|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Meioc maintains an extended meiotic prophase I in mice.

First Author  Soh YQS Year  2017
Journal  PLoS Genet Volume  13
Issue  4 Pages  e1006704
PubMed ID  28380054 Mgi Jnum  J:242348
Mgi Id  MGI:5905073 Doi  10.1371/journal.pgen.1006704
Citation  Soh YQS, et al. (2017) Meioc maintains an extended meiotic prophase I in mice. PLoS Genet 13(4):e1006704
abstractText  The meiosis-specific chromosomal events of homolog pairing, synapsis, and recombination occur over an extended meiotic prophase I that is many times longer than prophase of mitosis. Here we show that, in mice, maintenance of an extended meiotic prophase I requires the gene Meioc, a germ-cell specific factor conserved in most metazoans. In mice, Meioc is expressed in male and female germ cells upon initiation of and throughout meiotic prophase I. Mouse germ cells lacking Meioc initiate meiosis: they undergo pre-meiotic DNA replication, they express proteins involved in synapsis and recombination, and a subset of cells progress as far as the zygotene stage of prophase I. However, cells in early meiotic prophase-as early as the preleptotene stage-proceed to condense their chromosomes and assemble a spindle, as if having progressed to metaphase. Meioc-deficient spermatocytes that have initiated synapsis mis-express CYCLIN A2, which is normally expressed in mitotic spermatogonia, suggesting a failure to properly transition to a meiotic cell cycle program. MEIOC interacts with YTHDC2, and the two proteins pull-down an overlapping set of mitosis-associated transcripts. We conclude that when the meiotic chromosomal program is initiated, Meioc is simultaneously induced so as to extend meiotic prophase. Specifically, MEIOC, together with YTHDC2, promotes a meiotic (as opposed to mitotic) cell cycle program via post-transcriptional control of their target transcripts.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

27 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

106 Expression

Trail: Publication