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1.
Cyclins in association with the protein kinase p34cdc2and related cyclin-dependent protein kinases (cdks) are key regulatory elements in controlling the cell division cycle. Here, we describe the identification and characterization of a full-length cDNA clone of alfalfa mitotic cyclin, termed CycIIIMs. Computer analysis of known plant cyclin gene sequences revealed that this cyclin belongs to the same structural group as the other known partial alfalfa cyclin sequences. Genetic segregation analysis based on DNA-DNA hybridization data showed that the CycIIIMs gene(s) locates in a single chromosomal region on linkage group 5 of the alfalfa genetic map between RFLP markers UO89A and CG13. The assignment of this cyclin to the mitotic cyclin class was based on its cDNA-derived sequence and its differential expression during G2/M cell cycle phase transition of a partially synchronized alfalfa cell culture. Sequence analysis indicated common motifs with both the A- and B-types of mitotic cyclins similarly to the newly described B3-type of animal cyclins.  相似文献   

2.
Summary Cyclin proteins and cyclin-dependent kinases play a key role in the regulation of cell division. We have therefore studied the relationship of the level of four mitotic cyclin proteins and the Cdc2a kinase protein to cell division in maize root tissue with respect to cessation of division as cells leave the primary meristem region, resumption of division in formation of lateral-root primordia, and induced division following wounding. All four mitotic cyclins and Cdc2a were most abundant in dividing cells. The only examined cell cycle protein which was restricted to dividing tissue was cyclin ZmCycB1;2 (previously ZmIb) and may thus be a limiting factor for cell division. All other cyclin proteins, i.e., ZmCycB1;1 (previously ZmIa), ZmCycA1;1 (previously ZmII), and ZmCycB2;1 (previously ZmIII), and the Cdc2a kinase declined shortly after cells had ceased division. The distance from the root tip at which cells ceased division was tissue-specific and reflected the distance at which decrease of cell cycle proteins was detected. Whereas cyclin ZmCycB1;2 rapidly declined to a hardly detectable level in either nucleus or cytoplasm, in the nuclei of nondividing cells there was persistence of Cdc2a and of cyclins ZmCycB1;1, ZmCycCA1;1, and ZmCycB2;1, indicating that there are plant cyclins which are tightly linked to cell division and others that persist, especially in the nuclei, in nondividing cells. The transition from division to differentiation may thus partly be triggered and enforced by the decrease of the cell cycle proteins and especially the decline of cyclins in the cytoplasm. In the resumption of cell division, both in lateral-root formation and in wound response, high nuclear and low cytoplasmic accumulation of cyclin ZmCycB2;1 was the first visible sign of cell dedifferentiation, implying a role for cyclin ZmCycB2;1 in the G0–G1 phase transition. Next, cytoplasmic accumulation of cyclin ZmCycA1;1, followed by a rearrangement of cortical microtubules, was observed and since both the cyclins ZmCycA1;1 and ZmCycB2;1 were found at places of high tubulin concentration, they may function in the microtubule rearrangement for cell division. When the nuclei of dedifferentiating cells had visibly enlarged, all cyclins and Cdc2a accumulated there, possibly contributing to DNA replication and preparation for mitosis. Later, presumably during G2 phase, cytoplasmic accumulation was observed for Cdc2a at low levels, as observed in G2 phase cells of the primary meristem, and for cyclins ZmCycB1;1 and ZmCycB1;2 accumulation was observed above the levels found in undisturbed meristems, suggesting special contributions to late dedifferentiation processes in both wound-induced and lateral meristems.Abbreviations CDK cyclin-dependent kinase - LRP lateral-root primordium - Mt microtubule - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - TRITC tetramethylrhodamine isothiocyanate Dedicated to Professor Walter Gustav Url on the occasion of his 70th birthday  相似文献   

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4.
5.
Negative Regulation of Cdc18 DNA Replication Protein by Cdc2   总被引:15,自引:4,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
Fission yeast Cdc18, a homologue of Cdc6 in budding yeast and metazoans, is periodically expressed during the S phase and required for activation of replication origins. Cdc18 overexpression induces DNA rereplication without mitosis, as does elimination of Cdc2-Cdc13 kinase during G2 phase. These findings suggest that illegitimate activation of origins may be prevented through inhibition of Cdc18 by Cdc2. Consistent with this hypothesis, we report that Cdc18 interacts with Cdc2 in association with Cdc13 and Cig2 B-type cyclins in vivo. Cdc18 is phosphorylated by the associated Cdc2 in vitro. Mutation of a single phosphorylation site, T104A, activates Cdc18 in the rereplication assay. The cdc18-K9 mutation is suppressed by a cig2 mutation, providing genetic evidence that Cdc2-Cig2 kinase inhibits Cdc18. Moreover, constitutive expression of Cig2 prevents rereplication in cells lacking Cdc13. These findings identify Cdc18 as a key target of Cdc2-Cdc13 and Cdc2-Cig2 kinases in the mechanism that limits chromosomal DNA replication to once per cell cycle.  相似文献   

6.
Cell cycle control in the fission yeastSchizosaccharomyces pombe involves interplay amongst a number of regulatory molecules, including thecdc2, cdc13, cdc25, weel, andmik1 gene products. Cdc2, Cdc13, and Cdc25 act as positive regulators of cell cycle progression at the G2/M boundary, while Wee1 and Mik1 play a negative regulatory role. Here, we have screened for suppressors of the lethal premature entry into mitosis, termed mitotic catastrophe, which results from simultaneous loss of function of both Wee1 and Mik1. Through such a screen, we hoped to identify additional components of the cell cycle regulatory network, and/or G2/M-specific substrates of Cdc2. Although we did not identify such molecules, we isolated a number of alleles of bothcdc2 andcdc13, including a novel wee allele ofcdc2, cdc2-5w. Here, we characterizecdc2-5w and two alleles ofcdc13, which have implications for the understanding of details of the interactions amongst Cdc2, Cdc13, and Wee1.  相似文献   

7.
Anaphase onset and mitotic exit are regulated by the spindle assembly or kinetochore checkpoint, which inhibits the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), preventing the degradation of anaphase inhibitors and mitotic cyclins. As a result, cells arrest with high cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity due to the accumulation of cyclins. Aside from this, a clear-cut demonstration of a direct role for CDKs in the spindle checkpoint response has been elusive. Cdc28 is the main CDK driving the cell cycle in budding yeast. In this report, mutations in cdc28 are described that confer specific checkpoint defects, supersensitivity towards microtubule poisons and chromosome loss. Two alleles encode single mutations in the N and C terminal regions, respectively (R10G and R288G), and one allele specifies two mutations near the C terminus (F245L, I284T). These cdc28 mutants are unable to arrest or efficiently prevent sister chromatid separation during treatment with nocodazole. Genetic interactions with checkpoint and apc mutants suggest Cdc28 may regulate checkpoint arrest downstream of the MAD2 and BUB2 pathways. These studies identify a C-terminal domain of Cdc28 required for checkpoint arrest upon spindle damage that mediates chromosome stability during vegetative growth, suggesting that it has an essential surveillance function in the unperturbed cell cycle.Communicated by A. Aguilera  相似文献   

8.
In the clam, Spisula, two previously described proteins known as cyclin A and B display the unusual property of selective proteolytic degradation at the end of each mitosis. We show here that clam oocytes and embryos contain a cdc2 protein kinase. This protein kinase is a component of the M phase promoting factor (MPF) in frog eggs and the M phase-specific histone H1 kinase in starfish. Clam cdc2 is found in association with both cyclin A and B, probably not as a trimolecular association, but as separate cdc2/cyclin A and cdc2/cyclin B complexes. Clam cdc2 and the associated cyclins bind to p13suc1-Sepharose. The p13-bound complex, and also anti-cyclin A or B immunoprecipitates, each display cell cycle-dependent histone H1 kinase activity. We suggest that in addition to the cdc2 protein kinase, the cyclins are further components of the M phase promoting factor and that cyclin proteolysis provides the mechanism of MPF inactivation and thus exit from mitosis.  相似文献   

9.

Background

During the last three decades, the cell cycle and its control by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) have been extensively studied in eukaryotes. This endeavour has produced an overall picture that basic mechanisms seem to be largely conserved among all eukaryotes. The intricate regulation of CDK activities includes, among others, CDK activation by CDC25 phosphatase at G2/M. In plants, however, studies of this regulation have lagged behind as a plant Cdc25 homologue or other unrelated phosphatase active at G2/M have not yet been identified.

Scope

Failure to identify a plant mitotic CDK activatory phosphatase led to characterization of the effects of alien cdc25 gene expression in plants. Tobacco, expressing the Schizosaccharomyces pombe mitotic activator gene, Spcdc25, exhibited morphological, developmental and biochemical changes when compared with wild type (WT) and, importantly, increased CDK dephosphorylation at G2/M. Besides changes in leaf shape, internode length and root development, in day-neutral tobacco there was dramatically earlier onset of flowering with a disturbed acropetal floral capacity gradient typical of WT. In vitro, de novo organ formation revealed substantially earlier and more abundant formation of shoot primordia on Spcdc25 tobacco stem segments grown on shoot-inducing media when compared with WT. Moreover, in contrast to WT, stem segments from transgenic plants formed shoots even without application of exogenous growth regulator. Spcdc25-expressing BY-2 cells exhibited a reduced mitotic cell size due to a shortening of the G2 phase together with high activity of cyclin-dependent kinase, NtCDKB1, in early S-phase, S/G2 and early M-phase. Spcdc25-expressing tobacco (‘Samsun’) cell suspension cultures showed a clustered, more circular, cell phenotype compared with chains of elongated WT cells, and increased content of starch and soluble sugars. Taken together, Spcdc25 expression had cytokinin-like effects on the characteristics studied, although determination of endogenous cytokinin levels revealed a dramatic decrease in Spcdc25 transgenics.

Conclusions

The data gained using the plants expressing yeast mitotic activator, Spcdc25, clearly argue for the existence and importance of activatory dephosphorylation at G2/M transition and its interaction with cytokinin signalling in plants. The observed cytokinin-like effects of Spcdc25 expression are consistent with the concept of interaction between cell cycle regulators and phytohormones during plant development. The G2/M control of the plant cell cycle, however, remains an elusive issue as doubts persist about the mode of activatory dephosphorylation, which in other eukaryotes is provided by Cdc25 phosphatase serving as a final all-or-nothing mitosis regulator.  相似文献   

10.
Progression through and completion of mitosis require the actions of the evolutionarily conserved Polo kinase. We have determined that the levels of Cdc5p, a Saccharomyces cerevisiae member of the Polo family of mitotic kinases, are cell cycle regulated. Cdc5p accumulates in the nuclei of G2/M-phase cells, and its levels decline dramatically as cells progress through anaphase and begin telophase. We report that Cdc5p levels are sensitive to mutations in key components of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC). We have determined that Cdc5p-associated kinase activity is restricted to G2/M and that this activity is posttranslationally regulated. These results further link the actions of the APC to the completion of mitosis and suggest possible roles for Cdc5p during progression through and completion of mitosis.  相似文献   

11.
The plant cell cycle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The first aim of this paper is to review recent progress in identifying genes in plants homologous to cell division cycle (cdc) genes of fission yeast. In the latter, cdc genes are well-characterised. Arguably, most is known about cdc2 which encodes a 34 kDa protein kinase (p34cdc2) that functions at the G2-M and G1-S transition points of the cell cycle. At G2-M, the p34cdc2 protein kinase is regulated by a number of gene products that function in independent regulatory pathways. The cdc2 kinase is switched on by a phosphatase encoded by cdc25, and switched off by a protein kinase encoded by weel. p34 Must also bind with a cyclin protein to form maturation promoting factor before exhibiting protein kinase activity. In plants, homologues to p34cdc2 have been identified in pea, wheat, Arabidopsis, alfalfa, maize and Chlamydomonas. They all exhibit the PSTAIRE motif, an absolutely conserved amino acid sequence in all functional homologues sequenced so far. As in animals, some plant species contain more than one cdc2 protein kinase gene. but in contrast to animals where one functions at G2-M and the other (CDK2 in humans and Egl in Xenopus) at G1-S, it is still unclear whether there are functional differences between the plant p34cdc2 protein kinases. Again, whereas in animals cyclins are well characterised on the basis of sequence analysis, into class A, class B (G2-M) and CLN (G1 cyclins), cyclins isolated from several plant species cannot be so clearly characterised. The differences between plant and animal homologues to p34cdc2 and cyclins raises the possibility that some of the regulatory controls of the plant genes may be different from those of their animal counterparts. The second aim of the paper is to review how planes of cell division and cell size are regulated at the molecular level. We focus on reports showing that p34cdc2 binds to the preprophase band (ppb) in late G2 of the cell cycle. The binding of p34cdc2 to ppbs may be important in regulating changes in directional growth but, more importantly, there is a requirement to understand what controls the positioning of ppbs. Thus, we highlight work resolving proteins such as the microtubule associated proteins (MAPs) and those mitogen activated protein kinases (MAP kinases), which act on, or bind to, mitotic microtubules. Plant homologues to MAP kinases have been identified in alfalfa. Finally, some consideration is given to cell size at division and how alterations in cell size can alter plant development. Transgenic tobacco plants expressing the fission yeast gene, cdc25, exhibited various perturbations of development and a reduced cell size at division. Hence, cdc25 affected the cell cycle (and as a consequence, cell size at division) and cdc25 expression was correlated with various alterations to development including precocious flowering and altered floral morphogenesis. Our view is that the cell cycle is a growth cycle in which a cell achieves an optimal size for division and that this size control has an important bearing on differentiation and development. Understanding how cell size is controlled, and how plant cdc genes are regulated, will be essential keys to ‘the cell cycle locks’, which when ‘opened’, will provide further clues about how the cell cycle is linked to plant development.  相似文献   

12.
Summary— Several studies have shown that kinases and phosphatases can interact with the centrosome during interphase and mitosis suggesting that centrosomal components might be the targets of these enzymes. The association of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase type II and the mitotic kinase p34cdc2 with centrosomes from human lymphoblast cells has previously been shown (Keryer et al, 1993, Exp Cell Res 204, 230–240; Bailly et al, 1989, EMBO J 8, 3985–3995). In this paper we demonstrate that isolated centrosomes are able to phosphorylate a few number of centrosomal proteins (Mr 230–220000; 135000 and 50000) and also H1 histone. The phosphorylation of H1-histone is cell cycle dependent and modulated by phosphatases. The use of kinase and phosphatase inhibitors and the addition of the catalytic subunit of cAMP-dependent kinase or of cyclinB-p34cdc2 kinase showed that both kinases phosphorylate the same centrosomal substrates. In addition two centrosomal proteins (Mr 100000 and 37000) were phosphorylated only by p34cdc2 kinase. Although the low amount of centrosomal proteins precluded a full characterization of these substrates we discuss the identity of the major centrosomal phosphoproteins by comparison with proteins known to associate with microtubule-organizing centres or mitotic spindles. Our results raise also the intriguing possibility that the cAMP-dependent protein kinase could be regulated by the mitotic kinase at the entry of mitosis.  相似文献   

13.
To study a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) from alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.), an antibody was raised against the C-terminal 16 amino acids of the protein cdc2aMs. The cdc2Ms protein was immunopurified with this antibody and its histone kinase activity was measured. The cdc2Ms kinase is activated at the G1/S transition when phosphate-starved cells from the G0 phase re-enter the cell cycle and remain active as cells transit the S, G2, and M phases, indicating that the same CDK regulates all of these phases in alfalfa. In contrast, when cdc2Ms kinase was purified by binding to p13suc1, it was active only in the G2 and M phases. In immunoblots the C-terminal antibody detected an equal amount of the cdc2Ms protein in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. By indirect immunofluorescence, however, the cytoplasmic form of cdc2Ms could not be found in the S phase of the cells, indicating that the epitope for the cdc2 antibody is not accessible. Binding of putative inhibitor proteins to cdc2 was shown by inactivation of purified plant CDK when cell extracts were added. Furthermore, purified CDK inhibitors, such as the mouse p27kip1 and the yeast p40sic1, blocked the purified plant CDK activity.  相似文献   

14.
W. Nagl 《Protoplasma》1995,188(3-4):143-150
Summary Almost all organisms, from protists to humans, and from algae to orchids, display somatic polyploidy, including polyteny. In insects and higher plants, nearly all normal, differentiated cells are polyploid, corresponding to the majority of living matter. So far, no universal mechanism controlling the switch from proliferation to polyploidization has been proposed. However, recent progress in understanding regulation of the mitotic cell cycle by protein kinases and cyclins allows some unifying ideas which can be experimentally tested to be put forward. The key events are the abolishment of the dependence of DNA replication on mitosis, and changes in the expression and activity of the complexes formed by cyclin-dependent kinases and cyclins. In addition, repression of further cell cycle control genes may allow underreplication of DNA, characteristic of endo-cycles in many insects and angiosperms. Change to a different checkpoint may be responsible for gene amplification. The switch in cell cycle control is developmentally regulated by signal transduction cascades, which are briefly discussed. Polyploidy is also known from many cancers, where genetic and metabolic disturbances lead to a similar switch to that in normal cells. The related literature is reviewed and some possible lines of future research are suggested.Abbreviations CAK p34cdc2-activating kinase - cdc2 cell division cycle gene inSchizosaccharomyces pombe (fission yeast), named cdk1 in mammals - CDKs cyclin-dependent kinases - cdk2 S-phase specific CDK gene in higher organisms - MAP kinase mitogen-activated protein kinase - MAPs microtubule-associated proteins - MPF maturation (or mitosis) promoting factor - p34cdc2 mitosis specific protein kinase  相似文献   

15.
Progression through mitosis requires the coordinated regulation of Cdk1 kinase activity. Activation of Cdk1 is a multistep process comprising binding of Cdk1 to cyclin B, relocation of cyclin-kinase complexes to the nucleus, activating phosphorylation of Cdk1 on Thr161 by the Cdk-activating kinase (CAK; Cdk7 in metazoans), and removal of inhibitory Thr14 and Tyr15 phosphorylations. This dephosphorylation is catalyzed by the dual specific Cdc25 phosphatases, which occur in three isoforms in mammalian cells, Cdc25A, -B, and -C. We find that expression of Cdc25A leads to an accelerated G2/M phase transition. In Cdc25A-overexpressing cells, Cdk1 exhibits high kinase activity despite being phosphorylated on Tyr15. In addition, Tyr15-phosphorylated Cdk1 binds more cyclin B in Cdc25A-overexpressing cells compared with control cells. Consistent with this observation, we demonstrate that in human transformed cells, Cdc25A and Cdc25B, but not Cdc25C phosphatases have an effect on timing and efficiency of cyclin-kinase complex formation. Overexpression of Cdc25A or Cdc25B promotes earlier assembly and activation of Cdk1-cyclin B complexes, whereas repression of these phosphatases by short hairpin RNA has a reverse effect, leading to a substantial decrease in amounts of cyclin B-bound Cdk1 in G2 and mitosis. Importantly, we find that Cdc25A overexpression leads to an activation of Cdk7 and increase in Thr161 phosphorylation of Cdk1. In conclusion, our data suggest that complex assembly and dephosphorylation of Cdk1 at G2/M is tightly coupled and regulated by Cdc25 phosphatases.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibition of membrane fusion in vitro via cyclin B but not cyclin A.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
It is now clear that complexes of cdc2 kinase with "mitotic" cyclins regulate the transition between the G2 phase of the cell cycle and mitosis and that membrane traffic in mammalian cells is arrested during mitosis. Using a cell-free assay, we have previously reported that the fusion of early endosomes is, in fact, inhibited via the cdc2 kinase (Tuomikoski, T., Felix, M.-A., Dorée, M., and Gruenberg, J. (1989) Nature 342, 942-945). In the present paper, we show that this in vitro inhibition occurs efficiently only when the kinase activity is specifically evoked by a cyclin of the B-type but not by cyclins of the A-type. In addition, high resolution two-dimensional gel analysis revealed that the kinases associated with A- and B-type cyclins exhibit different substrate preferences. These data suggest that the complexes of the cdc2 kinase with different cyclins may control specific events of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

17.
In excised pith parenchyma from Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. Wisconsin Havana 38, auxin (naphthalene-1-acetic acid) together with cytokinin (6-benzylaminopurine) induced a greater than 40-fold increase in a p34cdc2-like protein, recoverable in the p13suc1-binding fraction, that had high H1 histone kinase activity, but enzyme induced without cytokinin was inactive. In suspension-cultured N. plumbaginifolia Viv., cytokinin (kinetin) was stringently required only in late G2 phase of the cell division cycle (cdc) and cells lacking kinetin arrested in G2 phase with inactive p34cdc2-like H1 histone kinase. Control of the Cdc2 kinase by inhibitory tyrosine phosphorylation was indicated by high phosphotyrosine in the inactive enzyme of arrested pith and suspension cells. Yeast cdc25 phosphatase, which is specific for removal of phosphate from tyrosine at the active site of p34cdc2 enzyme, was expressed in bacteria and caused extensive in-vitro activation of p13suc1-purified enzyme from pith and suspension cells cultured without cytokinin. Cytokinin stimulated the removal of phosphate, activation of the enzyme and rapid synchronous entry into mitosis. Therefore, plants can control cell division by tyrosine phosphorylation of Cdc2 but differ from somatic animal cells in coupling this mitotic control to hormonal signals.Abbreviations BAP 6-benzylaminopurine - BrdUrd 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine - cdc cell division cycle - Cdc25 cdc phospho-protein phosphatase - CKI cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor - 2,4-D 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid - DAPI 4,6 diamidino-2-phenylindole - GST-cdc25 glutathione sulfur transferase-truncated cdc25 fusion - MS Murashige and Skoog (1962) - NAA naphthalene-1-acetic acid - p34cdc2 34-kDa product of the cdc2 gene  相似文献   

18.
19.
Hancioglu B  Tyson JJ 《PloS one》2012,7(2):e30810
Cell cycle progression in eukaryotes is regulated by periodic activation and inactivation of a family of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdk's). Entry into mitosis requires phosphorylation of many proteins targeted by mitotic Cdk, and exit from mitosis requires proteolysis of mitotic cyclins and dephosphorylation of their targeted proteins. Mitotic exit in budding yeast is known to involve the interplay of mitotic kinases (Cdk and Polo kinases) and phosphatases (Cdc55/PP2A and Cdc14), as well as the action of the anaphase promoting complex (APC) in degrading specific proteins in anaphase and telophase. To understand the intricacies of this mechanism, we propose a mathematical model for the molecular events during mitotic exit in budding yeast. The model captures the dynamics of this network in wild-type yeast cells and 110 mutant strains. The model clarifies the roles of Polo-like kinase (Cdc5) in the Cdc14 early anaphase release pathway and in the G-protein regulated mitotic exit network.  相似文献   

20.
《Gene》1996,172(1):137-141
Major transitions in the eukaryotic cell cycle are regulated by the cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDK). In particular, the G2/M transition is initiated by the activity of a complex formed by a CDK of the Cdc2/Cdc28 family and B-type cyclins of the Cdc13/Clb family in the yeasts, Schizosaccharomyces pombe (Sp) and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Sc). To study the molecular mechanisms that control the G2/M transition in the dimorphic pathogenic yeast, Candida albicans, we have cloned and characterized cDNAs corresponding to CDK1 and CYB1. The CDK1 cDNA encodes a 317-amino-acid (aa) protein that shares 76.8 and 62.3% identity with the Sc CDC28 and Sp cdc2 gene products, respectively. The CYB1 cDNA encodes a 493-aa protein that is 34.8, 34.4 and 35.5% identical to Sc Clbl and Clb2, and to Sp Cdc13, respectively. Cyb1 contains characteristic mitotic destruction and cyclin boxes. The CDK1 and CYB1 cDNAs are functional homologues, as they are able to complement Sp cdc2 and cdc13 temperature-sensitive (ts) mutations, respectively, and their gene products interact in vivo in Sc to form an active histone H1 kinase.  相似文献   

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