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Cells and polyamines do it cyclically

Alm, Kersti LU and Oredsson, Stina LU (2009) In Essays in Biochemistry 46. p.63-76
Abstract
Cell-cycle progression is a one-way journey where the cell grows in size to be able to divide into two equally sized daughter cells. The cell cycle is divided into distinct consecutive phases defined as G(1) (first gap), S (synthesis), G(2) (second gap) and M (mitosis). A non-proliferating cell, which has retained the ability to enter the cell cycle when it receives appropriate signals, is in G(0) phase, and cycling cells that do not receive proper signals leave the cell cycle from G(1) into G(0). One of the major events of the cell cycle is the duplication of DNA during S-phase. A group of molecules that are important for proper cell-cycle progression is the polyamines. Polyamine biosynthesis occurs cyclically during the cell cycle with... (More)
Cell-cycle progression is a one-way journey where the cell grows in size to be able to divide into two equally sized daughter cells. The cell cycle is divided into distinct consecutive phases defined as G(1) (first gap), S (synthesis), G(2) (second gap) and M (mitosis). A non-proliferating cell, which has retained the ability to enter the cell cycle when it receives appropriate signals, is in G(0) phase, and cycling cells that do not receive proper signals leave the cell cycle from G(1) into G(0). One of the major events of the cell cycle is the duplication of DNA during S-phase. A group of molecules that are important for proper cell-cycle progression is the polyamines. Polyamine biosynthesis occurs cyclically during the cell cycle with peaks in activity in conjunction with the G(1)/S transition and at the end of S-phase and during G(2)-phase. The negative regulator of polyamine biosynthesis, antizyme, shows an inverse activity compared with the polyamine biosynthetic activity. The levels of the polyamines, putrescine, spermidine and spermine, double during the cell cycle and show a certain degree of cyclic variation in accordance with the biosynthetic activity. When cells in G(0)/G(1) -phase are seeded in the presence of compounds that prevent the cell-cycle-related increases in the polyamine pools, the S-phase of the first cell cycle is prolonged, whereas the other phases are initially unaffected. The results point to an important role for polyamines with regard to the ability of the cell to attain optimal rates of DNA replication. (Less)
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author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Essays in Biochemistry
volume
46
pages
63 - 76
publisher
Portland Press
external identifiers
  • wos:000275377000005
  • scopus:77449155827
  • pmid:20095970
ISSN
0071-1365
DOI
10.1042/bse0460005
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
400c10ae-922c-4720-8111-3fe8471ef3d9 (old id 1540665)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 14:50:18
date last changed
2022-03-29 23:09:06
@article{400c10ae-922c-4720-8111-3fe8471ef3d9,
  abstract     = {{Cell-cycle progression is a one-way journey where the cell grows in size to be able to divide into two equally sized daughter cells. The cell cycle is divided into distinct consecutive phases defined as G(1) (first gap), S (synthesis), G(2) (second gap) and M (mitosis). A non-proliferating cell, which has retained the ability to enter the cell cycle when it receives appropriate signals, is in G(0) phase, and cycling cells that do not receive proper signals leave the cell cycle from G(1) into G(0). One of the major events of the cell cycle is the duplication of DNA during S-phase. A group of molecules that are important for proper cell-cycle progression is the polyamines. Polyamine biosynthesis occurs cyclically during the cell cycle with peaks in activity in conjunction with the G(1)/S transition and at the end of S-phase and during G(2)-phase. The negative regulator of polyamine biosynthesis, antizyme, shows an inverse activity compared with the polyamine biosynthetic activity. The levels of the polyamines, putrescine, spermidine and spermine, double during the cell cycle and show a certain degree of cyclic variation in accordance with the biosynthetic activity. When cells in G(0)/G(1) -phase are seeded in the presence of compounds that prevent the cell-cycle-related increases in the polyamine pools, the S-phase of the first cell cycle is prolonged, whereas the other phases are initially unaffected. The results point to an important role for polyamines with regard to the ability of the cell to attain optimal rates of DNA replication.}},
  author       = {{Alm, Kersti and Oredsson, Stina}},
  issn         = {{0071-1365}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{63--76}},
  publisher    = {{Portland Press}},
  series       = {{Essays in Biochemistry}},
  title        = {{Cells and polyamines do it cyclically}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/bse0460005}},
  doi          = {{10.1042/bse0460005}},
  volume       = {{46}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}