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1.
The accurate segregation of sister chromatids at the metaphase to anaphase transition in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is regulated by the activity of the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C). In the event of spindle damage or monopolar spindle attachment, the spindle checkpoint is activated and inhibits APC/C activity towards the anaphase inhibitor Pds1p, resulting in a cell cycle arrest at metaphase. We have identified a novel allele of a gene for an APC/C subunit, cdc16-183 , in S. cerevisiae. cdc16-183 mutants arrest at metaphase at 37°C, and are supersensitive to the spindle-damaging agent nocodazole, which activates the spindle checkpoint, at lower temperatures. This supersensitivity to nocodazole cannot be explained by impairment of the spindle checkpoint pathway, as cells respond normally to spindle damage with a stable metaphase arrest and high levels of Pds1p. Despite showing metaphase arrest at G2/M at 37°C, cdc16-183 mutants are able to perform tested G1 functions normally at this temperature. This is the first demonstration that a mutation in a core APC/C subunit can result in a MAD2-dependent arrest at the restrictive temperature. Our results suggest that the cdc16-183 mutant may have a novel APC/C defect(s) that mimics or activates the spindle checkpoint pathway.Communicated by C. P. Hollenberg  相似文献   

2.
The spindle assembly checkpoint monitors biorientation of chromosomes on the metaphase spindle and inhibits the Anaphase Promoting Complex (APC) specificity factor Cdc20. If APC-Cdc20 is the sole target of the spindle checkpoint, then cells lacking APC and its targets, B-type cyclin and securin, would lack spindle checkpoint function. We tested this hypothesis in yeast cells that are APC-null. Surprisingly, we find that such yeast cells are able to activate the spindle assembly checkpoint, delaying cell cycle progression in G2/M phase. These data suggest that the spindle checkpoint has a non-APC target that can restrain anaphase onset.  相似文献   

3.
In mitosis the checkpoint proteins ensure faithful chromosome segregation by delaying onset of anaphase until all sister chromatids align at the metaphase plate of the bipolar spindle correctly. In the present study we blocked the function of Bub1 during meiosis by microinjecting anti-Bub1 specific antibody into cytoplasm of mouse oocytes, and found that depletion of Bub1 induced evident cyclin B degradation and precocious anaphase onset. Bub1 suppression also overrode the checkpoint-dependent cell cycle arrest provoked by a low dosage of nocodazole. Furthermore, Bub1 depletion induced a significantly higher percentage of oocytes with misaligned chromosomes. In addition, we depicted the localization dynamics of Bub1 in response to spindle damage and its relationship with microtubules and chromosomes, providing further evidence for Bub1’s role as a spindle checkpoint protein. Our data suggest that Bub1 is a critical spindle checkpoint protein that regulates accurate chromosome alignment and homolog disjunction in mammalian oocyte meiosis.  相似文献   

4.
Cyclin A is a stable protein in S and G2 phases, but is destabilized when cells enter mitosis and is almost completely degraded before the metaphase to anaphase transition. Microinjection of antibodies against subunits of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) or against human Cdc20 (fizzy) arrested cells at metaphase and stabilized both cyclins A and B1. Cyclin A was efficiently polyubiquitylated by Cdc20 or Cdh1-activated APC/C in vitro, but in contrast to cyclin B1, the proteolysis of cyclin A was not delayed by the spindle assembly checkpoint. The degradation of cyclin B1 was accelerated by inhibition of the spindle assembly checkpoint. These data suggest that the APC/C is activated as cells enter mitosis and immediately targets cyclin A for degradation, whereas the spindle assembly checkpoint delays the degradation of cyclin B1 until the metaphase to anaphase transition. The "destruction box" (D-box) of cyclin A is 10-20 residues longer than that of cyclin B. Overexpression of wild-type cyclin A delayed the metaphase to anaphase transition, whereas expression of cyclin A mutants lacking a D-box arrested cells in anaphase.  相似文献   

5.
Here we discuss a “chromosome separation checkpoint” that might regulate the anaphase‐telophase transition. The concept of cell cycle checkpoints was originally proposed to account for extrinsic control mechanisms that ensure the order of cell cycle events. Several checkpoints have been shown to regulate major cell cycle transitions, namely at G1‐S and G2‐M. At the onset of mitosis, the prophase‐prometaphase transition is controlled by several potential checkpoints, including the antephase checkpoint, while the spindle assembly checkpoint guards the metaphase‐anaphase transition. Our hypothesis is based on the recently uncovered feedback control mechanism that delays chromosome decondensation and nuclear envelope reassembly until effective separation of sister chromatids during anaphase is achieved. A central player in this potential checkpoint is the establishment of a constitutive, midzone‐based Aurora B phosphorylation gradient that monitors the position of chromosomes along the spindle axis. We propose that this surveillance mechanism represents an additional step towards ensuring mitotic fidelity.  相似文献   

6.
A cDNA encoding a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme designated UbcP4 in fission yeast was isolated. Disruption of its genomic gene revealed that it was essential for cell viability. In vivo depletion of the UbcP4 protein demonstrated that it was necessary for cell cycle progression at two phases, G2/M and metaphase/anaphase transitions. The G2 arrest of UbcP4-depleted cells was dependent upon chk1, which mediates checkpoint pathway. UbcP4-depleted cells arrested at metaphase had condensed chromosomes but were defective in separation. However, septum formation and cytokinesis were not restrained during the metaphase arrest. Overexpression of UbcP4 specifically rescued the growth defect of cut9ts cells at a restrictive temperature. cut9 encodes a component of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) which is required for chromosome segregation at anaphase and moreover is defined as cyclin-specific ubiquitin ligase. Cdc13, a mitotic cyclin in fission yeast, was accumulated in the UbcP4-depleted cells. These results strongly suggested that UbcP4 is a ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme working in conjunction with APC and mediates the ubiquitin pathway for degradation of "sister chromatid holding protein(s)" at the onset of anaphase and possibly of mitotic cyclin at the exit of mitosis.  相似文献   

7.
《Cellular signalling》2014,26(10):2217-2222
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) monitors unsatisfied connections of microtubules to kinetochores and prevents anaphase onset by inhibition of the ubiquitin ligase E3 anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) in association with the activator Cdc20. Another APC/C activator, Cdh1, exists permanently throughout the cell cycle but it becomes active from telophase to G1. Here, we show that Cdh1 is partially active and mediates securin degradation even in SAC-active metaphase cells. Additionally, Cdh1 mediates Cdc20 degradation in metaphase, promoting formation of the APC/C-Cdh1. These results indicate that Cdh1 opposes the SAC and promotes anaphase transition.  相似文献   

8.
BubR1 (Bub1-related kinase or MAD3/Bub1b) is an essential component of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) and plays an important role in kinetochore localization of other spindle checkpoint proteins in mitosis. But its roles in mammalian oocyte meiosis are unclear. In the present study, we examined the expression, localization and function of BubR1 during mouse oocyte meiotic maturation. The expression level of BubR1 increased progressively from germinal vesicle to metaphase II stages. Immunofluorescent analysis showed that BubR1 localized to kinetochores from the germinal vesicle breakdown to the prometaphase I stages, co-localizing with polo-like kinase 1, while it disappeared from the kinetochores at the metaphase I stage. Spindle disruption by nocodazole treatment caused relocation of BubR1 to kinetochores at metaphase I, anaphase I and metaphase II stages; spindle microtubules were disrupted by low temperature treatment in the BubR1-depleted oocytes in meiosis I, suggesting that BubR1 monitors kinetochore-microtubule (K-MT) attachments. Over-expression of exogenous BubR1 arrested oocyte meiosis maturation at the M I stage or earlier; in contrast, dominant-negative BubR1 and BubR1 depletion accelerated meiotic progression. In the BubR1-depleted oocytes, higher percentage of chromosome misalignment was observed and more oocytes overrode the M I stage arrest induced by low concentration of nocodazole. Our data suggest that BubR1 is a spindle assembly checkpoint protein regulating meiotic progression of oocytes.  相似文献   

9.
In vertebrate unfertilized eggs, metaphase arrest in Meiosis II is mediated by an activity known as cytostatic factor (CSF). CSF arrest is dependent upon Mos-dependent activation of the MAPK/Rsk pathway, and Rsk activates the spindle checkpoint kinase Bub1, leading to inhibition of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), an E3 ubiquitin ligase required for the metaphase/anaphase transition. However, it is not known whether Bub1 is required for the establishment of CSF arrest or whether other pathways also contribute. Here, we show that immunodepletion of Bub1 from egg extracts blocks the ability of Mos to establish CSF arrest, and arrest can be restored by the addition of wild-type, but not kinase-dead, Bub1. The appearance of CSF arrest at Meiosis II may result from coexpression of cyclin E/Cdk2 with the MAPK/Bub1 pathway. Cyclin E/Cdk2 was able to cause metaphase arrest in egg extracts even in the absence of Mos and could also inhibit cyclin B degradation in oocytes when expressed at anaphase of Meiosis I. Once it has been established, metaphase arrest can be maintained in the absence of MAPK, Bub1, or cyclin E/Cdk2 activity. Both pathways are independent of each other, but each appears to block activation of the APC, which is required for cyclin B degradation and the metaphase/anaphase transition.  相似文献   

10.
11.
We recently reported that MEK1/2 plays an important role in microtubule organization and spindle pole tethering in mouse oocytes, but how the intracellular transport of this protein is regulated remains unknown. In the present study, we investigated the mechanisms of poleward MEK1/2 transport during the prometaphase I/metaphase I transition and MEK1/2 release from the spindle poles during the metaphase I/anaphase I transition in mouse oocytes. Firstly, we found that p-MEK1/2 was colocalized with dynactin at the spindle poles. Inhibition of the cytoplasmic dynein/dynactin complex by antibody microinjection blocked polar accumulation of p-MEK1/2 and caused obvious spindle abnormalities. Moreover, coimmunoprecipitation of p-MEK1/2 and dynein or dynactin from mouse oocyte extracts confirmed their association at metaphase I. Secondly, disruption of microtubules by nocodazole resulted in the failure of poleward p-MEK1/2 transport. Whereas, when the nocodazole-treated oocytes were recovered in fresh culture medium, the spindle reformed and p-MEK1/2 relocalized to the spindle poles. Finally, we examined the mechanism of p-MEK1/2 release from the spindle poles. In control oocytes, polar p-MEK1/2 was gradually released during metaphase I/anaphase I transition. By contrast, in the presence of nondegradable cyclin B (△90), p-MEK1/2 still remained at the spindle poles at anaphase I. Our results indicate that poleward MEK1/2 transport is a cytoplasmic dynein/dynactin-mediated and spindle microtubule-dependent intracellular movement, and that its subsequent anaphase release from spindle poles is dependent on cyclin B degradation.  相似文献   

12.
We propose a seven variable model with time delay in one of the variables for the cell cycle in higher eukaryotes. The model consists of four important phosphorylation-dephosphorylation (P-D) cycles that govern the cell cycle, namely Pre-MPF-MPF, Cdc25P-Cdc25, Wee1P-Wee1 and APCP-APC. Other variables are cyclin, free cyclin dependent kinase (Cdk) and mass. The mass acts as a G2/M checkpoint and the checkpoint is represented by a saddle node loop bifurcation. The key feature of the model is that a time lag has been introduced in the activation of anaphase promoting complex (APC) by maturation promoting factor (MPF). This is effected by treating MPF as a time-delayed variable in the activation step of APC. The time lag acts as a spindle checkpoint. Absence of time delay induces a bistability in our model. Time delay also brings about variability in G1 phase timings. The model also reproduces the mutant phenotype experiments on wee1 cells. Stochasticity has been introduced in the model to simulate the dependence of the cycle time on cell birth length. Mutant phenotypes in the stochastic model reproduce the experimental observations better than the deterministic model.  相似文献   

13.
Mitosis is a continuous process to separate replicated chromosomes into two daughter cells through prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. Although a number of methods have been established to synchronize cells at different phases of the cell cycle, it is difficult to synchronize cells at the specific phases, anaphase and telophase, during mitosis because of the short duration of anaphase. Here, we show that HeLa S3 cells in anaphase and in telophase are successfully enriched by treatment with a combination of low concentrations of the microtubule-depolymerizing agent nocodazole and the myosin II inhibitor blebbistatin. After 9-h release from thymidine block at G1/S phase, addition of nocodazole at 20 ng/ml but not 40 ng/ml ensures rapid release from the nocodazole arrest. Subsequently, the cells are cultured in the presence of 50 μM blebbistatin for 20 and 50 min to enrich cells in anaphase and telophase, respectively. Western blot analysis verifies down-regulation of phospho-histone H3-Ser10, phospho-Aurora A/B/C, and cyclin B1 during M-phase progression. Furthermore, we show how the electrophoretic mobility shifts of the Src-family kinases c-Yes and c-Src can change in each phase of mitosis. These results provide a useful synchronization method for biochemically examining protein dynamics during M-phase progression.  相似文献   

14.
《The Journal of cell biology》1994,125(6):1303-1312
CENP-E is a kinesin-like protein that binds to kinetochores through the early stages of mitosis, but after initiation of anaphase, it relocalizes to the overlapping microtubules in the midzone, ultimately concentration in the developing midbody. By immunoblotting of cells separated at various positions in the cell cycle using centrifugal elutriation, we show that CENP-E levels increase progressively across the cycle peaking at approximately 22,000 molecules/cell early in mitosis, followed by an abrupt (> 10 fold) loss at the end of mitosis. Pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine reveals that beyond a twofold increase in synthesis between G1 and G2, interphase accumulation results primarily from stabilization of CENP-E during S and G2. Despite localizing in the midbody during normal cell division, CENP-E loss at the end of mitosis is independent of cytokinesis, since complete blockage of division with cytochalasin has no affect on CENP-E loss at the M/G1 transition. Thus, like mitotic cyclins, CENP-E accumulation peaks before cell division, and it is specifically degraded at the end of mitosis. However, CENP-E degradation kinetically follows proteolysis of cyclin B in anaphase. Combined with cyclin A destruction before the end of metaphase, degradation of as yet unidentified components at the metaphase/anaphase transition, and cyclin B degradation at or after the anaphase transition, CENP-E destruction defines a fourth point in a mitotic cascade of timed proteolysis.  相似文献   

15.
In unfertilized eggs from vertebrates, the cell cycle is arrested in metaphase of the second meiotic division (metaphase II) until fertilization or activation. Maintenance of the long-term meiotic metaphase arrest requires mechanisms preventing the destruction of the maturation promoting factor (MPF) and the migration of the chromosomes. In frog oocytes, arrest in metaphase II (M II) is achieved by cytostatic factor (CSF) that stabilizes MPF, a heterodimer formed of cdc2 kinase and cyclin. At the metaphase/anaphase transition, a rapid proteolysis of cyclin is associated with MPF inactivation. In Drosophila, oocytes are arrested in metaphase I (M I); however, only mechanical forces generated by the chiasmata seem to prevent chromosome separation. Thus, entirely different mechanisms may be involved in the meiotic arrests in various species. We report here that in mouse oocytes a CSF-like activity is involved in the M II arrest (as observed in hybrids composed of fragments of metaphase II-arrested oocytes and activated mitotic mouse oocytes) and that the high activity of MPF is maintained through a continuous equilibrium between cyclin B synthesis and degradation. In addition, the presence of an intact metaphase spindle is required for cyclin B degradation. Finally, MPF activity is preferentially associated with the spindle after bisection of the oocyte. Taken together, these observations suggest that the mechanism maintaining the metaphase arrest in mouse oocytes involves an equilibrium between cyclin synthesis and degradation, probably controlled by CSF, and which is also dependent upon the three-dimensional organization of the spindle.  相似文献   

16.
E J Schott  M A Hoyt 《Genetics》1998,148(2):599-610
We identified an allele of Saccharomyces cerevisiae CDC20 that exhibits a spindle-assembly checkpoint defect. Previous studies indicated that loss of CDC20 function caused cell cycle arrest prior to the onset of anaphase. In contrast, CDC20-50 caused inappropriate cell cycle progression through M phase in the absence of mitotic spindle function. This effect of CDC20-50 was dominant over wild type and was eliminated by a second mutation causing loss of function, suggesting that it encodes an overactive form of Cdc20p. Overexpression of CDC20 was found to cause a similar checkpoint defect, causing bypass of the preanaphase arrest produced by either microtubule-depolymerizing compounds or MPS1 overexpression. CDC20 overexpression was also able to overcome the anaphase delay caused by high levels of the anaphase inhibitor Pds1p, but not a mutant form immune to anaphase-promoting complex- (APC-)mediated proteolysis. CDC20 overexpression was unable to promote anaphase in cells deficient in APC function. These findings suggest that Cdc20p is a limiting factor that promotes anaphase entry by antagonizing Pds1p. Cdc20p may promote the APC-dependent proteolytic degradation of Pds1p and other factors that act to inhibit cell cycle progression through mitosis.  相似文献   

17.
Anaphase, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis proceed in rapid succession, and while mitotic exit is a requirement for cytokinesis in yeast, it may not be a direct requirement for furrow initiation in animal cells. In this report, we physically manipulated the proximity of the mitotic apparatus (MA) to the cell cortex in combination with microinjection of effectors of the spindle checkpoint and CDK1 activity to determine how the initiation of cytokinesis is coupled to the onset of anaphase and mitotic exit. Whereas precocious contact between the MA and the cell surface advanced the onset of cytokinesis into early anaphase A, furrowing could not be advanced prior to the metaphase-anaphase transition. Additionally, while cells arrested in anaphase could be induced to initiate cleavage furrows, cells arrested in metaphase could not. Finally, activation of the mitotic checkpoint in one spindle of a binucleate cell failed to arrest cytokinesis induced by the control spindle but did inhibit the formation of furrows between the arrested MA and the control, nonarrested MA. Our experiments suggest that the competence of the mitotic apparatus to initiate cytokinesis is not dependent on cyclin degradation but does require anaphase-promoting complex (APC) activity and, thus, inactivation of the mitotic checkpoint.  相似文献   

18.
We provide evidence for an unusual behavior of the cyclin B homologue, p56, in the dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium cohnii. p56, of which we previously demonstrated the presence in this original eukaryotic protist, is present all along the cell cycle progression, and is exclusively cytoplasmic as revealed after immunofluorescence labeling with anti-p56 Ab and counterstaining with Dapi. It was never found in the nucleus as is the case in higher eukaryotic cells. During motosis, p56 was essentially associated with the mitotic apparatus: centrosomes and mitotic spindle, as shown after double immunofluorescence labeling with anti p56 and anti β-tubulin Ab. Using high pressure freeze fixation, we clearly detected in transmission electron microscopy (TEM) the localization of p56 cyclin B homologue and β-tubulin: single immunogold labeling demonstrated that p56 is localized along the whole cell cortex, along the cleavage furrow of anaphase to cytokinesis cells and into cytoplasmic channels passing throughout the mitotic nucleus where is located the mitotic spindle. Double immunogold labeling realized with anti-p56 and anti-β-tubulin antibodies confirm that p56 antigens colocalize with β-tubulin in many sites. The significance of the exclusively cytoplasmic localization of the cyclin B homologue is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Cyclin B1 should have some rate limiting function for cell cycle progression. To test this, we measured the effect of siRNA-mediated depletion of cyclin B1 on mitotic entry and timing. We depleted cyclin B1 in HeLa and hTert-RPE1 cells to levels equivalent or below those achieved in the telophase-to-G1 window. Average cyclin B1/Cdk1 activity was measured in HeLa cells and depleted by ~99%. In both cell lines, this caused ~20% increase in the G2 and ~20% increase the M traverse time. However, co-depletion of cyclin B1 and B2 induced a profound increase in G2 cells, a dramatic reduction in mitotic cells, and an increase in a 4C cycling population. We conclude that any residual levels of cyclin B1 were not sufficient to promote stable mitotic entry and transition in absence of normal levels of cyclin B2. Therefore, we conclude that B cyclin is necessary for mitosis but cyclin B1 is not. Nocodazole treated, cyclin B1-depleted HeLa cells arrested but exited that arrest at higher rates than controls, suggesting that the duration of the spindle checkpoint was affected. In B1 depleted cells, population growth was delayed but evidence of cell death was not consistently observed. A strong phenotype of mitotic chromosomal aberration was observed in HeLa cells depleted for either cyclin but not in RPE cells. In B1 or B2 depleted cells, maloriented chromosomes at metaphase were increased 10 fold and one third of affected metaphase cells entered anaphase without congression. Lagging chromosomes at anaphase were dramatically increased. The aggregate evidence from our study and others suggests that the common effect of cyclin B1 depletion is mild cell cycle perturbation. Lack of uniformity in other phenotypes suggest that these are low penetrance effects that are exacerbated or compensated in some systems by other mechanisms.  相似文献   

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