Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Life-cycle-coupled evolution of mitosis in close relatives of animals

Published inNature, vol. 630, no. 8015, p. 116-122
Publication date2024-06
First online date2024-05-22
Abstract

Eukaryotes have evolved towards one of two extremes along a spectrum of strategies for remodelling the nuclear envelope during cell division: disassembling the nuclear envelope in an open mitosis or constructing an intranuclear spindle in a closed mitosis1,2. Both classes of mitotic remodelling involve key differences in the core division machinery but the evolutionary reasons for adopting a specific mechanism are unclear. Here we use an integrated comparative genomics and ultrastructural imaging approach to investigate mitotic strategies in Ichthyosporea, close relatives of animals and fungi. We show that species in this clade have diverged towards either a fungal-like closed mitosis or an animal-like open mitosis, probably to support distinct multinucleated or uninucleated states. Our results indicate that multinucleated life cycles favour the evolution of closed mitosis.

Keywords
  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution
  • Genomics
  • Life Cycle Stages
  • Mesomycetozoea / genetics
  • Mesomycetozoea / physiology
  • Mesomycetozoea / cytology
  • Mitosis
  • Nuclear Envelope / metabolism
  • Nuclear Envelope / ultrastructure
  • Phylogeny
  • Spindle Apparatus / metabolism
  • Fungi / classification
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Funding
Citation (ISO format)
SHAH, Hiral et al. Life-cycle-coupled evolution of mitosis in close relatives of animals. In: Nature, 2024, vol. 630, n° 8015, p. 116–122. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07430-z
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Article (Published version)
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Identifiers
Journal ISSN0028-0836
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