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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 7325

Yvonne Bhaud, Michele Barbier, and Marie-Odile Soyer-Gobillard; A Detailed Study of the Complex Cell Cycle of the Dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii Biecheler and Evidence for Variation in Histone H1 Kinase Activity. J.Eukaryot.Microbiol. 41(5):519-526, 1994

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By adding the protein synthesis inhibitor, emetine (10E-4 M) to a highly synchronized population of Crypthecodinium cohnii Biecheler 1938 at different phases of its cycle, we were able to determine: 1. The existence and the lengthening of the G2-Phase (30 min) in the first cycle (cycle with swimming G1 phase). 2. The time of the second cell cycle phases (cycle in the cysts): G1, 30 min; S, 1.5 hr; G2, 2 hr and M, 2 hr. These results, together with the estimation of the cell volume of the two and four swimming daughter cells emerging from the cysts, allowed us to state the existence of two transition points: G1/S and G2/M, which are necessary for completion of mitosis. We completed this refined approach of the cell cycle in studying the activities of the histone H1 kinase either in dividing or in non-dividing Crypthecodinium cohnii cells with either total soluble proteins or the isolated mitotic kinase complex. The H1 kinase activity of this purified complex is noticeably higher (twice as high) in the dividing cells than in the non-dividing ones. These data are discussed in the light of the basic characteristics of the dinokaryon, and also compared with recent biochemical observations on the same organism and studies on other higher eukaryotic protists and metazoa.