical synchronization is probably the most desirable method to use. Chemicals are often inexpensive and work quickly. However, chemicals may have more than one target in the cell not all of which are known and they can also be disruptive to the point of inducing 2 apoptosis. Such disadvantages are not encountered by nonchemical methods, but these may require expensive equipment such as a flow cytometer. Synchronization Methods Synchronization methods fall into two categories: physical methods, such as mitotic shake off or flow cytometry; and chemical methods, where drug-like inhibitors prevent cells from progressing beyond a given point in the cycle. Flow cytometry is a general method that can be used to sort cells into populations based on size and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) content. It is thus possible, for example, to obtain large cells with 1C DNA that correspond to a G1 population, and distinguish them from large cells with 2C DNA (post-S and, pre-M phase) and small cells with 1C DNA (post-M phase, early G1 cells). Given large populations of cells, it is possible to obtain relatively pure populations. By contrast, chemical synchronization methods work by reversibly arresting the cell cycle at a certain point. Cells not yet at this point in the cell cycle will continue to cycle until they reach the arrest point and then stop. Synchronizing cells in G0/G1 Nonchemical methods for synchronizing cells in G0/G1 include serum and amino acid starvation. Serum starvation was one of the earliest methods used. Cells in culture, that are isolated from their natural environment, depend upon a rich supply of growth factors for their survival and proliferation. These growth factors are generally supplied in the form of blood serum drawn from pregnant cattle. Similarly, cell growth requires an ample supply of amino acids in the growth medium. Withdrawal of serum or amino acids from cells will thus lead them to withdraw from the cell cycle (see Figure 1). Restoring complete medium should then allow cells to reenter the cell cycle in synchrony. Such nonchemical methods are apparently straightforward. However, long periods of withdrawal of serum or amino acids can reduce synchrony in a population when cells are released. In addition, some cell types do not respond to serum starvation, and transformed cells in particular may respond to amino acid starvation by death or partial differentiation. Chemical inhibitors (Table 1) offer greater confidence that cells will arrest uniformly, and knowledge of the molecular target of the chemical ensures that the experimenter does not affect the outcome of the experiment by using a treatment that affects the process he or she is trying to study. Lovastatin Lovastatin arrests cells in G0/G1 by inhibiting 3-hydroxy3-methyl glutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase and Cell Cycle: Synchronization at Various Stages Table 1 Summary of cell-cycle inhibitors most commonly used, the cell-cycle phase they inhibit, mechanism of inhibition and working concentrations found in the literature Inhibitor Cell-cycle phase Mode of action Working concentration Lovastatin Mimosine Tunicamycin Thymidine Hydroxyurea Aphidicolin Nocodazole Colchicine Colcimid Taxol Vinblastine Roscovitine Merbarone VM-26 G1 G1/S G1 S S S G2/M G2/M G2/M G2/M M HMG-CoA reductase Ribonuclease reductase Inhibits glucosylation dNTP synthesis Ribonucleoside reductase DNA polymerase a Destabilizes microtubules Destabilizes microtubules Destabilizes microtubules Stabilizes microtubules Microtubule aggregation CDKs Topoisomerase II Topoisomerase II 10–40 mM 100–1200 mM 0.5–6 mg mL21 2 mM 1 mM 1 mg mL21 10–400 ng mL21 100 nM 0.3 mg mL21 1 nm ! 10 nM 1.6 nm 16 mM 5 mM 1–10 mM G2 G2 therefore cholesterol synthesis. Lovastatin treatment has been shown to decrease CDK2 activity, by causing the release of the CDK2 inhibitors p21 and p27 from CDK4– cyclinD complex, inhibiting entry into S phase. Alternatively, low concentrations of lovastatin can induce a G2/M arrest. A further caveat is that sustained incubation with lovastatin can induce apoptosis. Synchronizing cells in S phase Inhibitors of S phase commonly act by reducing the cellular pool of deoxynucleotide triphosphate (dNTP)s or their incorporation into growing DNA strands. Thymidine block A procedure known as ‘thymidine block’ is the oldest method used for synchronizing cells in S phase. Thymidine acts primarily through inhibiting conversion of cytidine-5’diphosphate into deoxycytidine-5’-diphosphate. Growth inhibition by the addition of excess thymidine to the culture medium can also involve feedback regulation of several other pyrimidine biosynthetic enzymes. The caveat here is that excessive levels of thymidine have been shown to cause chromosomal damage in some cell types. A double thymidine block, where cells are arrested in S phase by thymidine and then released for a short period before reintroducing thymidine is often used alone or in conjunction with other cell-cycle inhibitors to increase the degree of synchrony in a population of cells. Mimosine Mimosine is a rare plant amino acid derived from Mimosa, which arrests cells in late G1 or G1/S phase and there is still some debate over the precise arrest point. Mimosine is thought to inhibit ribonucleotide reductase by chelating metal ions required by the enzyme. Mimosine is a less potent inhibitor than other chemicals, and if levels are not sufficiently high, cells can still progress through S phase albeit at a slower rate. Hydroxyurea Hydroxyurea inactivates ribonucleotide reductase by forming a nitroxide-free radical that binds and inhibits the enzyme active site, thus preventing conversion of ribonucleotides into deoxyribonucleotides. Hydroxyurea treatment can also lead to the formation of hydrogen peroxide and nitric oxide, which can cause sitespecific DNA damage, stalling DNA replication forks, and thus S phase through the activation of a DNA-damage checkpoint. This means that cells treated with hydroxyurea will arrest in S phase, but may consist of a mixed population of cells with different histories. Other potential drawbacks of using hydroxyurea is that low concentrations give rise to only partial synchrony and high concentrations have been shown to be toxic to S phase cells. Aphidicolin Aphidicolin is potentially a more efficient inhibitor of S phase than hydroxyurea and it has not been shown to be toxic to cells. It acts by preventing DNA polymerase a from being able to bind dNTPs, without blocking the activity of DNA polymerases b and g. Aphidicolin does not have an effect on the levels of dNTPs. In fact, dNTP levels continue to increase in the presence of aphidicolin, so that once the block is released DNA synthesis resumes immediately. 3 Cell Cycle: Synchronization at Various Stages Synchronizing cells in G2/M Mitotic cells can be enriched by mitotic shake off, which simply involves shaking the tissue culture dish so that the rounded mitotic cells, which have reduced cell contacts with the culture dish, float off into the medium. A caveat here is that apoptotic cells also round up and float off, and will severely complicate experimental analysis if they are not removed. The mitotic spindle is the defining feature of the mitotic cell, and is appropriately enough a key target for chemical inhibitors. Colchicine, colcemid and nocodazole Drugs that depolymerize mitotic spindles include colchicine, colcemid and nocodazole. Colchicine and colcemid are natural compounds isolated from plants, while nocodazole is a synthetic variant. All three compounds arrest cells in mitosis. However, if cells are arrested for extended periods, abnormalities are seen upon release: some cells return straight to interphase, while others form multiple spindles or enter apoptosis without dividing their chromosomes. Nocodazole is experimentally the most practical of the three reagents, being the most readily reversible and causing the least side effects. Colchicine is the most detrimental agent, preventing cells from producing a functional spindle upon release, while release from colcemid allows far fewer cells to form functional spindles, with very slow kinetics compared to nocodazole. Taxol Taxol (used in cancer chemotherapy as Paclitaxel) is a natural compound that binds microtubules, but not unpolymerized tubulin dimers (Figure 2), at a site distinct from other microtubule targeting drugs. Treatment with taxol stabilizes microtubules, suppressing dynamic changes such as growing and shortening of the microtubules. Taxol along with many other cell cycle drugs, has been used at a wide range of concentrations in the literature (1 nM!100 mM; see Table 1). This in turn has led to a broad spectrum of often contradictory cellular and molecular effects observed in treated cells. Clinically relevant concentrations (5 to 200 nM) are considered to be most appropriate for arresting cells in mitosis and inducing apoptosis. Future Directions Chemical inhibitors have allowed great progress in our understanding of the molecular biology of the cell cycle. However, these drugs have limitations, the most important being that they are blunt tools that may arrest cells in a particular phase of the cell cycle, but their multiple effects often prevent a clean interpretation of the data. 4 Figure 2 a- and b-tubulin are the basic subunits of microtubules. a-tubulin is bound by stable guanosine triphosphate (GTP), b-tubulin by unstable GTP, which can be hydrolysed to GDP. a- and b-tubulin monomers form a stable heterodimer. Heterodimers make longitudinal contacts forming a protofilament. Thirteen protofilaments make lateral contacts generating a microtubule cylinder. If the plus (+) end of the microtubule is GTP bound (on the b-tubulin subunits), additional tubulin dimers can be added, once a dimer is incorporated the GTP on b-tubulin is hydrolysed to GDP. If GTP bound tubulin dimer concentration is low, GTP in the microtubule is hydrolysed. GDP microtubule caps are unstable leading to depolymerization of the microtubule, microtubules peel apart to release tubulin subunits. Methods to synchronize cells in a more specific manner, by specifically targeting a single molecule would be greatly advantageous. One technology that may allow us to achieve this is ribonucleic acid interference (RNAi). Messenger RNA transcribed from a specific gene is targeted by short interfering oligonucleotides for degradation, preventing its translation into protein. Using RNAi to target individual cell-cycle regulators or effectors may allow us to begin to dissect the cell cycle with a fine scalpel. For RNAi technology to be employed would involve targeting gene products unambiguously involved in moving the cell from one phase to another. The greatest limitation to using RNAi technology is that stable protein products that could persist from one cell cycle to the next would remain fully functional in the cell. Thus, proteins that are degraded during each cell cycle would be good targets to choose. Cyclins A and B, and other substrates of the anaphase Cell Cycle: Synchronization at Various Stages promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) or the cullins are obvious targets as they are synthesized and degraded once per cell cycle and are involved in driving the cell through its different stages. Generating chemical inhibitors that specifically target and inhibit certain cyclin–CDK interactions may lead to a more clear-cut synchronization being accomplished. The cell division cycle (CDC)2 inhibitor Roscovitine showed early promise, but it has been shown also to inhibit CDK2 and CDK5, and so lacks the required specificity to arrest cells in a specific phase. Cyclins and CDKs present difficulties as targets for inhibition due to the high degree of structural and functional homology, but CDK inhibitors are being actively sought in the biotech industry. Conclusions Synchronization is a technique commonly used to enrich cell populations at a single stage in the cell cycle, thus facilitating the study of cell cycle specific regulation. Cells respond to chemical treatment by signalling to cell-cycle checkpoints, which arrest cells, preventing further progression. The biggest drawbacks to all the methods described, but in particular chemical ones, are lack of specificity and toxicity to the cell. Many chemicals have been shown to arrest cells in multiple phases. These problems can usually be overcome by optimizing the concentration and duration of the cell-cycle block for each cell type used. Generally, low concentration coupled with short incubation allows cells to arrest without being compromised. As with every technique in experimental biology, it is crucial to include appropriate controls to assess the effect synchronization may be having on the experimental readout. Further Reading Blagosklonny MV and Fojo T (1999) Molecular effects of paclitaxel: myths and reality (a critical review). International Journal of Cancer 83: 151–156. Hammond EM, Green SL and Giaccia AJ (2003) Comparison of hypoxia-induced replication arrest with hydroxyurea and aphidicolininduced arrest. Mutation Research 532: 205–213. Jordan MA, Thrower D and Wilson L (1992) Effects of vinblastine, podophyllotoxin and nocodazole on mitotic spindles: implications for the role of microtubule dynamics in mitosis. Journal of Cell Science 102: 401–416. Kufe DW, Egan EM, Rosowsky A, Ensminger W and Frei E (1980) Thymidine arrest and synchrony of cellular growth in vivo. Cancer Treatment Reports 64: 1307–1317. Lodish H, Baltimore D, Berk A et al. (1995) Molecular Cell Biology, 3rd edn. New York: Scientific American Books. Martinez-Botas J, Ferruelo AJ, Suarez Y et al. (2001) Dose-dependent effects of lovastatin on cell cycle progression. Distinct requirement of cholesterol and non-sterol mevalonate derivatives. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1532: 185–194. Murray A and Hunt T (1993) The Cell Cycle: an Introduction, 1st edn. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Orr GA, Verdier-Pinard P, McDaid H and Horwitz SB (2003) Mechanisms of taxol resistance related to microtubules. Oncogene 22: 7280–7295. Pedrali-Noy G, Spadari S, Miller-Faures A et al. (1980) Synchronization of HeLa cell cultures by inhibition of DNA polymerase alpha with aphidicolin. Nucleic Acids Research 25: 377–387. Zieve GW, Turnbull D, Mullins M and McIntosh R (1980) Production of large numbers of mitotic mammalian cells by use of the reversible microtubule inhibitor nococdazole. Experimental Cell Research 126: 397–405. 5