Abstract :
Cyclin D1 is a key cell-cycle regulatory protein required for the cell to progress through G1 to S phase. We have
shown by Western blot analysis that cyclin D1 has a wide distribution in adult mouse tissues, with its level of expression
being tissue-dependent. Immunohistochemistry has also shown that cyclin D1 may be present in the cytoplasm,
in the nucleus or in both these cell compartments: cytoplasmic staining was observed in both proliferating cells (e.g.
kidney, intestine, stomach and salivary gland) and in the non-dividing cells (the mature neurons of adult brain),
while nuclear staining was seen in the neurons of the embryonic nervous system. Immunoelectron microscopy
results indicate that, in tissues where cyclin D1 is present in both compartments (e.g. intestinal enterocytes), it may
move via nuclear pores from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, and
vice versa
. The findings as a whole suggest that
cyclin D1 may play multiple roles within specific tissues, probably by interacting with different substrates, and that
its transit between nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments may help maintain cell homeostasis
Keywords :
cell cycle , Cyclin D1 , electron miscroscopy , immunoblotting , immunohistochemistry