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1.
Recently, we have partially purified and characterized a specific cell cycle-regulated cyclin B2 kinase (cyk) from prophase oocytes of Xenopus laevis after an ATP-gamma-S activation step (R. Derua, I. Stevens, E. Waelkens, A. Fernandez, N. Lamb, W. Merlevede, and J. Goris, 1997, Exp. Cell Res. 230, 310-324). In the present paper we describe its purification to homogeneity. We could identify the kinase as a special form of calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), consisting of five isoforms with molecular masses ranging from 52 to 83 kDa. At least three of them could be considered as novel. Using an in vivo assay with a synthetic peptide (cyktide), an activation of the kinase was shown at about 50% maturation. Further evidence for this observation came from the injection of the calcium chelator BAPTA and the specific cyk/CaMKII inhibitor AIP. A delay of oocyte maturation of at least 1 h was observed. Besides serine 53, a second cyk phosphorylation site in cyclin B2 was identified as threonine 41. Site-directed mutagenesis of these sites indicated that phosphorylation of these sites in Xenopus cyclin B2 was not required for the hallmark functions of cyclin B2.  相似文献   

2.
Mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) is a serine/threonine kinase whose enzymatic activity is thought to play a crucial role in mitogenic signal transduction and also in the progesterone-induced meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes. We have purified MAP kinase from Xenopus oocytes and have shown that the protein is present in metaphase ll oocytes under two different forms: an inactive 41-kD protein able to autoactivate and to autophosphorylate in vitro, and an active 42-kD kinase resolved into two tyrosine phosphorylated isoforms on 2D gels. During meiotic maturation, MAP kinase becomes tyrosine phosphorylated and activated following the activation of the M-phase promoting factor (MPF), a complex between the p34cdc2 kinase and cyclin B. In vivo, MAP kinase activity displays a different stability in metaphase l and in metaphase II: protein synthesis is required to maintain MAP kinase activity in metaphase I but not in metaphase II oocytes. Injection of either MPF or cyclin B into prophase oocytes promotes tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase, indicating that its activation is a downstream event of MPF activation. In contrast, injection of okadaic acid, which induces in vivo MPF activation, promotes only a very weak tyrosine phosphorylation of MAP kinase, suggesting that effectors other than MPF are required for the MAP kinase activation. Moreover, in the absence of protein synthesis, cyclin B and MPF are unable to promote in vivo activation of MAP kinase, indicating that this activation requires the synthesis of new protein(s). © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
Oocyte maturation is finally triggered by the maturation-promoting factor (MPF), which consists of Cdc2 and cyclin B. We have cloned cDNAs encoding frog (Rana japonica) cyclins B1 and B2 and produced antibodies against their products. Using the antibodies, we investigated changes in protein states and levels of Cdc2 and cyclins B1 and B2 during oocyte maturation. In immature oocytes, all Cdc2 was a monomeric unphosphorylated inactive 35 kDa form and neither cyclin B1 nor cyclin B2 was present. Mature oocytes contained the MPF complex consisting of an active 34 kDa Cdc2 phosphorylated on threonine161 and a 49 kDa cyclin B1 or a 51 kDa cyclin B2. After progesterone stimulation, both cyclins B1 and B2 were synthesized from their stored mRNAs and bound to the preexisting 35 kDa Cdc2. The binding of Cdc2 with cyclin B and its activation probably through the phosphorylation on threonine161 occurred at almost the same time, in accordance with an electrophoretic mobility shift of Cdc2 from 35 to 34 kDa. Microinjection into immature oocytes of cyclin B1 or B2 mRNA alone, or a mixture of them, induced germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) with similar dose-dependence. When the translation of endogenous mRNAs of both cyclins B1 and B2 was inhibited with antisense RNAs, progesterone failed to induce GVBD in the oocytes, but the inhibition of only one of the two was unable to inhibit the progesterone-induced GVBD. These results indicate that either cyclin B1 or B2 is necessary and sufficient for inducing GVBD during Rana oocyte maturation. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 50:499–509, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

4.
Microinjection of a bacterially expressed stable delta 90 sea urchin cyclin B into Xenopus prophase oocytes, in absence or presence of cycloheximide, provokes the activation of histone H1 kinase and the tyrosine dephosphorylation of p34cdc2. Unexpectedly, when prophase oocytes are submitted to a treatment known to elevate the intracellular cAMP level (3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine and cholera toxin), delta 90 cyclin has no effect and the oocytes remain blocked in prophase. This inhibition is reverted by the microinjection of the inhibitor of cAMP-dependent protein kinase. When delta 90 cyclin is microinjected into oocytes depleted of endogenous cyclins (cycloheximide-treated metaphase I) and in the presence of a high intracellular concentration of cAMP, p34cdc2 kinase is tyrosine rephosphorylated. Altogether, our results indicate that in Xenopus oocyte, cAMP-dependent protein kinase (A-kinase) controls the formation of the cyclin B/p34cdc2 complex which remains inactive and tyrosine phosphorylated.  相似文献   

5.
The molecular mechanisms underlying oocyte maturation in the annelid polychaetes Arenicola marina and Arenicola defodiens were investigated. In both species, a hitherto unidentified hormone triggers synchronous and rapid transition from prophase to metaphase, a maturation process which can be easily reproduced in vitro. Activation of a roscovitine- and olomoucine-sensitive M-phase-specific histone, H1 kinase, occurs during oocyte maturation. Using affinity chromatography on immobilized p9CKShs1, we purified CDK1 and cyclin B from oocyte extracts prepared from both phases and both species. In prophase, CDK1 is present both as an inactive, but Thr161-phosphorylated monomer, and as an inactive (Tyr15-phosphorylated) heterodimer with cyclin B. Prophase to metaphase transition is associated with complete tyrosine dephosphorylation of the cyclin B-associated CDK1, with phosphorylation of cyclin B, and with dramatic activation of the kinase activity of the CDK1/cyclin B complex. We propose that Arenicola oocytes may provide an ideal model system to investigate the acquisition of the ability of oocytes to be fertilized that occurs as oocyte shift from prophase to metaphase, an important physiological event, probably regulated by active CDK1/cyclin B.  相似文献   

6.
Using a polyclonal antibody raised against B2 cyclin from Xenopus laevis, we show that prophase-arrested Xenopus oocytes contain a stockpile of cyclin B2 protein. During progesterone-induced maturation, an increase in the synthesis of cyclin B2 is observed, although Western blotting experiments show that this new synthesis does not significantly increase the mass of cyclin over the maternal stockpile. In the oocyte cyclin B2 is already present in two forms which differ in the extent of phosphorylation, but the phosphorylated form becomes predominant as oocytes progress towards germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD), coincident with cdc2 protein kinase activation. These two events do not depend upon formation of a new complex between cyclin and cdc2 protein kinase, since these two proteins are already found associated in resting oocytes, prior to activation of the kinase.  相似文献   

7.
In most species, the meiotic cell cycle is arrested at the transition between prophase and metaphase through unclear somatic signals. Activation of the Cdc2-kinase component of maturation promoting factor (MPF) triggers germinal vesicle breakdown after the luteinizing hormone (LH) surge and reentry into the meiotic cell cycle. Although high levels of cAMP and activation of protein kinase A (PKA) play a critical role in maintaining an inactive Cdc2, the steps downstream of PKA in the oocyte remain unknown. Using a small-pool expression-screening strategy, we have isolated several putative PKA substrates from a mouse oocyte cDNA library. One of these clones encodes a Wee1-like kinase that prevents progesterone-induced oocyte maturation when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Unlike the widely expressed Wee1 and Myt1, mWee1B mRNA and its protein are expressed only in oocytes, and mRNA downregulation by RNAi injection in vitro or transgenic overexpression of RNAi in vivo causes a leaky meiotic arrest. Ser15 residue of mWee1B is the major PKA phosphorylation site in vitro, and the inhibitory effects of the kinase are enhanced when this residue is phosphorylated. Thus, mWee1B is a key MPF inhibitory kinase in mouse oocytes, functions downstream of PKA, and is required for maintaining meiotic arrest.  相似文献   

8.
Tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and cyclin B2 are present and physically associated in small growing stage IV oocytes (800 microns in diameter) of Xenopus laevis. Microinjection of M-phase promoting factor (MPF) into stage IV oocytes induces germinal vesicle breakdown and the activation of the kinase activity of the p34cdc2/cyclin B2 complex measured on p13suc1 beads. During the in vivo activation of MPF in stage IV oocytes, p34cdc2 tyrosine dephosphorylation is not detectable, in contrast to stage VI oocytes. Addition of cycloheximide in MPF-injected stage IV oocytes induces neither the inhibition of histone H1 kinase activity nor the cyclin B2 degradation. Therefore, the activation mechanism of histone H1 kinase in stage IV oocytes does not require detectable tyrosine dephosphorylation of p34cdc2. It is suggested rather that the tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 plays a role in inhibiting cyclin B2 degradation.  相似文献   

9.
The p34cdc2 protein kinase is a component of maturation-promoting factor, the master regulator of the cell cycle in all eukaryotes. The activity of p34cdc2 is itself tightly regulated by phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. Predicted regulatory phosphorylation sites of Xenopus p34cdc2 were mutated in vitro, and in vitro-transcribed RNAs were injected into Xenopus oocytes. The cdc2 single mutants Thr-14----Ala and Tyr-15----Phe did not induce germinal vesicle breakdown (BVBD) upon microinjection into oocytes. In contrast, the cdc2 double mutant Ala-14/Phe-15 did induce GVBD. Both the Ala-14 and Ala-14/Phe-15p34cdc2 mutants were shown to coimmunoprecipitate cyclin B1 and to phosphorylate histone H1 in immune complex kinase assays. Microinjection of antisense oligonucleotides to c-mosXe was used to demonstrate the role of mos protein synthesis in the induction of GVBD by the Ala-14/Phe-15 cdc2 mutant. Thr-161 was also mutated. p34cdc2 single mutants Ala-161 and Glu-161 and triple mutants Ala-14/Phe-15/Ala-161 and Ala-14/Phe-15/Glu-161 failed to induce GVBD in oocytes and showed a decreased binding to cyclin B1 in coimmunoprecipitations. Each of the cdc2 mutants was also assayed by coinjection with cyclin B1 or c-mosXe RNA into oocytes. Several of the cdc2 mutants were found to affect the kinetics of cyclin B1 and/or mos-induced GVBD upon coinjection, although none affected the rate of progesterone-induced maturation. We demonstrate here the significance of Thr-14, Tyr-15, and Thr-161 of p34cdc2 in Xenopus oocyte maturation. In addition, these results suggest a regulatory role for mosXe in induction of oocyte maturation by the cdc2 mutant Ala-14/Phe-15.  相似文献   

10.
H Kosako  Y Gotoh    E Nishida 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(9):2131-2138
MAP kinase kinase (MAPKK) has been identified as a protein factor that can induce phosphorylation and activation of inactive MAP kinase in vitro. In this study, we produced an anti-Xenopus MAPKK antibody that can specifically inhibit Xenopus MAPKK activity in vitro. Microinjection of this antibody into immature oocytes prevented progesterone-induced MAP kinase activation. Moreover, progesterone-induced histone H1 kinase activation and germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) were inhibited in the oocytes injected previously with this antibody. Furthermore, when a bacterially expressed Mos was introduced into immature oocytes, Mos-induced MAP kinase activation and GVBD were blocked in the oocytes injected with the anti-MAPKK antibody. These results show that MAPKK is responsible for the activation of MAP kinase in vivo and that the MAPKK/MAP kinase cascade plays a pivotal role in the MPF activation during the oocyte maturation process.  相似文献   

11.
The Cdc25C phosphatase is a key activator of Cdc2/cyclin B that controls M-phase entry in eukaryotic cells. Here we discuss the regulation of Cdc25C by phosphorylation during the meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes. In G2 arrested oocytes, Cdc25C is phosphorylated on Ser287 and associated with 14-3-3 proteins. Entry of the oocytes into M-phase of meiosis is triggered by progesterone, which activates a signaling pathway leading to the dephosphorylation of Ser287, probably mediated by the PP1 phosphatase. The activation of Cdc25C during oocyte maturation correlates also with its phosphorylation on multiple sites. These phosphorylations involve several signaling pathways, including Polo kinases and MAP kinases, and might require also the inhibition of the PP2A phosphatase. Finally, Cdc25C is further phosphorylated by its substrate Cdc2/cyclin B, as part of an auto-amplification loop that ensures the high Cdc2/cyclin B activity level required to drive the oocyte through the meiotic cell cycle.  相似文献   

12.
Fully grown immature oocytes acquire the ability to be fertilized with sperm after meiotic maturation, which is finally accomplished by the formation and activation of the maturation-promoting factor (MPF). MPF is the complex of Cdc2 and cyclin B, and its function in promoting metaphase is common among species. The Mos/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is also commonly activated during vertebrate oocyte maturation, but its function seems to be different among species. We investigated the function of the Mos/MAPK pathway during oocyte maturation of the frog Rana japonica. Although MAPK was activated in accordance with MPF activation during oocyte maturation, MPF activation and germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) was not initiated when the Mos/MAPK pathway was activated in immature oocytes by the injection of c-mos mRNA. Inhibition of Mos synthesis by c-mos antisense RNA and inactivation of MAPK by CL100 phosphatase did not prevent progesterone-induced MPF activation and GVBD. However, continuous MAPK activation and MAPK inhibition through oocyte maturation accelerated and delayed MPF activation, respectively. Furthermore, Mos induced a low level of cyclin B protein synthesis in immature oocytes without the aid of MAPK. These results suggest that the general function of the Mos/MAPK pathway, which is not essential for MPF activation and GVBD in Rana oocytes, is to enhance cyclin B translation by Mos itself and to stabilize cyclin B protein by MAPK during oocyte maturation.  相似文献   

13.
In mammalian oocytes, meiosis arrests at prophase I. Meiotic resumption requires activation of Maturation-Promoting Factor (MPF), comprised of a catalytic Cyclin-dependent kinase-1 (Cdk1) and a regulatory subunit cyclin B, and results in germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD). Cyclic AMP (cAMP)-mediated Protein Kinase A (PKA) activity sustains prophase arrest by inhibiting Cdk1. However, the link between PKA activity and MPF inhibition remains unclear. Cdc25 phosphatases can activate Cdks by removing inhibitory phosphates from Cdks. Thus one method for sustaining prophase arrest could be inhibition of the activity of the Cdc25 protein required for MPF activation. Indeed, studies in Xenopus identify Cdc25C as a target of PKA activity in meiosis. However, in mice, studies suggest that Cdc25B is the phosphatase essential for GVBD and, therefore, the likely target of PKA activity. To assess these questions, we targeted a potential PKA substrate, a highly conserved serine 321 residue of Cdc25B and evaluated the effect on oocyte maturation. A Cdc25B-Ser321Ala point mutant mRNA induces GVBD when injected into prophase-arrested oocytes more rapidly than wild type mRNA. Using fluorescently-tagged proteins we also determined that the mutant protein enters the nucleus more rapidly than its wildtype counterpart. These data suggest that phosphorylation of the Ser321 residue plays a key role in the negative regulation and localization of Cdc25B during prophase arrest. PKA also phosphorylates a wildtype Cdc25B protein but not a Ser321Ala mutant protein in vitro. Mutation of Ser321 in Cdc25B also affects its association with a sequestering protein, 14-3-3. Our studies suggest that Cdc25B is a direct target of PKA in prophase-arrested oocytes and that Cdc25B phosphorylation results in its inhibition and sequestration by the 14-3-3 protein.  相似文献   

14.
Haccard O  Jessus C 《EMBO reports》2006,7(3):321-325
Xenopus oocytes are arrested in meiotic prophase I. Progesterone induces the resumption of meiotic maturation, which requires continuous protein synthesis to bring about Cdc2 activation. The identification of the newly synthesized proteins has long been a goal. Two plausible candidates have received extensive study. The synthesis of cyclin B and of c-Mos, a kinase that activates the mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway in oocytes, is clearly upregulated by translational control in response to progesterone. Recent studies suggest that ablation of either c-Mos or cyclin B synthesis by antisense oligonucleotides does not block meiotic maturation. Here, however, we show that when both pathways are simultaneously inhibited, progesterone no longer triggers maturation; adding back either c-Mos or cyclin B restores meiotic maturation. We conclude that the specific synthesis of either B-type cyclins or c-Mos, induced by progesterone, is required to induce meiotic maturation. The two pathways seem to be functionally redundant.  相似文献   

15.
Xenopus laevis oocytes have been incubated or microinjected with cholera and diphtheria holotoxins or their respective isolated fragments A and B. Effects on progesterone-induced maturation, protein synthesis and cAMP levels were observed. Xenopus laevis oocytes were highly susceptible to cholera toxin upon incubation as evidenced by the increase of cAMP (two-fold increase in cAMP with 0.1 nM cholera toxin) and the blockade of progesterone-induced maturation. When isolated cholera toxin fragments A or B were incubated with oocytes, no activity could be detected. However, microinjection of cholera toxin fragment A into oocyte was able to mimic the effects of incubated holotoxin. Microinjection of cholera toxin B fragment was only effective at very high concentrations, probably due to trace contaminations by the A fragment. On the other hand, Xenopus laevis oocytes were very resistant to diphtheria toxin action upon incubation, a result attributable to lack of specific membrane receptors since, after microinjection of diphtheria toxin A fragment into oocytes, inhibition of protein synthesis was demonstrated. By simultaneous microinjection of highly radioactive adenine-labelled NAD and diphtheria toxin fragment A into oocytes, radioactive ADP ribosylation of the elongation factor 2 (EF2) was observed. It is proposed that Xenopus laevis oocytes provide a new experimental approach for studying the mechanisms of action of microbial toxins.  相似文献   

16.
During mitosis the Xenopus polo-like kinase 1 (Plx1) plays key roles in the activation of Cdc25C, in spindle assembly, and in cyclin B degradation. Previous work has shown that the activation of Plx1 requires phosphorylation on serine and threonine residues. In the present work, we demonstrate that replacement of Ser-128 or Thr-201 with a negatively charged aspartic acid residue (S128D or T201D) elevates Plx1 activity severalfold and that replacement of both Ser-128 and Thr-201 with Asp residues (S128D/T201D) increases Plx1 activity approximately 40-fold. Microinjection of mRNA encoding S128D/T201D Plx1 into Xenopus oocytes induced directly the activation of both Cdc25C and cyclin B-Cdc2. In egg extracts T201D Plx1 delayed the timing of deactivation of Cdc25C during exit from M phase and accelerated Cdc25C activation during entry into M phase. This supports the concept that Plx1 is a "trigger" kinase for the activation of Cdc25C during the G(2)/M transition. In addition, during anaphase T201D Plx1 reduced preferentially the degradation of cyclin B2 and delayed the reduction in Cdc2 histone H1 kinase activity. In early embryos S128D/T201D Plx1 resulted in arrest of cleavage and formation of multiple interphase nuclei. Consistent with these results, Plx1 was found to be localized on centrosomes at prophase, on spindles at metaphase, and at the midbody during cytokinesis. These results demonstrate that in Xenopus laevis activation of Plx1 is sufficient for the activation of Cdc25C at the initiation of mitosis and that inactivation of Plx1 is required for complete degradation of cyclin B2 after anaphase and completion of cytokinesis.  相似文献   

17.
Fully grown Xenopus oocytes are physiologically arrested at the G2/prophase border of the first meiotic division. Addition in vitro of progesterone or insulin causes release of the G2/prophase block and stimulates meiotic cell division of the oocyte, leading to maturation of the oocyte into an unfertilized egg. The possibility that the products of polyphosphoinositide breakdown, diacylglycerol and inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3-, are involved in oocyte maturation was investigated. Microinjection of IP3 into oocytes just prior to addition of progesterone or insulin accelerated the rate of germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) by up to 25%. Half-maximal acceleration occurred at an intracellular IP3 concentration of 1 microM. Treatment of oocytes with the diacylglycerol analog and tumor promoter, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (TPA) induced GVBD in the absence of hormone. Half-maximal induction of GVBD occurred with 150 nM TPA and was blocked by pretreatment of oocytes with 10 nM cholera toxin. Microinjection of highly purified protein kinase C from rat brain into oocytes did not induce maturation but markedly accelerated the rate of insulin-induced oocyte maturation. However, injection of the enzyme had no effect on progesterone action. In oocytes with a basal intracellular pH below 7.6, TPA increased intracellular pH, but GVBD occurred with TPA in Na-substituted medium. Neomycin, a putative inhibitor of polyphosphoinositide breakdown, reversibly inhibited insulin- but not progesterone-induced maturation. Half-maximal inhibition occurred at 1.6 mM neomycin. These results indicate that protein kinase C is capable of regulating oocyte maturation in Xenopus.  相似文献   

18.
Temporal control of messenger RNA (mRNA) translation is an important mechanism for regulating cellular, neuronal, and developmental processes. However, mechanisms that coordinate timing of translational activation remain largely unresolved. Full-grown oocytes arrest meiosis at prophase I and deposit dormant mRNAs. Of these, translational control of cyclin B1 mRNA in response to maturation-inducing hormone is important for normal progression of oocyte maturation, through which oocytes acquire fertility. In this study, we found that dormant cyclin B1 mRNA forms granules in the cytoplasm of zebrafish and mouse oocytes. Real-time imaging of translation revealed that the granules disassemble at the time of translational activation during maturation. Formation of cyclin B1 RNA granules requires binding of the mRNA to Pumilio1 protein and depends on actin filaments. Disruption of cyclin B1 RNA granules accelerated the timing of their translational activation after induction of maturation, whereas stabilization hindered translational activation. Thus, our results suggest that RNA granule formation is critical for the regulation of timing of translational activation.  相似文献   

19.
Previous work has demonstrated that the Xenopus protooncogene mosxe can induce the maturation of prophase-arrested Xenopus oocytes. Recently, we showed that mosxe can transform murine NIH3T3 fibroblasts, although it exhibited only 1-2% of the transforming activity of the v-mos oncogene. In this study we have investigated the ability of the v-mos protein to substitute for the mosxe protein in stimulating Xenopus oocytes to complete meiosis. Microinjection of in vitro synthesized RNAs encoding either the mosxe or v-mos proteins stimulates resting oocytes to undergo germinal vesicle breakdown. Microinjection of an antisense oligonucleotide spanning the initiation codon of the mosxe gene blocked progesterone-induced oocyte maturation. When oocytes were microinjected first with the mosxe antisense oligonucleotide, and subsequently with in vitro synthesized v-mos RNA, meiotic maturation was rescued as evidenced by germinal vesicle breakdown. The v-mos protein exhibited in vitro kinase activity when recovered by immunoprecipitation from either microinjected Xenopus oocytes or transfected monkey COS-1 cells; however, in parallel experiments, we were unable to detect in vitro kinase activity associated with the mosxe protein. Microinjection of in vitro synthesized v-mos RNA into cleaving Xenopus embryos resulted in mitotic arrest, demonstrating that the v-mos protein can function like the mosxe protein as a component of cytostatic factor. These results exemplify the apparently conflicting effects of the v-mos protein, namely, its ability to induce maturation of oocytes, its ability to arrest mitotic cleavage of Xenopus embryo, and its ability to transform mammalian fibroblasts.  相似文献   

20.
At the end of oogenesis, Xenopus laevis stage VI oocytes are arrested at the G2/M transition (prophase) waiting for progesterone to release the block and begin maturation. Progesterone triggers a cascade of phosphorylation events such as a decrease of pK(a) and an increase of maturating-promoting factor activity. Progression through meiosis was controlled by the sequential synthesis of several proteins. For instance, the MAPK kinase kinase c-Mos is the very first protein to be produced, whereas cyclin B1 appears only after meiosis I. After the meiotic cycles, the oocyte arrests at metaphase of meiosis II with an elevated c-Mos kinase activity (cytostatic factor). By using a two-hybrid screen, we have identified maskin, a protein involved in the control of mRNA sequential translation, as a binding partner of Aurora-A, a protein kinase necessary for oocyte maturation. Here we showed that, in vitro, Aurora-A directly binds to maskin and that both proteins can be co-immunoprecipitated from oocyte extracts, suggesting that they do associate in vivo. We also demonstrated that Aurora-A phosphorylates maskin on a Ser residue conserved in transforming acidic coiled coil proteins from Drosophila to human. When the phosphorylation of this Ser was inhibited in vivo by microinjection of synthetic peptides that mimic the maskin-phosphorylated sequence, we observed a premature maturation. Under these conditions, proteins such as cyclin B1 and Cdc6, which are normally detected only in meiosis II, were massively produced in meiosis I before the occurrence of the nuclear envelope breakdown. This result strongly suggests that phosphorylation of maskin by Aurora-A prevents meiosis II proteins from being produced during meiosis I.  相似文献   

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