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Most cells in the body are in a resting state and undergo cell cycle progression only upon growth factor stimulation or activation. While much research on proliferation and activation has been performed, very little about signals that maintain quiescent cells in G0 is known, preventing cell cycle entry or apoptosis. In this study, the pathways of apoptosis induction in quiescent peripheral blood cells and fibroblasts mediated by inhibition or down-regulation of Dipeptidyl Peptidase 2 (DPP2) have been explored. A decrease in DPP2 activity was found to cause resting cells to exit from G0, accompanied by a decrease in p130, p27Kip1 and p21Cip1 protein levels. In addition, DPP2-inhibited or down-regulated cells exhibit an increase in early G1/S progressors, with increases in the levels of retinoblastoma (pRb), p107 and cyclin D proteins. Furthermore, decrease of DPP2 activity leads to an increase in c-Myc and a decrease in Bcl-2, two events that have been associated with apoptosis induction. This apoptosis by DPP2 down-regulation is prevented in p53-/- cells or by ectopic expression of proteins that suppress p53 or c-Myc activity. Thus, DPP2 is essential for maintaining lymphocytes and fibroblasts in G0, and its inhibition results in apoptosis mediated by induction of c-Myc and p53.  相似文献   

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Mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) pathways are necessary for cell cycle progression into S phase; however the importance of these pathways after the restriction point is poorly understood. In this study, we examined the regulation and function of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and PI3K during G(2)/M in synchronized HeLa and NIH 3T3 cells. Phosphorylation and activation of both the MAP kinase kinase/ERK and PI3K/Akt pathways occur in late S and persist until the end of mitosis. Signaling was rapidly reversed by cell-permeable inhibitors, indicating that both pathways are continuously activated and rapidly cycle between active and inactive states during G(2)/M. The serum-dependent behavior of PI3K/Akt versus ERK pathway activation indicates that their mechanisms of regulation differ during G(2)/M. Effects of cell-permeable inhibitors and dominant-negative mutants show that both pathways are needed for mitotic progression. However, inhibiting the PI3K pathway interferes with cdc2 activation, cyclin B1 expression, and mitotic entry, whereas inhibiting the ERK pathway interferes with mitotic entry but has little effect on cdc2 activation and cyclin B1 and retards progression from metaphase to anaphase. Thus, our study provides novel evidence that ERK and PI3K pathways both promote cell cycle progression during G(2)/M but have different regulatory mechanisms and function at distinct times.  相似文献   

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Despite numerous studies on the tumor suppressor p53, a complete picture of its role in cell arrest and killing in G1, S and G2M phases after drug treatment is lacking. We tackled the analysis of the complexity of cell cycle effects combining the time-course measures with different techniques with the aid of a computer program simulating cell cycle progression. This mixed experimental-simulation approach enabled us to decode the dynamics of the cytostatic and cytotoxic responses to cisplatin and doxorubicin treatments in a p53-proficient colon carcinoma cell line (HCT-116) and in its p53-deficient counterpart. We achieved a separate evaluation of the activity of each cell cycle control and we connected these results with measures of p53 level in G1, S and G2M. We confirmed the action of p53 in all cell cycle phases, but also the presence of strong p53-independent cytostatic and cytotoxic activities exerted by both drugs. In G1 phase, p53 was responsible for a medium/long term block, distinct from the short-term block, which was p53-independent. The delay in traversing S phase was reduced by the presence of p53. In G2M phase, despite a strong p53-independent block, there was a weaker but more persistent p53-dependent block. At cytotoxic concentrations, p53-dependent and p53-independent cell death was observed. The former was poorly phase-specific, occurred earlier and exploited the apoptotic mechanism more than p53-independent death.Computer simulation produced a framework where previous partial and sometimes apparently contradictory observations of the p53-mediated effects could be reconciled and explained.  相似文献   

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Intracellular signaling by the second messenger Ca2+ through its receptor calmodulin (CaM) regulates cell function via the activation of CaM-dependent enzymes. Previous studies have shown that cell cycle progression at G1/S and G2/M is sensitive to intracellular CaM levels. However, little is known about the CaM-regulated enzymes involved. Protein phosphorylation has been shown to be important for cell-cycle regulation. Because CaM regulates several protein kinases, and at least one protein phosphatase, our studies are focusing on the roles of these enzymes within the cell cycle. As an initial approach to this problem, cDNAs encoding either normal or mutant calcium/calmodulin kinase II (CaMKII) have been expressed in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. The results show that overexpression of a constitutively active mutant CaMKII caused cell-cycle arrest in G2. Arrest was associated with a failure to activate the p34/cdc2 protein kinase. Expression of the mutant CaMKII in strains of S. pombe with altered timing of mitosis revealed that this effect is not mediated either by cdc25+ or wee1+, suggesting that CaMKII may regulate G2/M progression by another mechanism.  相似文献   

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In Drosophila and mammals, insulin signalling can increase growth, progression through G1/S, cell size and tissue size. Here, we analyse the way insulin affects cell size and cell-cycle progression in two haemocyte-derived Drosophila cell lines. Surprisingly, we find that although insulin increases cell size, it slows the rate at which these cells increase in number. By using BrdU pulse-chase to label S-phase cells and follow their progression through the cell cycle, we show that insulin delays progression through G2/M, thereby slowing cell division. The ability of insulin to slow progression through G2/M is independent of its ability to stimulate progression through G1/S, so is not a consequence of feedback by the cell-cycle machinery to maintain cell-cycle length. Insulin's effects on progression through G2/M are mediated by dTOR/dRaptor signalling. Partially inhibiting dTOR/dRaptor signalling by dsRNAi or mild rapamycin treatment can increase cell number in cultured haemocytes and the Drosophila wing, respectively. Thus, insulin signalling can influence cell number depending on a balance between its ability to accelerate progression through G1/S and delay progression through G2/M.  相似文献   

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Some hepatitis C virus (HCV) proteins, including core protein, deregulate the cell cycle of infected cells, thereby playing an important role in the viral pathogenesis of HCC. Thus far, there are only few studies that have deeply investigated in depth the effects of the HCV core protein expression on the progression through the G1/S and G2/M phases of the cell cycle. To shed light on the molecular mechanisms by which the HCV core protein modulates cell proliferation, we have examined its effects on cell cycle in hepatocarcinoma cells. We show here that HCV core protein perturbs progression through both the G1/S and the G2/M phases, by modulating the expression and the activity of several cell cycle regulatory proteins. In particular, our data provided evidence that core-dependent deregulation of the G1/S phase and its related cyclin-CDK complexes depends upon the ERK1/2 pathway. On the other hand, the viral protein also increases the activity of the cyclin B1-CDK1 complex via the p38 MAPK and JNK pathways. Moreover, we show that HCV core protein promotes nuclear import of cyclin B1, which is affected by the inhibition of both the p38 and the RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) activities. The important role of p38 MAPK in regulating G2/M phase transition has been previously documented. It is becoming clear that PKR has an important role in regulating both the G1/S and the G2/M phase, in which it induces M phase arrest. Based on our model, we now show, for the first time, that HCV core expression leads to deregulation of the mitotic checkpoint via a p38/PKR-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

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We have studied the ability of F9 teratocarcinoma cells to arrest in G1/S and G2/M checkpoints following gamma-irradiation. Wild-type p53 protein is rapidly accumulated in F9 cells after gamma-irradiation, however this is not followed by G1/S arrest; there is just a reversible delay of the cell cycle in G2/M. In order to elucidate the reasons of the lack of G1/S arrest in F9 cells we investigated the levels of regulatory cell cycle proteins: G1-cyclins, cyclin dependent kinases and kinase inhibitor p21WAF1/CIP1. We have shown that in spite of p53-dependent activation of p21WAF1/CIP1 promoter, p21WAF1/CIP1 protein is not revealed by different polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies, either by immunoblotting or by immunofluorescent staining. However, when cells are treated with specific proteasome inhibitor lactacystin, p21WAF1/CIP1 protein is revealed. We therefore suggest that p21WAF1/CIP1 protein is subjected to proteasome degradation in F9 cells and probably the lack of G1/S arrest after gamma-irradiation is due to this degradation. Thus, it is the combination of functionally active p53 with low level expression of p21WAF1/CIP1 that causes a short delay of the cell cycle progression in G2/M, rather than the G1-arrest after gamma-irradiation of F9 cells.  相似文献   

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B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) originates from B lymphocytes that may differ in the activation level, maturation state or cellular subgroups in peripheral blood. Tumour progression in CLL B cells seems to result in gradual accumulation of the clone of resting B lymphocytes in the early phases (G0/G1) of the cell cycle. The G1 phase is impaired in B-CLL. We investigated the gene expression of five key cell cycle regulators: TP 53, c-Myc, cyclin D2, p21WAF1/CIP1 and p27KIP1, which primarily regulate the G1 phase of the cell cycle, or S-phase entry and ultimately control the proliferation and cell growth as well as their role in B-CLL progression. The study was conducted in peripheral blood CLL lymphocytes of 40 previously untreated patients. Statistical analysis of correlations of TP53, cyclin D2, c-Myc, p21WAF1/CIP1 and p27KIP1 expressions in B-CLL patients with different Rai stages demonstrated that the progression of disease was accompanied by increases in p53, cyclin D2 and c-Myc mRNA expression. The expression of p27KIP1 was nearly statistically significant whereas that of p21 WAF1/CIP1 showed no such correlation. Moreover, high expression levels of TP53 and c-Myc genes were found to be closely associated with more aggressive forms of the disease requiring earlier therapy.  相似文献   

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Among the early events of induced differentiation of murine erythroleukemia cells that we studied was the variations of cell distribution in the cell cycle as a function of the time of induction. Flow-cytofluorimetry measurements of DNA content and BrdU incorporation allowed for a precise determination of the variations of the cell cycle parameters. Cells underwent a transient arrest in both G1 and G2 + M between 6 to 16 h of induction. The progression of the cells through S phase seems not to be affected during this period. After this time cells escaped from G1 and reentered the S phase. We described previously [S. Khochbin et al. (1988) J. Mol. Biol. 200, 55-64], that p53 decreased continuously during the induction of MELC and remained at a steady-state level after 18 to 20 h of induction. In order to look for a possible redistribution of the protein along the cell cycle during the induction process, we measured the accumulation of the protein along the cell cycle. In noninduced cells there were four steps in the accumulation of the protein throughout the cell cycle: the amount of p53 was constant during G1 and it increased as cells progressed through S phase, which is characterized by an increased accumulation at the G1/S transition and a more moderate accumulation during progression through the rest of the S phase. A constant level in G2/M, approximately twice that obtained in G1, was achieved. There was no change in this distribution that correlated with the various modifications of the cell cycle in induced cells. It seems then, that p53 is associated neither with the progression of the cells in the S phase nor with the resumption of the DNA synthesis after the G1 block.  相似文献   

12.
The human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) IE86 protein induces the human fibroblast cell cycle from G(0)/G(1) to G(1)/S, where cell cycle progression stops. Cells with a wild-type, mutated, or null p53 or cells with null p21 protein were transduced with replication-deficient adenoviruses expressing HCMV IE86 protein or cellular p53 or p21. Even though S-phase genes were activated in a p53 wild-type cell, IE86 protein also induced phospho-Ser(15) p53 and p21 independent of p14ARF but dependent on ATM kinase. These cells did not enter the S phase. In human p53 mutant, p53 null, or p21 null cells, IE86 protein did not up-regulate p21, cellular DNA synthesis was not inhibited, but cell division was inhibited. Cells accumulated in the G(2)/M phase, and there was increased cyclin-dependent kinase 1/cyclin B1 activity. Although the HCMV IE86 protein increases cellular E2F activity, it also blocks cell division in both p53(+/+) and p53(-/-) cells.  相似文献   

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B99 is a p53-inducible gene whose accumulation upon p53 activation is restricted to late S/G2 cells. Here we have analyzed B99 regulation during the cell cycle in murine cells with or without functional p53. We report that B99 accumulates in late S/G2 phase, is phosphorylated in mitosis, and disappears in G1 phase, regardless of the status of p53. As a complement to this observation, we show that B99 is not induced by p53 in quiescent cells. Therefore, B99 expression is modulated both by cell-cycle regulatory mechanisms and by p53, and p53 can increase the cellular levels of B99 only during the window of the cell cycle when it is normally expressed. On the basis of these observations we rename B99 Gtse-1 (G-two- and S-phase-expressed).  相似文献   

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The product of the c-myc gene (c-Myc) is a sequence-specific DNA-binding protein that has previously been demonstrated to be required for cell cycle progression. Here we report that the c-Myc DNA binding site confers cell cycle regulation to a reporter gene in Chinese hamster ovary cells. The observed transactivation was biphasic with a small increase in G1 and a marked increase during the S-to-G2/M transition of the cell cycle. This cell cycle regulation of transactivation potential is accounted for, in part, by regulatory phosphorylation of the c-Myc transactivation domain. Together, these data demonstrate that c-Myc may have an important role in the progression of cells through both the G1 and G2 phases of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

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Mutations in the tumor suppressor gene p53 were found in more than 90% of all human squamous cell carcinomas (SCC). To study the function of p53 in a keratinocyte background, a tetracycline-controlled p53 transgene was introduced into a human SCC cell line (SCC15), lacking endogenous p53. Conditional expression of wild-type p53 protein upon withdrawal of tetracycline was accompanied with increased expression of p21(WAF1/Cip1) resulting in reduced cell proliferation. Flow-cytometric analysis revealed that these cells were transiently arrested in the G1/S phase of the cell cycle. However, when SCC15 cells expressing p53 were exposed to ionizing radiation (IR), a clear shift from a G1/S to a G2/M cell cycle arrest was observed. This effect was greatly depending on the presence of wild-type p53, as it was not observed to the same extent in SCC15 cells lacking p53. Unexpectedly, the p53- and IR-dependent G2/M cell cycle arrest in the keratinocyte background was not depending on increased expression or stabilization of 14-3-3sigma, a p53-regulated effector of G2/M progression in colorectal cancer cells. In keratinocytes, 14-3-3sigma (stratifin) is involved in terminal differentiation and its cell cycle function in this cell type might diverge from the one it fulfills in other cellular backgrounds.  相似文献   

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The anticancer activity of selenium (Se) has been demonstrated in myriad animal and in vitro studies, yet the mechanisms remain obscure. The main form of Se in animal tissues is selenocysteine in selenoproteins, but the relative importance of selenoproteins versus smaller Se compounds in cancer protection is unresolved. Selenoprotein W (SEPW1) is a highly conserved protein ubiquitously expressed in animals, bacteria, and archaea. SEPW1 depletion causes a delay in cell cycle progression at the G1/S transition of the cell cycle in breast and prostate epithelial cells. Tumor suppressor protein p53 is a master regulator of cell cycle progression and is the most frequently mutated gene in human cancers. p53 was increased in SEPW1 silenced cells and was inversely correlated with SEPW1 mRNA in cell lines with altered SEPW1 expression. Silencing SEPW1 decreased ubiquitination of p53 and increased p53 half-life. SEPW1 silencing increased p21(Cip1/WAF1/CDKN1A), while p27 (Kip1/CDKN1B) levels were unaffected. G1-phase arrest from SEPW1 knockdown was abolished by silencing p53 or p21. Cell cycle arrest from SEPW1 silencing was not associated with activation of ATM or phosphorylation of Ser-15 in p53, suggesting the DNA damage response pathway was not involved. Silencing GPX1 had no effect on cell cycle, suggesting that G1-phase arrest from SEPW1 silencing was not due to loss of antioxidant protection. More research is required to identify the function of SEPW1 and how it affects stability of p53.  相似文献   

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