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1.
M phase-promoting factor (MPF) consists of a p34cdc2 (cdc2) kinase and cyclin B complex which in its active form promotes G2 to M transition. The role of MPF in G2 arrest following DNA damage, however, has remained largely uncharacterized. We have investigated whether nitrogen mustard (HN2) interfered with either the formation of MPF or its activation. For this purpose, we measured cdc2 kinase activity relative to cdc2 and cyclin B protein turnover and the phosphorylation status of cdc2. Studies were performed in two exceptional human lymphoma cell lines, which differed in HN2 sensitivity by 5-fold (CA46, 50% growth-inhibitory dose = 1.0 microM; JLP119, 50% growth-inhibitory dose = 0.2 microM) but exhibited virtually identical DNA interstrand and DNA-protein cross-link exposure. Following HN2 treatment, CA46 cells ceased to enter mitosis and exhibited a marked delay in G2 phase. Failure to enter mitosis paralleled inhibition of cdc2 kinase. Inhibition was not due to decreased levels of cdc2 or cyclin B protein; rather, G2 arrest correlated with the accumulation of both tyrosine-phosphorylated cdc2 and cyclin B. These findings implied that G2 arrest resulted from a down-regulation of the processes that activate MPF. We also found that JLP119 cells, within a few hours of mitosis at the time of drug treatment, evaded checkpoint control and continued cell division unabated by DNA damage. Furthermore, despite similar DNA cross-link exposure, JLP119 cells within the window of checkpoint control were more susceptible to S phase delay than CA46 cells. Altered cell cycle responses correlated with the greater susceptibility of JLP119 cells to the cytotoxic effects of HN2.  相似文献   

2.
Recent advances in cell biology indicate that the interactions between two proteins, cdc2 and cyclin, together with the activity of the cdc2/cyclin complex called MPF in the cytoplasm form the basis of a universal biochemical control mechanism for the cell division cycle in eukaryotes. Based on experimental facts that total cdc2 level is constant throughout the cell cycle and that onset of mitosis is subsequent to activation of MPF, we propose and analyze two different but related models — an ordinary differential equations model and a delay differential equations model — for the control of the early embryonic cell division cycle. Assuming very general reaction terms in the model equations, it is shown that MPF activation and rapid cyclin degradation triggered by active MPF drive cells to alternate between interphase and mitosis, the two phases of the cell cycle.S. Busenberg passed away on April 3, 1993 from complications of ALS (Lou Gehrig's disease). His research was supported by NSF Grant DMS-9112821Research was carried out at Harvey Mudd College and was supported by NSF Grant HRD-9252994  相似文献   

3.
Background Mitosis is regulated by MPF (maturation promoting factor), the active form of Cdc2/28–cyclin B complexes. Increasing levels of cyclin B abundance and the loss of inhibitory phosphates from Cdc2/28 drives cells into mitosis, whereas cyclin B destruction inactivates MPF and drives cells out of mitosis. Cells with defective spindles are arrested in mitosis by the spindle-assembly checkpoint, which prevents the destruction of mitotic cyclins and the inactivation of MPF. We have investigated the relationship between the spindle-assembly checkpoint, cyclin destruction, inhibitory phosphorylation of Cdc2/28, and exit from mitosis.Results The previously characterized budding yeast mad mutants lack the spindle-assembly checkpoint. Spindle depolymerization does not arrest them in mitosis because they cannot stabilize cyclin B. In contrast, a newly isolated mutant in the budding yeast CDC55 gene, which encodes a protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) regulatory subunit, shows a different checkpoint defect. In the presence of a defective spindle, these cells separate their sister chromatids and leave mitosis without inducing cyclin B destruction. Despite the persistence of B-type cyclins, cdc55 mutant cells inactivate MPF. Two experiments show that this inactivation is due to inhibitory phosphorylation on Cdc28: phosphotyrosine accumulates on Cdc28 in cdc55Δ cells whose spindles have been depolymerized, and a cdc28 mutant that lacks inhibitory phosphorylation sites on Cdc28 allows spindle defects to arrest cdc55 mutants in mitosis with active MPF and unseparated sister chromatids.Conclusions We conclude that perturbations of protein phosphatase activity allow MPF to be inactivated by inhibitory phosphorylation instead of by cyclin destruction. Under these conditions, sister chromatid separation appears to be regulated by MPF activity rather than by protein degradation. We discuss the role of PP2A and Cdc28 phosphorylation in cell-cycle control, and the possibility that the novel mitotic exit pathway plays a role in adaptation to prolonged activation of the spindle-assembly checkpoint.  相似文献   

4.
Some foreign proteins are produced in yeast in a cell cycle-dependent manner, but the cause of the cell cycle dependency is unknown. In this study, we found that Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells secreting high levels of mouse α-amylase have elongated buds and are delayed in cell cycle completion in mitosis. The delayed cell mitosis suggests that critical events during exit from mitosis might be disturbed. We found that the activities of PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A) and MPF (maturation-promoting factor) were reduced in α-amylase-oversecreting cells and that these cells showed a reduced level of assembly checkpoint protein Cdc55, compared to the accumulation in wild-type cells. MPF inactivation is due to inhibitory phosphorylation on Cdc28, as a cdc28 mutant which lacks an inhibitory phosphorylation site on Cdc28 prevents MPF inactivation and prevents the defective bud morphology induced by overproduction of α-amylase. Our data also suggest that high levels of α-amylase may downregulate PPH22, leading to cell lysis. In conclusion, overproduction of heterologous α-amylase in S. cerevisiae results in a negative regulation of PP2A, which causes mitotic delay and leads to cell lysis.  相似文献   

5.
M Dasso  J W Newport 《Cell》1990,61(5):811-823
During cell division complete DNA replication must occur before mitosis is initiated. Using a cell-free extract derived from Xenopus eggs that oscillates between S phase and mitosis, we have investigated how completion of DNA synthesis is coupled to the initiation of mitosis. We find that Xenopus eggs contain a feedback pathway which suppresses mitosis until replication is completed and that activation of this inhibitory system is dependent on the presence of a threshold concentration of unreplicated DNA. We demonstrate that in the presence of unreplicated DNA the active feedback system inhibits initiation of mitosis by blocking the activation of MPF, a regulator of mitosis found in all eukaryotic cells. Our results demonstrate that the feedback system does not inhibit MPF activation by blocking the synthesis or accumulation of cyclin protein, a subunit of MPF, or by blocking association of cyclin with the cdc2 subunit of MPF. We propose that the feedback system blocks mitosis by maintaining MPF in an inactive state by modulating posttranslational modifications critical for MPF activation.  相似文献   

6.
Previous work has shown that nimA encodes a cell cycle regulated protein kinase that is required along with the p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase (MPF) for mitosis in Aspergillus nidulans. We have now identified two other gene products required for mitosis in A.nidulans. nimT encodes a protein similar to the fission yeast cdc25 tyrosine phosphatase and is required for the conversion of pre-MPF to MPF and nimE encodes a B-type cyclin which is a subunit of MPF. A new genetic interaction between nimEcyclinB and nimTcdc25 type genes is reported. Increased copy number of nimEcyclinB can suppress mutation of nimTcdc25 and also lead to increased accumulation of tyrosine phosphorylated p34cdc2 (pre-MPF). This biochemical observation suggests an explanation for the genetic complementation. If nimEcyclinB recruits p34cdc2 for tyrosine phosphorylation to form pre-MPF it follows that increased expression of nimEcyclinB would increase the level of pre-MPF. The increased level of pre-MPF generated may then allow the mutant nimTcdc25 protein to convert enough pre-MPF to MPF and thus permit some mitotic progression. We also demonstrate that correct cell cycle regulation by the p34cdc2 protein kinase pathway is essential for correct developmental progression in A.nidulans.  相似文献   

7.
At the G2/M transition of the cell cycle, the cdc25c phosphatase dephosphorylates inhibitory residues of cdc2, and cyclin-B–cdc2 kinase (MPF) is activated. Phosphorylation of cyclin B1 induces its nuclear accumulation, and, since cdc25c is also believed to accumulate and activate shortly before G2/M in the nucleus, it has been proposed that this induces cyclin-B1–cdc2 kinase activation. We demonstrate that cyclin B1 phosphorylation has another essential function in vivo: it is required for cdc25c and MPF activation, which does not require nuclear accumulation of cyclin B1, and occurs in the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
Cyclins and their partners: from a simple idea to complicated reality.   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
The cyclins comprise a family of proteins which combine with protein kinase subunits encoded by members of the cdc2 family. The active protein kinase thus formed phosphorylates target proteins in the cell and promotes certain cell cycle transitions. Cyclins A and B show the unusual property of sudden and specific proteolysis shortly before the metaphase-anaphase transition during mitosis. The destruction of the cyclins leads to rapid loss of activity of their kinase companions. The 'simple idea' referred to in the title of this article was that accumulation of cyclin formed maturation promoting factor (MPF), the enzyme that promotes the G2-M transition, and cyclin destruction turned off MPF. The complexity refers to additional controls of cdc2 activity, such as its reversible phosphorylation. Furthermore, many new members of the cyclin family have recently been discovered that may play a role in the regulation of the G1-S transition, and in higher organisms, the cdc2 family is also more numerous than was at first appreciated. Cyclins make important contributions both to subcellular localization and the substrate specificity of their companion kinase subunits. It is too early to say if the entire range of cyclin-like and cdc2-like protein kinases are involved in the control of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

9.
Xenopus oocytes and the biochemistry of cell division   总被引:31,自引:0,他引:31  
J L Maller 《Biochemistry》1990,29(13):3157-3166
The control of cell proliferation involves both regulatory events initiated at the plasma membrane that control reentry into the cell cycle and intracellular biochemical changes that direct the process of cell division itself. Both of these aspects of cell growth control can be studied in Xenopus oocytes undergoing meiotic maturation in response to mitogenic stimulation. All mitogenic signaling pathways so far identified lead to the phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6 on serine residues, and the biochemistry of this event has been investigated. Insulin and other mitogens activate ribosomal protein S6 kinase II, which has been cloned and sequences in oocytes and other cells. This enzyme is activated by phosphorylation on serine and threonine residues by an insulin-stimulated protein kinase known as MAP-2 kinase. MAP kinase itself is also activated by direct phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues in vivo. These results reconstitute one step of the insulin signaling pathway evident shortly after insulin receptor binding at the membrane. Several hours after mitogenic stimulation, a cell cycle cytoplasmic control element is activated that is sufficient to cause entry into M phase. This control element, known as maturation-promoting factor or MPF, has been purified to near homogeneity and shown to consist of a complex between p34cdc2 protein kinase and cyclin B2. In addition to apparent phosphorylation of cyclin, regulation of MPF activity involves synthesis of the cyclin subunit and its periodic degradation at the metaphase----anaphase transition. The p34cdc2 kinase subunit is regulated by phosphorylation/dephosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues, being inactive when phosphorylated and active when dephosphorylated. Analysis of phosphorylation sides in histone H1 for p34cdc2 has revealed a consensus sequence of (K/R)S/TP(X)K/R, where the elements in parentheses are present in some but not all sites. Sites with such a consensus are specifically phosphorylated in mitosis and by MPF in the protooncogene pp60c-src. These results provide a link between cell cycle control and cell growth control and suggest that changes in cell adhesion and the cytoskeleton in mitosis may be regulated indirectly by MPF via protooncogene activation. S6 kinase II is also activated upon expression of MPF in cells, indicating that MPF is upstream of S6 kinase on the mitogenic signaling pathway. Further study both of the signaling events that lead to MPF activation and of the substrates for phosphorylation by MPF should lead to a comprehensive understanding of the biochemistry of cell division.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclin B targets p34cdc2 for tyrosine phosphorylation.   总被引:28,自引:7,他引:21       下载免费PDF全文
L Meijer  L Azzi    J Y Wang 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(6):1545-1554
A universal intracellular factor, the 'M phase-promoting factor' (MPF), triggers the G2/M transition of the cell cycle in all organisms. In late G2, it is present as an inactive complex of tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and unphosphorylated cyclin Bcdc13. In M phase, its activation as an active MPF displaying histone H1 kinase (H1K) originates from the concomitant tyrosine dephosphorylation of the p34cdc2 subunit and the phosphorylation of the cylin Bcdc13 subunit. We have investigated the role of cyclin in the formation of this complex and the tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2, using highly synchronous mitotic sea urchin eggs as a model. As cells leave the S phase and enter the G2 phase, a massive tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 occurs. This large p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation burst does not arise from a massive increase in p34cdc2 concentration. It even appears to affect only a fraction (non-immunoprecipitable by anti-PSTAIR antibodies) of the total p34cdc2 present in the cell. Several observations point to an extremely close association between accumulation of unphosphorylated cyclin and p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation: (i) both events coincide perfectly during the G2 phase; (ii) both tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and cyclin are not immunoprecipitated by anti-PSTAIR antibodies; (iii) accumulation of unphosphorylated cyclin by aphidicolin treatment of the cells, triggers a dramatic accumulation of tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2; and (iv) inhibition of cyclin synthesis by emetine inhibits p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation without affecting the p34cdc2 concentration. These results show that, as it is synthesized, cyclin B binds and recruits p34cdc2 for tyrosine phosphorylation; this inactive complex then requires the completion of DNA replication before it can be turned into fully active MPF. These results fully confirm recent data obtained in vitro with exogenous cyclin added to cycloheximide-treated Xenopus egg extracts.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
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   

13.
Cytoskeleton reorganization, leading to mitotic spindle formation, is an M-phase-specific event and is controlled by maturation promoting factor (MPF: p34cdc2–cyclinB1 complex). It has previously been demonstrated that the p34cdc2–cyclin B complex associates with mitotic spindle microtubules and that microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs), in particular MAP4, might be responsible for this interaction. In this study, we report that another ubiquitous MAP, TOG in human and its homologue in Xenopus XMAP215, associates also with p34cdc2 kinase and directs it to the microtubule cytoskeleton. Costaining of Xenopus cells with anti-TOGp and anti-cyclin B1 antibodies demonstrated colocalization in interphase cells and also with microtubules throughout the cell cycle. Cyclin B1, TOG/XMAP215, and p34cdc2 proteins were recovered in microtubule pellets isolated from Xenopus egg extracts and were eluted with the same ionic strength. Cosedimentation of cyclin B1 with in vitro polymerized microtubules was detected only in the presence of purified TOG protein. Using a recombinant C-terminal TOG fragment containing a Pro-rich region, we showed that this domain is sufficient to mediate cosedimentation of cyclin B1 with microtubules. Finally, we demonstrated interaction between TOG/XMAP215 and cyclin B1 by co-immunoprecipitation assays. As XMAP215 was shown to be the only identified assembly promoting MAP which increases the rapid turnover of microtubules, the TOG/XMAP215–cyclin B1 interaction may be important for regulation of microtubule dynamics at mitosis.  相似文献   

14.
Simian virus 40 (SV40) infection stimulates confluent cultures of monkey kidney cells into successive rounds of cellular DNA synthesis without intervening mitosis. As an initial step in defining the mechanisms responsible for viral inhibition of mitosis, M-phase-promoting factor (MPF) was examined in SV40-infected CV-1 cells passing from G2 phase into a second S phase. MPF is a serine-threonine protein kinase that is essential for mitosis in eukaryotic cells. In SV40-infected cells exiting G2 phase, there was a reduced amount of MPF-associated H1 kinase activity relative to that of uninfected cells passing through mitosis. Both subunits of MPF, cyclin B and the p34cdc2 catalytic subunit, were present and in a complex in infected cells. In uninfected cultures, passage through mitosis was associated with the dephosphorylation of the p34cdc2 subunit, which is characteristic of MPF activation. In contrast, the p34cdc2 subunit remained in the tyrosine-phosphorylated, inactive form in SV40-infected cells passing from G2 phase into a second S phase. These results suggest that although the MPF complex is assembled and modified normally, SV40 interferes with pathways leading to MPF activation.  相似文献   

15.
Some foreign proteins are produced in yeast in a cell cycle-dependent manner, but the cause of the cell cycle dependency is unknown. In this study, we found that Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells secreting high levels of mouse alpha-amylase have elongated buds and are delayed in cell cycle completion in mitosis. The delayed cell mitosis suggests that critical events during exit from mitosis might be disturbed. We found that the activities of PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A) and MPF (maturation-promoting factor) were reduced in alpha-amylase-oversecreting cells and that these cells showed a reduced level of assembly checkpoint protein Cdc55, compared to the accumulation in wild-type cells. MPF inactivation is due to inhibitory phosphorylation on Cdc28, as a cdc28 mutant which lacks an inhibitory phosphorylation site on Cdc28 prevents MPF inactivation and prevents the defective bud morphology induced by overproduction of alpha-amylase. Our data also suggest that high levels of alpha-amylase may downregulate PPH22, leading to cell lysis. In conclusion, overproduction of heterologous alpha-amylase in S. cerevisiae results in a negative regulation of PP2A, which causes mitotic delay and leads to cell lysis.  相似文献   

16.
Dog thyroid epithelial cells in primary culture constitute a model of positive control of DNA synthesis initiation and GO-S prereplicative phase progression by cyclic AMP as a second messenger for TSH. In its early steps, this mitogenic control is quite distinct from cyclic AMP-independent mitogenic cascades elicited by growth factors. We demonstrate here that TSH (cyclic AMP) and EGF + serum (cyclic AMP-independent) stimulations cooperate and finally converge on proteins that control the cell cycle machinery. This convergence included a common induction of the expression of cyclin A and p34cdc2, and to a lesser extent of p33/38cdk2, which was already expressed in quiescent thyroid cells, and common changes of cdc2 and CDK2 phosphorylations as evidenced by electrophoretic mobility shifts. Kinetic differences in these processes after stimulation by TSH or EGF + serum or by these factors in combination correlated with differences in cell cycle kinetics. Moreover, an immunofluorescence analysis of these proteins using the double labeling of PCNA as a marker of each cell cycle phase shows: (1) a previously undescribed nuclear translocation of CDK2 before S phase initiation; (2) a sudden increase of cdc2 nuclear immunoreactivity at G2/mitosis transition. These data support the roles of CDK2 and cdc2 at G1/S and G2/mitosis transitions, respectively. (3) We were unable to demonstrate in individual cells a strict association between the nuclear appearance of cyclin A and G1/S transition, and an association of cyclin A and CDK2 with PCNA-stained DNA replication sites. On the other hand, the lengthening of G2 phase in the TSH/cyclic AMP-dependent thyroid cell cycle was associated with a stabilization of Tyr15 inhibitory phosphorylation of cdc2 and an especially high nuclear concentration of cyclin A and CDK2. We hypothesize that high nuclear accumulation of cyclin A and CDK2 during G2 phase could be causative in the cyclic AMP-dependent delay of mitosis onset. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

17.
Although cell polyploidization is not an infrequent event in mammalian cells and is common in tumours, the mechanisms involved are not well understood. Using the murine B16 cell line as a model, we evaluated the role of some key proteins involved in cell cycle progression: p34cdc2, cyclin B1 and PCNA. By means of flow cytometry, we showed that both in modal- and in high-ploidy subpopulations, almost all cells were p34cdc2-positive. In the modal-ploidy subpopulation only 17.1% cells were cyclin B1-positive and 85.6% PCNA-positive; in contrast, in the high-ploidy subpopulation up to 91.8% cells were cyclin B1-positive and 97.3% cells were PCNA-positive (P < 0.001). Immunofluorescence microscopy showed that PCNA was located in the nucleus; p34cdc2, both in the nucleus and cytoplasm; and cyclin B1 yielded a cytoplasmic spotted pattern with a perinuclear reinforcement. After a 24-h incubation with 3[H]-thymidine followed by withdrawal of the isotope, high-ploidy cells remained labelled 8 days after thymidine withdrawal, in contrast to modalploidy cells. Taken together, our results suggest that polyploid cells are not quiescent, their cell cycle is longer than that of the modal-ploidy population, and they maintain cyclin B1 throughout the cycle, which may contribute to their genesis by impeding the exit from mitosis.  相似文献   

18.
Retinal progenitor cells undergo apical mitoses during the process of interkinetic nuclear migration and newly generated post-mitotic neurons migrate to their prospective retinal layer. Whereas this is valid for most types of retinal neurons, chicken horizontal cells are generated by delayed non-apical mitoses from dedicated progenitors. The regulation of such final cell cycle is not well understood and we have studied how Lim1 expressing horizontal progenitor cells (HPCs) exit the cell cycle. We have used markers for S- and G2/M-phase in combination with markers for cell cycle regulators Rb1, cyclin B1, cdc25C and p27Kip1 to characterise the final cell cycle of HPCs. The results show that Lim1+ HPCs are heterogenic with regards to when and during what phase they leave the final cell cycle. Not all horizontal cells were generated by a non-apical (basal) mitosis; instead, the HPCs exhibited three different behaviours during the final cell cycle. Thirty-five percent of the Lim1+ horizontal cells was estimated to be generated by non-apical mitoses. The other horizontal cells were either generated by an interkinetic nuclear migration with an apical mitosis or by a cell cycle with an S-phase that was not followed by any mitosis. Such cells remain with replicated DNA and may be regarded as somatic heteroploids. The observed heterogeneity of the final cell cycle was also seen in the expression of Rb1, cyclin B1, cdc25C and p27Kip1. Phosphorylated Rb1-Ser608 was restricted to the Lim1+ cells that entered S-phase while cyclin B1 and cdc25C were exclusively expressed in HPCs having a basal mitosis. Only HPCs that leave the cell cycle after an apical mitosis expressed p27Kip1. We speculate that the cell cycle heterogeneity with formation of heteroploid cells may present a cellular context that contributes to the suggested propensity of these cells to generate cancer when the retinoblastoma gene is mutated.  相似文献   

19.
We show that a splice variant–derived cyclin B is produced in sea urchin oocytes and embryos. This splice variant protein lacks highly conserved sequences in the COOH terminus of the protein. It is found strikingly abundant in growing oocytes and cells committed to differentiation during embryogenesis. Cyclin B splice variant (CBsv) protein associates weakly in the cell with Xenopus cdc2 and with budding yeast CDC28p. In contrast to classical cyclin B, CBsv very poorly complements a triple CLN deletion in budding yeast, and its microinjection prevents an initial step in MPF activation, leading to an important delay in oocyte meiosis reinitiation. CBsv microinjection in fertilized eggs induces cell cycle delay and abnormal development. We assume that CBsv is produced in growing oocytes to keep them in prophase, and during embryogenesis to slow down cell cycle in cells that will be committed to differentiation.Cyclins are a conserved family of proteins that play a central role in eukaryotic cell division cycle progression, as regulatory subunits of cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs, whose catalytic subunits are homologues of the fission yeast cdc2 protein).1 CDKs are downstream targets of convergent cascades of regulations at critical points of the cell cycle. M-phase–promoting factor (MPF, formerly maturation promoting factor, reference 21), the factor responsible for M-phase entry and progression in mitosis, has been purified three times by biochemical means (7, 19, 36). MPF from starfish, Xenopus, and carp oocytes has been found to be a heterodimer composed of one molecule of cdc2 and one molecule of cyclin B (CB). B type cyclins are archetypal mitotic cyclins, evolutively and functionally related to fission yeast cdc13p. Among CDKs, the regulation of MPF is by far the best understood today. Cyclin B is required for activity, as well for activation and for inhibition of MPF. The cdc2 monomer has never been found active. Its activation is conferred by the CAK-dependent T161-phosphorylation that requires cyclin B association (4, 28, 33). Inhibition of MPF during S- and G2-phases and also by the DNA replication checkpoint mechanism is achieved by wee1-catalyzed phosphorylation of the tyrosine 15 in cyclin B–bound molecules of cdc2 (9, 22). Cyclin B is also likely required for activation of the protein phosphatase cdc25p that specifically dephosphorylates tyrosine 15 and allows MPF amplification and entry into mitosis (5, 37). Finally, targeted proteolysis of cyclin B by an ubiquitin-dependent pathway is the mechanism by which MPF is inactivated and the cell returns to interphase (8). Therefore, the major part of MPF regulation is accounted for by cyclin B synthesis and proteolysis. This was emphasized in simplified early embryogenesis cycles that are composed of a succession of M- and S-phases without intervening G-phases. Cycles in acellular Xenopus egg extracts are driven by MPF as a basic oscillator, whose periodic activity is scheduled strictly by oscillating abundance of cyclin B (24). Accordingly, during the cleavage period of Xenopus embryogenesis, cdc2 tyrosine 15 is never found phosphorylated (3) and checkpoint mechanisms are downregulated.Site-directed mutagenesis as well as protein crystallization have allowed the mapping of some sequences in cyclins involved in these regulations. Crystal structure of the homologous dimer cdk2–cyclin A showed that the cyclin interacts with the cdk via sequences distributed along the so-called cyclin box, a sequence well conserved among all cyclins (14). In the NH2 terminus of mitotic cyclins A and B, a destruction box is required to allow ubiquitination of the protein and its targeted proteolysis in anaphase (8). Mutants that are deleted for this box are stable in mitosis, and their overexpression triggers mitotic arrest. Also in the NH2-terminal region of B type cyclins, a cytoplasmic retention signal (CRS) is presumed to account for differential early prophase localization of nuclear cyclin A and cytoplasmic cyclin B (27). A chimeric cyclin A with the first amino acids of cyclin B remains cytoplasmic until early prophase. Further on, at the beginning of the cyclin box, conserved amino acids in the P-box are thought to be involved in the specific activation of cdc2 by cdc25 (37). Finally, two reports showed that a short COOH-terminal deletion of recombinant cyclins A or B abolished the binding to cdc2 (17, 34), although this region was not found to be directly involved in the physical interaction between cyclin A and cdk2 (14).Here we show that such a COOH-terminal truncation, which removes universally conserved amino acids, is naturally realized in a splice variant of sea urchin cyclin B. Moreover, immunofluorescence experiments suggest this splice variant plays a role in embryogenesis and behaves like a marker of cell lineages in postcleavage embryos.  相似文献   

20.
Oocytes, eggs and embryos from the frog Xenopus laevis have been an important model system for studying cell-cycle regulation for several decades. First, progression through meiosis in the oocyte has been extensively investigated. Oocyte maturation has been shown to involve complex networks of signal transduction pathways, culminating in the cyclic activation and inactivation of Maturation Promoting Factor (MPF), composed of cyclin B and cdc2. After fertilisation, the early embryo undergoes rapid simplified cell cycles which have been recapitulated in cell-free extracts of Xenopus eggs. Experimental manipulation of these extracts has given a wealth of biochemical information about the cell cycle, particularly concerning DNA replication and mitosis. Finally, cells of older embryos adopt a more somatic-type cell cycle and have been used to study the balance between cell cycle and differentiation during development.  相似文献   

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