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1.
M Peter  E Heitlinger  M Hner  U Aebi    E A Nigg 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(6):1535-1544
The nuclear lamina is an intermediate filament-type network underlying the inner nuclear membrane. At the onset of mitosis it depolymerizes, presumably in response to phosphorylation of the lamin proteins. Recently, cdc2 kinase, a major regulator of the eukaryotic cell cycle, was shown to induce lamina depolymerization when incubated with isolated nuclei. Here, we have analysed the structural consequences of lamin phosphorylation by cdc2 kinase using lamin head-to-tail polymers reconstituted in vitro from bacterially expressed chicken lamin B2 protein as a substrate. The effects of phosphorylation were monitored by both a pelleting assay and electron microscopy. We show that lamin B2 head-to-tail polymers disassemble in response to phosphorylation of specific sites that are phosphorylated also during mitosis in vivo. These sites are located within SP/TP motifs N- and C-terminal to the central alpha-helical rod domain of lamin proteins. Subsequent dephosphorylation of these sites by purified phosphatase 1 allows reformation of lamin head-to-tail polymers. The relative importance of N- and C-terminal phosphorylation sites for controlling the assembly state of nuclear lamins was assessed by mutational analysis. Polymers formed of lamin proteins carrying mutations in the C-terminal phosphoacceptor motif could still be disassembled by cdc2 kinase. In contrast, a single point mutation in the N-terminal site (Ser16----Ala) rendered head-to-tail polymers resistant to disassembly. These results emphasize the importance of the N-terminal end domain for lamin head-to-tail polymerization in vitro, and they demonstrate that phosphorylation-dephosphorylation is sufficient to control the longitudinal assembly of lamin B2 dimers.  相似文献   

2.
M Peter  J Nakagawa  M Dorée  J C Labbé  E A Nigg 《Cell》1990,61(4):591-602
The nuclear lamina is an intermediate filament-type network underlying the inner nuclear membrane. Phosphorylation of lamin proteins is believed to cause lamina disassembly during meiotic and mitotic M phase, but the M phase-specific lamin kinase has not been identified. Here we show that the cdc2 kinase, a major element implicated in controlling the eukaryotic cell cycle, phosphorylates chicken B-type lamins in vitro on sites that are specifically phosphorylated during M phase in vivo. Concomitantly, cdc2 kinase is capable of inducing lamina depolymerization upon incubation with isolated nuclei. One of the target sites of cdc2 kinase is identified as a motif (SPTR) conserved in the N-terminal domain of all lamin proteins. These results lead us to propose that mitotic disassembly of the nuclear lamina results from direct phosphorylation of lamins by cdc2 kinase.  相似文献   

3.
p34cdc2 acts as a lamin kinase in fission yeast   总被引:10,自引:3,他引:7  
The nuclear lamina is an intermediate filament network that underlies the nuclear membrane in higher eukaryotic cells. During mitosis in higher eukaryotes, nuclear lamins are phosphorylated by a mitosis-specific kinase and this induces disassembly of the lamina structure. Recently, p34cdc2 protein kinase purified from starfish has been shown to induce phosphorylation of lamin proteins and disassembly of the nuclear lamina when incubated with isolated chick nuclei suggesting that p34cdc2 is likely to be the mitotic lamin kinase (Peter, M., J. Nakagawa, M. Dorée, J.C. Labbe, and E.A. Nigg. 1990b. Cell. 45:145-153). To confirm and extend these studies using genetic techniques, we have investigated the role of p34cdc2 in lamin phosphorylation in the fission yeast. As fission yeast lamins have not been identified, we have introduced a cDNA encoding the chicken lamin B2 protein into fission yeast. We report here that the chicken lamin B2 protein expressed in fission yeast is assembled into a structure that associates with the nucleus during interphase and becomes dispersed throughout the cytoplasm when cells enter mitosis. Mitotic reorganization correlates with phosphorylation of the chicken lamin B2 protein by a mitosis-specific yeast lamin kinase with similarities to the mitotic lamin kinase of higher eukaryotes. We show that a lamin kinase activity can be detected in cell-free yeast extracts and in p34cdc2 immunoprecipitates prepared from yeast cells arrested in mitosis. The fission yeast lamin kinase activity is temperature sensitive in extracts and immunoprecipitates prepared from strains bearing temperature-sensitive mutations in the cdc2 gene. These results in conjunction with the previously reported biochemical studies strongly suggest that disassembly of the nuclear lamina at mitosis in higher eukaryotic cells is a consequence of direct phosphorylation of nuclear lamins by p34cdc2.  相似文献   

4.
《The Journal of cell biology》1993,120(6):1293-1304
The nuclear lamina is a karyoskeletal structure at the nucleoplasmic surface of the inner nuclear membrane. Its assembly state is regulated by phosphorylation of the intermediate filament type lamin proteins. Strong evidence has been obtained for a causal link between phosphorylation of lamins by the p34cdc2 protein kinase and disassembly of the nuclear lamina during mitosis. In contrast, no information is currently available on the role of lamin phosphorylation during interphase of the cell cycle. Here, we have identified four protein kinase C phosphorylation sites in purified chicken lamin B2 as serines 400, 404, 410, and 411. In vivo, the tryptic peptide containing serines 400 and 404 is phosphorylated throughout interphase, whereas serines 410 and 411 become phosphorylated specifically in response to activation of protein kinase C by phorbol ester. Prompted by the close proximity of serines 410/411 to the nuclear localization signal of lamin B2, we have studied the influence of phosphorylation of these residues on nuclear transport. Using an in vitro assay, we show that phosphorylation of lamin B2 by protein kinase C strongly inhibits transport to the nucleus. Moreover, phorbol ester treatment of intact cells leads to a substantial reduction of the rate of nuclear import of newly synthesized lamin B2 in vivo. These findings have implications for the dynamic structure of the nuclear lamina, and they suggest that the modulation of nuclear transport rates by cytoplasmic phosphorylation may represent a general mechanism for regulating nuclear activities.  相似文献   

5.
M Eggert  N Radomski  D Tripier  P Traub  E Jost 《FEBS letters》1991,292(1-2):205-209
Isolated interphase lamin C, obtained from Ehrlich ascites tumor cells, was digested by Lys-C endoproteinase, the resulting peptides separated by reversed-phase HPLC and subjected to microsequencing in order to identify phosphorylation sites in interphase and following phosphorylation in vitro by cdc2-kinase, protein kinase C (PKC) and protein kinase A (PKA), respectively. Nuclear lamin C showed partial phosphorylation of Ser392 and Ser409, and possibly Ser407 in interphase. Phosphorylation was increased in response to cdc2-kinase at Ser390 and Ser392 and to PKC at Ser572. The N-terminal peptide (aa 1-32) containing consensus sequences for the 3 kinases was phosphorylated by cdc2-kinase, PKC and PKA. The sequence data suggests that multiple molecular switches via lamina modification control the dynamic behaviour of the nucleoskeleton during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

6.
While the p34cdc2 kinase is considered to be a critical regulator of mitosis, its function has not yet been directly linked to one of the key events during the onset of mitosis: nuclear envelope breakdown. Here we show that a major structural protein of the nuclear envelope, lamin B2, is phosphorylated by p34cdc2. Results from two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping experiments demonstrate that the p34cdc2-specific phosphopeptides represent both mitotic and interphase specific phosphorylations of lamin B2 and include the major interphase phosphorylation site. In mitotic cells we detected two distinct forms of lamin B2 which differ in electrophoretic mobility and in degree of phosphorylation. The phosphorylation pattern of lamin B2 generated in vitro by p34cdc2 was more closely related to the less phosphorylated mitotic lamin B2, suggesting that another kinase(s) in addition to p34cdc2 is involved in generating the mitotic phosphorylation pattern. In addition, we show that treatment of interphase cells with okadaic acid, a potent phosphatase inhibitor, leads to the acquisition of mitosis-specific phosphopeptides and can reversibly increase the detergent-solubility of lamin B2. However, the M-phase-like phosphorylation of lamin B2 in itself is not sufficient to induce its disassembly from the nuclear lamina suggesting that an additional event(s) besides phosphorylation is required.  相似文献   

7.
Members of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family are implicated in mediating entry of cells into the cell cycle, as well as passage through meiotic M phase. These kinases have attracted much interest because their activation involves phosphorylation on both tyrosine and threonine residues, but little is known about their physiological targets. In this study, two distinct members of the MAP kinase family (p44mpk and p42mapk) are shown to phosphorylate chicken lamin B2 at a single site identified as Ser16. Moreover, these MAP kinases cause depolymerization of in-vitro-assembled longitudinal lamin head-to-tail polymers. Ser16 was previously shown to be phosphorylated during mitosis in vivo, and to be a target of the mitotic protein kinase p34cdc2 in vitro. Accordingly, lamins were proposed to be direct in vivo substrates of p34cdc2. This proposal is supported by quantitative analyses indicating that lamin B2, when assayed in vitro, is a substantially better substrate for p34cdc2 than for MAP kinases. Nevertheless, a physiological role of MAP kinases in lamin phosphorylation is not excluded. The observation that members of the MAP kinase family display sequence specificities overlapping that of p34cdc2 raises the possibility that some of the purported substrates of p34cdc2 may actually be physiological substrates of MAP kinases.  相似文献   

8.
Lamins' functions are regulated by phosphorylation at specific sites but our understanding of the role of such modifications is practically limited to the function of cdc 2 (cdk1) kinase sites in depolymerization of the nuclear lamina during mitosis. In our study we used Drosophila lamin Dm (B-type) to examine the function of particular phosphorylation sites using pseudophosphorylated mutants mimicking single phosphorylation at experimentally confirmed in vivo phosphosites (S(25)E, S(45)E, T(435)E, S(595)E). We also analyzed lamin C (A-type) and its mutant S(37)E representing the N-terminal cdc2 (mitotic) site as well as lamin Dm R(64)H mutant as a control, non-polymerizing lamin. In the polymerization assay we could observe different effects of N-terminal cdc2 site pseudophosphorylation on A- and B-type lamins: lamin Dm S(45)E mutant was insoluble, in contrast to lamin C S(37)E. Lamin Dm T(435)E (C-terminal cdc2 site) and R(64)H were soluble in vitro. We also confirmed that none of the single phosphorylation site modifications affected the chromatin binding of lamin Dm, in contrast to the lamin C N-terminal cdc2 site. In vivo, all lamin Dm mutants were incorporated efficiently into the nuclear lamina in transfected Drosophila S2 and HeLa cells, although significant amounts of S(45)E and T(435)E were also located in cytoplasm. When farnesylation incompetent mutants were expressed in HeLa cells, lamin Dm T(435)E was cytoplasmic and showed higher mobility in FRAP assay.  相似文献   

9.
R Heald  F McKeon 《Cell》1990,61(4):579-589
The nuclear envelope is a dynamic structure that completely disassembles in response to MPF/cdc2 activity in mitosis. A key feature of this process is the hyperphosphorylation of the major structural proteins of the envelope, the nuclear lamins A, B, and C. Two highly conserved serine residues of the lamin protein (Ser-22 and Ser-392 of lamins A and C) are symmetrically positioned 5 amino acids from the ends of the large alpha-helical domain and are shown in the accompanying paper by Ward and Kirschner to be among four sites phosphorylated during nuclear envelope breakdown. Mutations in Ser-22 and Ser-392 that prevent phosphorylation at these sites block the disassembly of the nuclear lamina during mitosis. We propose a model for the regulation of lamin assembly in which phosphorylation just outside the ends of the alpha-helical domain controls the assembly dynamics of the lamin coiled-coil dimers.  相似文献   

10.
Lamins, major components of the nuclear lamina, undergo phosphorylation at multiple residues during cell cycle progression, but their detailed phosphorylation kinetics remain largely undetermined. Here, we examined changes in the phosphorylation of major phosphorylation residues (Thr14, Ser17, Ser385, Ser387, and Ser401) of lamin B2 and the homologous residues of lamin B1, A/C during the cell cycle using novel antibodies to the site-specific phosphorylation. The phosphorylation levels of these residues independently changed during the cell cycle. Thr14 and Ser17 were phosphorylated during G2/M phase to anaphase/telophase. Ser385 was persistently phosphorylated during mitosis to G1 phase, whereas Ser387 was phosphorylated discontinuously in prophase and G1 phase. Ser401 phosphorylation was enhanced in the G1/S boundary. Immunoprecipitation using the phospho-antibodies suggested that metaphase-phosphorylation at Thr14, Ser17, and Ser385 of lamins occurred simultaneously, whereas G1-phase phosphorylation at Ser385 and Ser387 occurred in distinct pools or with different timings. Additionally, we showed that lamin B2 phosphorylated at Ser17, but not Ser385, Ser387 and Ser401, was exclusively non-ionic detergent soluble, depolymerized forms in growing cells, implicating specific involvement of Ser17 phosphorylation in lamin depolymerization and nuclear envelope breakdown. These results suggest that the phosphorylations at different residues of lamins might play specific roles throughout the cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
The lamin B receptor (LBR) is an integral protein of the inner nuclear membrane that interacts with lamin B in vitro. If contains a 204-amino acid nucleoplasmic amino-terminal domain and a hydrophobic carboxyl-terminal domain with eight putative transmembrane segments. We found cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation of LBR using phosphoamino acid analysis and phosphopeptide mapping of in vivo 32P-labeled LBR immunoprecipitated from chicken cells in interphase and arrested in mitosis. LBR was phosphorylated only on serine residues in interphase and on serine and threonine residues in mitosis. Some serine residues phosphorylated in interphase were not phosphorylated in mitosis. To identify a threonine residue specifically phosphorylated in mitosis and the responsible protein kinase, wild-type and mutant LBR nucleoplasmic domain fusion proteins were phosphorylated in vitro by p34cdc2-type protein kinase. Comparisons of phosphopeptide maps to those of in vivo 32P-labeled mitotic LBR showed that Thr188 is likely to be phosphorylated by this enzyme during mitosis. These phosphorylation/dephosphorylation events may be responsible for some of the changes in the interaction between the nuclear lamina and the inner nuclear membrane that occur during mitosis.  相似文献   

12.
In the previous paper (Ookata et al., (1997) Biochemistry, 36: 249-259), we identified two mitotic cdc2 kinase phosphorylation sites (Ser696 and Ser787) in the proline-rich region of human MAP4. One (Ser696) of them was also phosphorylated during interphase. A protein kinase responsible for interphase phosphorylation of Ser696 could necessarily be distinct from cdc2/cyclin B kinase. To get insights into a physiological role for Ser696 phosphorylation, we searched for a Ser696 kinase and for cellular conditions under which Ser696 is dephosphorylated. Because Ser696 conforms to the MAP kinase phosphorylation consensus motif (PXSP), MAP kinase was tested as a possible kinase phosphorylating Ser696. MAP kinase, in fact, did phosphorylate Ser696 in MTB3, the carboxy-terminal half of human MAP4 in vitro. Phosphorylation of Ser696 in HeLa cell extract was suppressed by a MAP kinase inhibitor, DBTM-0004. Also consistent with the notion that Ser696 is a MAP kinase site were the fact that serum-starvation induced dephosphorylation of Ser696 in HeLa cells, TIG-3 and MRC-5-30 human fibroblasts, while readdition of serum recovered Ser696 phosphorylation, albeit after a surprisingly long interval. Thus, phosphorylation of Ser696 of MAP4, most likely carried out by MAP kinase, may play a role in modulation of MAP4 activity in proliferating versus quiescent cells.  相似文献   

13.
Cytoplasmic dynein, a large minus-end-directed microtubule motor, performs multiple functions during the cell cycle. In interphase, dynein moves membrane organelles, while in mitosis it moves chromosomes and helps to form the mitotic spindle. The cell-cycle regulation of dynein activity may be controlled, at least in part, by the phosphorylation of its light intermediate chains (DLIC), since a 10-fold increase in light intermediate chain phosphorylation correlates with a decrease in dynein-based membrane transport of similar magnitude in mitosis. In this study, we sought to identify the kinase responsible for this potentially important phosphorylation event. We show that bacterially-expressed chicken light intermediate chain (chDLIC) will undergo mitosis-specific phosphorylation when added to Xenopus egg extracts. Mutation of a conserved cdc2 kinase consensus site (Ser197) abolishes this phosphorylation event, and mass spectroscopy analysis confirms that the wild-type DLIC is stoichiometrically phosphorylated at this site when incubated with metaphase but not interphase extracts. We also show that purified cdc2 kinase phosphorylates purified DLICs at Ser197 in vitro and that Ser197 phosphorylation is dramatically reduced in metaphase extracts depleted of cdc2 kinase. These results indicate that cdc2 kinase directly phosphorylates dynein and thus may be an important regulator of dynein activity in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

14.
G E Ward  M W Kirschner 《Cell》1990,61(4):561-577
The mechanism by which MPF induces nuclear lamin disassembly and nuclear envelope breakdown during mitosis was studied in a frog egg extract in which the transition from interphase to mitosis can be induced by the addition of MPF. Bacterially expressed human nuclear lamin C, assembled in vitro into filaments, showed increased phosphorylation on specific sites in the extract in response to MPF. Phosphorylation was accompanied by disassembly of the lamin filaments. We determined the sequences of the sites phosphorylated both in the presence and absence of MPF. The sequence data suggest that multiple protein kinases act on the lamins, and S6 kinase II was identified as one potentially important lamin kinase.  相似文献   

15.
A 20-kDa DNA-binding protein that binds the AT-rich sequences within the promoters of the brain-specific protein kinase C (PKC) gamma and neurogranin/RC3 genes has been characterized as chromosomal nonhistone high-mobility-group protein (HMG)-I. This protein is a substrate of PKC alpha, beta, gamma, and delta but is poorly phosphorylated by PKC epsilon and zeta. Two major (Ser44 and Ser64) and four minor phosphorylation sites have been identified. The extents of phosphorylation of Ser44 and Ser64 were 1:1, whereas those of the four minor sites all together were <30% of the major one. These PKC phosphorylation sites are distinct from those phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase, which phosphorylates Thr53 and Thr78. Phosphorylation of HMG-I by PKC resulted in a reduction of DNA-binding affinity by 28-fold as compared with 12-fold caused by the phosphorylation with cdc2 kinase. HMG-I could be additively phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase and PKC, and the resulting doubly phosphorylated protein exhibited a >100-fold reduction in binding affinity. The two cdc2 kinase phosphorylation sites of HMG-I are adjacent to the N terminus of two of the three predicted DNA-binding domains. In comparison, one of the major PKC phosphorylation sites, Ser64, is adjacent to the C terminus of the second DNA-binding domain, whereas Ser44 is located within the spanning region between the first and second DNA-binding domains. The current results suggest that phosphorylation of the mammalian HMG-I by PKC alone or in combination with cdc2 kinase provides an effective mechanism for the regulation of HMG-I function.  相似文献   

16.
G Simos  S D Georgatos 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(11):4027-4036
p58, also referred to as the lamin B receptor, is an intrinsic protein of the inner nuclear membrane that binds in vitro to lamin B. Previous studies have demonstrated that p58 is phosphorylated in vivo and removal of its phosphate moieties affects lamin B binding. Using affinity-purified antipeptide antibodies, we have now immunoisolated p58 from bird erythrocyte lysates under isotonic, non-denaturing conditions. Analysis of the immunopurified material shows that five distinct proteins are tightly and specifically associated with p58. Two of these polypeptides can be identified as nuclear lamins A and B. The immunoisolate also contains a kinase activity that phosphorylates p58 in vivo and in vitro, exclusively at serine residues, as indicated by phosphoamino acid analysis and two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping. Cell fractionation experiments and in vitro phosphorylation assays demonstrate that the p58 kinase resides in the nuclear envelope and is distinct from protein kinase A and cdc2 kinase, for both of which p58 is an in vitro substrate. These data suggest that p58 is interacting in vivo with a p58 kinase and the nuclear lamins.  相似文献   

17.
During mitosis the lamins are found in a hyperphosphorylated and soluble state. p34cdc2 kinase (MPF), a protein kinase complex with a pivotal role during mitosis, has been found to phosphorylate the lamins and, in some cases, though not all, to cause depolymerization of the lamina in vitro. Due to the variety of protein interactions in the lamina, there is a probable requirement for multiple enzyme activities to effect its breakdown in mitosis. Using nuclear ghosts as substrate, we have fractionated a Xenopus mitotic extract into a lamin-releasing fraction (p34cdc2 kinase) and a fraction that inhibits p34cdc2 kinase-mediated lamin release if the nuclear ghosts are first preincubated in it. The lamin-release-inhibiting activity in the p34cdc2 kinase-depleted mitotic extract is, in turn, inhibited if PKI, a protein kinase inhibitor specific for PKA, is included in the preincubation reaction mixture. Furthermore, a similar degree of inhibition can be achieved by using purified PKA to preincubate the nuclear ghosts. This suggests that dephosphorylation of PKA substrate sites is necessary for lamin depolymerization.  相似文献   

18.
The Xenopus cdk2 gene encodes a 32-kDa protein kinase with sequence similarity to the 34-kDa product of the cdc2 gene. Previous studies have shown that the kinase activity of the protein product of the cdk2 gene oscillates in the Xenopus embryonic cell cycle with a high in M-phase and a low in interphase. In the present study cdk2 was found not to be associated with any newly synthesized proteins during the cell cycle, but the enzyme did undergo periodic changes in phosphorylation. Upon exit from metaphase, cdk2 became increasingly phosphorylated on both tyrosine and serine residues, and labeling on these residues increased progressively until entry into mitosis, when tyrosine residues were markedly dephosphorylated. Phosphopeptide mapping of cdk2 demonstrated the major sites of phosphorylation were in a phosphopeptide with a pI of 3.7 that contained both phosphoserine and phosphotyrosine. This phosphopeptide accumulated in egg extracts blocked in S-phase with aphidicolin and was not evident in cdc2 immunoprecipitated under the same conditions. Under the same conditions cdc2 was phosphorylated primarily on a phosphopeptide containing both phosphothreonine and phosphotyrosine residues, most likely threonine 14 and tyrosine 15. Affinity-purified human GST-cdc25 was able to dephosphorylate and activate cdk2 isolated from interphase cells. Phosphopeptide mapping demonstrated that the phosphate was specifically removed from the same phosphopeptide identified as the major in vivo site of phosphorylation. These results demonstrate that cdk2 is regulated in the cell cycle by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation on both serine and tyrosine residues. Moreover, the increased phosphorylation of cdk2 in aphidicolin-blocked extracts and the ability of cdc25 to mediate cdk2 dephosphorylation in vitro suggest the possibility that cdk2 is part of the mechanism ensuring mitosis is not initiated until completion of DNA replication. It also implies cdc25 may have other functions in addition to the regulation of cdc2 kinase activity.  相似文献   

19.
Caldesmon is phosphorylated by cdc2 kinase during mitosis, resulting in the dissociation of caldesmon from microfilaments. To understand the physiological significance of phosphorylation, we generated a caldesmon mutant replacing all seven cdc2 phosphorylation sites with Ala, and examined effects of expression of the caldesmon mutant on M-phase progression. We found that microinjection of mutant caldesmon effectively blocked early cell division of Xenopus embryos. Similar, though less effective, inhibition of cytokinesis was observed with Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells microinjected with 7th mutant. When mutant caldesmon was introduced into CHO cells either by protein microinjection or by inducible expression, delay of M-phase entry was observed. Finally, we found that 7th mutant inhibited the disassembly of microfilaments during mitosis. Wild-type caldesmon, on the other hand, was much less potent in producing these three effects. Because mutant caldesmon did not inhibit cyclin B/cdc2 kinase activity, our results suggest that alterations in microfilament assembly caused by caldesmon phosphorylation are important for M-phase progression.  相似文献   

20.
The M-phase-specific cdc2 (cell division control) protein kinase (a component of the M-phase-promoting factor) was found to activate casein kinase II in vitro. The increase in casein kinase II activity ranged over 1.5-5-fold. Increase in activity was prevented if ATP was replaced during the activation reaction by a non-hydrolysable analogue. Alkaline phosphatase treatment of the activated enzyme decreased the activity to the basal level. The beta subunit of casein kinase II was phosphorylated by cdc2 protein kinase at site(s) different from the autophosphorylation sites of the enzyme. Phosphoamino acid analysis showed that the beta subunit was phosphorylated by cdc2 protein kinase at threonine residues while autophosphorylation involved serine residues. Casein kinase II may be part of the cascade which leads to increased phosphorylation of many proteins at M-phase and therefore be involved in the pleiotropic effects of M-phase-promoting factor.  相似文献   

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