289 research outputs found
Non-SMC condensin I complex proteins control chromosome segregation and survival of proliferating cells in the zebrafish neural retina
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The condensation of chromosomes and correct sister chromatid segregation during cell division is an essential feature of all proliferative cells. Structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) and non-SMC proteins form the condensin I complex and regulate chromosome condensation and segregation during mitosis. However, due to the lack of appropriate mutants, the function of the condensin I complex during vertebrate development has not been described.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here, we report the positional cloning and detailed characterization of retinal phenotypes of a zebrafish mutation at the <it>cap-g </it>locus. High resolution live imaging reveals that the progression of mitosis between prometa- to telophase is delayed and that sister chromatid segregation is impaired upon loss of CAP-G. CAP-G associates with chromosomes between prometa- and telophase of the cell cycle. Loss of the interaction partners CAP-H and CAP-D2 causes cytoplasmic mislocalization of CAP-G throughout mitosis. DNA content analysis reveals increased genomic imbalances upon loss of non-SMC condensin I subunits. Within the retina, loss of condensin I function causes increased rates of apoptosis among cells within the proliferative ciliary marginal zone (CMZ) whereas postmitotic retinal cells are viable. Inhibition of p53-mediated apoptosis partially rescues cell numbers in <it>cap-g </it>mutant retinae and allows normal layering of retinal cell types without alleviating their aberrant nuclear sizes.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our findings indicate that the condensin I complex is particularly important within rapidly amplifying progenitor cell populations to ensure faithful chromosome segregation. In contrast, differentiation of postmitotic retinal cells is not impaired upon polyploidization.</p
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Non-SMC condensin I complex proteins control chromosome segregation and survival of proliferating cells in the zebrafish neural retina.
BACKGROUND: The condensation of chromosomes and correct sister chromatid segregation during cell division is an essential feature of all proliferative cells. Structural maintenance of chromosomes (SMC) and non-SMC proteins form the condensin I complex and regulate chromosome condensation and segregation during mitosis. However, due to the lack of appropriate mutants, the function of the condensin I complex during vertebrate development has not been described. RESULTS: Here, we report the positional cloning and detailed characterization of retinal phenotypes of a zebrafish mutation at the cap-g locus. High resolution live imaging reveals that the progression of mitosis between prometa- to telophase is delayed and that sister chromatid segregation is impaired upon loss of CAP-G. CAP-G associates with chromosomes between prometa- and telophase of the cell cycle. Loss of the interaction partners CAP-H and CAP-D2 causes cytoplasmic mislocalization of CAP-G throughout mitosis. DNA content analysis reveals increased genomic imbalances upon loss of non-SMC condensin I subunits. Within the retina, loss of condensin I function causes increased rates of apoptosis among cells within the proliferative ciliary marginal zone (CMZ) whereas postmitotic retinal cells are viable. Inhibition of p53-mediated apoptosis partially rescues cell numbers in cap-g mutant retinae and allows normal layering of retinal cell types without alleviating their aberrant nuclear sizes. CONCLUSION: Our findings indicate that the condensin I complex is particularly important within rapidly amplifying progenitor cell populations to ensure faithful chromosome segregation. In contrast, differentiation of postmitotic retinal cells is not impaired upon polyploidization.RIGHTS : This article is licensed under the BioMed Central licence at http://www.biomedcentral.com/about/license which is similar to the 'Creative Commons Attribution Licence'. In brief you may : copy, distribute, and display the work; make derivative works; or make commercial use of the work - under the following conditions: the original author must be given credit; for any reuse or distribution, it must be made clear to others what the license terms of this work are
Relativistic Viscous Fluid Dynamics and Non-Equilibrium Entropy
Fluid dynamics corresponds to the dynamics of a substance in the long
wavelength limit. Writing down all terms in a gradient (long wavelength)
expansion up to second order for a relativistic system at vanishing charge
density, one obtains the most general (causal) equations of motion for a fluid
in the presence of shear and bulk viscosity, as well as the structure of the
non-equilibrium entropy current. Requiring positivity of the divergence of the
non-equilibrium entropy current relates some of its coefficients to those
entering the equations of motion. I comment on possible applications of these
results for conformal and non-conformal fluids.Comment: 25 pages, no figures; v2: matches published versio
Mice Lacking the Circadian Modulators SHARP1 and SHARP2 Display Altered Sleep and Mixed State Endophenotypes of Psychiatric Disorders
Increasing evidence suggests that clock genes may be implicated in a spectrum of psychiatric diseases, including sleep and mood related disorders as well as schizophrenia. The bHLH transcription factors SHARP1/DEC2/BHLHE41 and SHARP2/DEC1/ BHLHE40 are modulators of the circadian system and SHARP1/DEC2/BHLHE40 has been shown to regulate homeostatic sleep drive in humans. In this study, we characterized Sharp1 and Sharp2 double mutant mice (S1/2(-/-)) using online EEG recordings in living animals, behavioral assays and global gene expression profiling. EEG recordings revealed attenuated sleep/wake amplitudes and alterations of theta oscillations. Increased sleep in the dark phase is paralleled by reduced voluntary activity and cortical gene expression signatures reveal associations with psychiatric diseases. S1/2(-/-) mice display alterations in novelty induced activity, anxiety and curiosity. Moreover, mutant mice exhibit impaired working memory and deficits in prepulse inhibition resembling symptoms of psychiatric diseases. Network modeling indicates a connection between neural plasticity and clock genes, particularly for SHARP1 and PER1. Our findings support the hypothesis that abnormal sleep and certain (endo) phenotypes of psychiatric diseases may be caused by common mechanisms involving components of the molecular clock including SHARP1 and SHARP2
The holographic fluid dual to vacuum Einstein gravity
We present an algorithm for systematically reconstructing a solution of the
(d+2)-dimensional vacuum Einstein equations from a (d+1)-dimensional fluid,
extending the non-relativistic hydrodynamic expansion of Bredberg et al in
arXiv:1101.2451 to arbitrary order. The fluid satisfies equations of motion
which are the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations, corrected by specific
higher derivative terms. The uniqueness and regularity of this solution is
established to all orders and explicit results are given for the bulk metric
and the stress tensor of the dual fluid through fifth order in the hydrodynamic
expansion. We establish the validity of a relativistic hydrodynamic description
for the dual fluid, which has the unusual property of having a vanishing
equilibrium energy density. The gravitational results are used to identify
transport coefficients of the dual fluid, which also obeys an interesting and
exact constraint on its stress tensor. We propose novel Lagrangian models which
realise key properties of the holographic fluid.Comment: 31 pages; v2: references added and minor improvements, published
versio
Lifetime of quasiparticles in hot QED plasmas
The calculation of the lifetime of quasiparticles in a QED plasma at high
temperature remains plagued with infrared divergences, even after one has taken
into account the screening corrections. The physical processes responsible for
these divergences are the collisions involving the exchange of very soft,
unscreened, magnetic photons, whose contribution is enhanced by the thermal
Bose-Einstein occupation factor. The self energy diagrams which diverge in
perturbation theory contain no internal fermion loops, but an arbitrary number
of internal magnetostatic photon lines. By generalizing the Bloch-Nordsieck
model at finite temperature, we can resum all the singular contributions of
such diagrams, and obtain the correct long time behaviour of the retarded
fermion propagator in the hot QED plasma: , where is the plasma frequency and
.Comment: 13 pages, LaTe
Rescattering Effects in Quarkonium Production
We study eta_c and J/psi hadroproduction induced by multiple scattering off
fixed centres in the target. We determine the minimum number of hard
scatterings required and show that additional soft scatterings may be
factorized, at the level of the production amplitude for the eta_c and of the
cross section for the J/psi. The J/psi provides an interesting example of soft
rescattering effects occurring inside a hard vertex. We also explain the
qualitative difference between the transverse momentum broadening of the J/psi
and of the Upsilon observed in collisions on nuclei. We point out that
rescattering from spectators produced by beam and target parton evolution may
have important effects in J/psi production.Comment: 30 pages, Late
Lifetimes of quasiparticles and collective excitations in hot QED plasmas
The perturbative calculation of the lifetime of fermion excitations in a QED
plasma at high temperature is plagued with infrared divergences which are not
eliminated by the screening corrections. The physical processes responsible for
these divergences are the collisions involving the exchange of longwavelength,
quasistatic, magnetic photons, which are not screened by plasma effects. The
leading divergences can be resummed in a non-perturbative treatement based on a
generalization of the Bloch-Nordsieck model at finite temperature. The
resulting expression of the fermion propagator is free of infrared problems,
and exhibits a {\it non-exponential} damping at large times: , where is the plasma
frequency and .Comment: LaTex file, 57 pages, 11 eps figures include
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