首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 609 毫秒
1.
cdc25C is a phosphatase which regulates the activity of the mitosis promoting factor cyclin B/cdk1 by dephosphorylation, thus triggering G(2)/M transition. The activity and the sub-cellular localisation of cdc25C are regulated by phosphorylation. It is well accepted that cdc25C has to enter the nucleus to activate the cyclin B/cdk1 complex at G(2)/M transition. Here, we will show that cdc25C is located in the cytoplasm at defined dense structures, which according to immunofluorescence analysis, electron microscopy as well as biochemical subfractionation, are proven to be the centrosomes. Since cyclin B and cdk1 are also located at the centrosomes, this subfraction of cdc25C might participate in the control of the onset of mitosis suggesting a further role for cdc25C at the centrosomes.  相似文献   

2.
3.
We describe a reliable and efficient method for the purification of catalytically active and mutant inactive full-length forms of the human dual specificity phosphatase cdc25C from bacteria. The protocol involves isolating insoluble cdc25C protein in inclusion bodies, solubilization in guanidine HCL, and renaturation through rapid dilution into low salt buffer. After binding renatured proteins to an ion exchange resin, cdc25C elutes in two peaks at 350 and 450 mM NaCl. Analysis by gel exclusion chromatography and enzymatic assays reveals the highest phosphatase activity is associated with the 350 mM NaCl with little or no activity present in the 450 mM peak. Furthermore, active cdc25C has a native molecular mass of 220 kDa consistent with a potential tetrameric complex of the 55-kDa cdc25C protein. Assaying phosphatase activity against artificial substrates pNPP and 3-OMFP reveals a 220 kDa form of the phosphatase is active in a non-phosphorylated state. The protein effectively activates cdk1/cyclin B prokinase complexes in vitro in the absence of cdk1 kinase activity in an orthovanadate sensitive manner but is inactivated by A-kinase phosphorylation. In vitro phosphorylation of purified cdc25C by cdk1/cyclin B1, cdk2/cyclin A2 and cdk2/cyclin E shows that distinct TP/SP mitotic phosphorylation sites on cdc25C are differentially phosphorylated by these 3 cdk/cyclin complexes associated with different levels of cdc25C activation. Finally, we show that endogenous native cdc25C from human cells is present in high molecular weight complexes with other proteins and resolves mostly above 200-kDa. These data show that untagged cdc25C can be purified with a simple protocol as an active dual specificity phosphatase with a native molecular mass consistent with a homo-tetrameric configuration.  相似文献   

4.
The cdc25 tyrosine phosphatase is known to activate cdc2 kinase in the G2/M transition by dephosphorylation of tyrosine 15. To determine how entry into M-phase in eukaryotic cells is controlled, we have investigated the regulation of the cdc25 protein in Xenopus eggs and oocytes. Two closely related Xenopus cdc25 genes have been cloned and sequenced and specific antibodies generated. The cdc25 phosphatase activity oscillates in both meiotic and mitotic cell cycles, being low in interphase and high in M-phase. Increased activity of cdc25 at M-phase is accompanied by increased phosphorylation that retards electrophoretic mobility in gels from 76 to 92 kDa. Treatment of cdc25 with either phosphatase 1 or phosphatase 2A removes phosphate from cdc25, reverses the mobility shift, and decreases its ability to activate cdc2 kinase. Furthermore, the addition of okadaic acid to egg extracts arrested in S-phase by aphidicolin causes phosphorylation and activation of the cdc25 protein before cyclin B/cdc2 kinase activation. These results demonstrate that the activity of the cdc25 phosphatase at the G2/M transition is directly regulated through changes in its phosphorylation state.  相似文献   

5.
Entry into mitosis by mammalian cells is triggered by the activation of the cdc2/cyclin B holoenzyme. This is accomplished by the specific dephosphorylation of key residues by the cdc25C phosphatase. The polo-like kinases are a family of serine/threonine kinases which are also implicated in the control of mitotic events, but their exact regulatory mechanism is not known. Recently, a Xenopus homologue, PLX1, was reported to phosphorylate and activate cdc25, leading to activation of cdc2/cyclin B. Jurkat T leukemia cells were chemically arrested and used to verify that PLK protein expression and its phosphorylation state is regulated with respect to cell cycle phase (i.e., protein is undetectable at G1/S, accumulates at S phase and is modified at G2/M). Herein, we show for the first time that endogenous human PLK protein immunoprecipitated from the G2/M-arrested Jurkat cells directly phosphorylates human cdc25C. In addition, we demonstrate that recombinant human (rh) PLK also phosphorylates rhcdc25C in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Phosphorylation of endogenous cdc25C and recombinant cdc25C by PLK resulted in the activation of the phosphatase as assessed by dephosphorylation of cdc2/cyclin B. These data are the first to demonstrate that human PLK is capable of phosphorylating and positively regulating human cdc25C activity, allowing cdc25C to dephosphorylate inactive cdc2/cyclin B. As this event is required for cell cycle progression, we define at least one key regulatory mode of action for human PLK in the initiation of mitosis.  相似文献   

6.
Transforming Growth Factor-beta (TGFbeta) is known to be a negative regulator of G1 cyclin/cdk activity. It is not clear whether TGFbeta has any effect on G2 checkpoint kinases. We have found that TGFbeta downregulated the expression of several G2 checkpoint kinases including cdc2, cyclin B1, and cdc25c without causing cell accumulation in G2/M phases in two human leukemia cell lines. The inhibition was time-dependent with a maximal inhibition being observed by 24h for cyclin B1 and cdc2 and by 48h for cdc25c. The inhibition was not a result of G1 arrest but a direct effect of TGFbeta which downregulates their expression at mRNA level. In proliferating cells, there was a significant formation of cdc2-pRb complexes, which was decreased to 30% of control levels by 48h after initiating TGFbeta treatment. Cdc2 showed a marked kinase activity on GST-Rb protein in proliferating cells detected by in vitro kinase assay, which was downregulated in response to TGFbeta. In addition, TGFbeta caused a rapid and transient dephosphorylation of cdc2 (Tyr15) and cdc25c (Ser216) for about 2-3h before a dramatic decrease of both molecules by 48h. Taken together, our data suggest that TGFbeta has a direct inhibitory effect on G2 checkpoint kinases, which is regulated at mRNA level. The transient activation of cdc2 and cdc25c and subsequent inhibition of cdc2, cyclin B1, and cdc25c could amplify TGFbeta-induced G1 arrest and growth inhibition.  相似文献   

7.
Progression through G2 phase into mitosis is regulated by the activation of the mitotic cyclin/cdk complexes, which are in turn activated cdc25B and cdc25C phosphatases. Here we report that alternate splicing produces at least five variants of cdc25B, although only cdc25B2 and cdc25B3 are detectable as proteins. Analysis of these two variants shows that cdc25B2 is expressed at lower levels relative to cdc25B3 in all cell lines tested, and the expression of both increased markedly during G2 and mitosis. Overexpression of the catalytically inactive version of either cdc25B variant produced a G2 arrest implicating both in regulating G2/M progression.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The activity of the dual specificity phosphatase cdc25C is required for mitotic progression though the mechanisms by which cdc25C is activated prior to mitosis in human cells remain unclear. The data presented herein show that the actin binding protein Filamin A forms a complex with cdc25C in vivo and binds preferentially to the mitotic form of cdc25C. Co-expression of Filamin A with cdc25C results in an increase in PCC induced by cdc25C, while knocking down Filamin A expression reduces the levels of PCC induced by cdc25C overexpression. Further, only a Filamin A fragment that forms a complex with both cdc25C and cyclin B1 and retains the dimerization domain can stimulate the ability of cdc25C to induce PCC. These results suggest that Filamin A provides a platform for the assembly of the cyclin B1-cdk1- cdc25C complex resulting in cdk1 activation and mitotic progression.  相似文献   

10.
I Hoffmann  G Draetta    E Karsenti 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(18):4302-4310
Progression through the cell cycle is monitored at two major points: during the G1/S and the G2/M transitions. In most cells, the G2/M transition is regulated by the timing of p34cdc2 dephosphorylation which results in the activation of the kinase activity of the cdc2-cyclin B complex. The timing of p34cdc2 dephosphorylation is determined by the balance between the activity of the kinase that phosphorylates p34cdc2 (wee1 in human cells) and the opposing phosphatase (cdc25C). Both enzymes are regulated and it has been shown that cdc25C is phosphorylated and activated by the cdc2-cyclin B complex. This creates a positive feed-back loop providing a switch used to control the onset of mitosis. Here, we show that another member of the human cdc25 family, cdc25A, undergoes phosphorylation during S phase, resulting in an increase of its phosphatase activity. The phosphorylation of cdc25A is dependent on the activity of the cdc2-cyclin E kinase. Microinjection of anti-cdc25A antibodies into G1 cells blocks entry into S phase. These results indicate that the cdc25A phosphatase is required to enter S phase in human cells and suggest that this enzyme is part of an auto-amplification loop analogous to that described at the G2/M transition. We discuss the nature of the in vivo substrate of the cdc25A phosphatase in S phase and the possible implications for the regulation of S phase entry.  相似文献   

11.
In uninfected cells the G2/M transition is regulated by cyclin kinase complex containing cdc2 and, initially, cyclin A, followed by cyclin B. cdc2 is downregulated through phosphorylation by wee-1 and myt-1 and upregulated by cdc-25C phosphatase. We have examined the accumulation and activities of these proteins in cells infected with wild type and mutants of herpes simplex virus 1. The results were as follows. (i) Cyclin A and B levels were reduced beginning 4 h after infection and were undetectable at 12 to 16 h after infection. (ii) cdc2 protein also decreased in amount but was detectable at all times after infection. In addition, a fraction of cdc2 protein from infected cells exhibited altered electrophoretic mobility in denaturing gels. (iii) The levels of cdk7 or myt-1 proteins remained relatively constant throughout infection, whereas the level of wee-1 was significantly decreased. (iv) cdc-25C formed novel bands characterized by slower electrophoretic mobility that disappeared after treatment with phosphatase. In addition, one phosphatase-sensitive band reacted with MPM-2 antibody that recognizes a phosphoepitope phosphorylated exclusively in M phase. (v) cdc2 accumulating in infected cells exhibited kinase activity. The activity of cdc2 was higher in infected cell lysates than those of corresponding proteins present in lysates of mock-infected cells even though cyclins A and B were not detectable in lysates of infected cells. (vi) The decrease in the levels of cyclins A and B, the increase in activity of cdc2, and the hyperphosphorylation of cdc-25C were mediated by UL13 and α22/US1.5 gene products. In light of its normal functions, the activated cdc2 kinase may play a role in the changes in the morphology of the infected cell. These results are consistent with the accruing evidence that herpes simplex virus scavenges the cell for useful cell cycle proteins and subverts them for its own use.  相似文献   

12.
cdc25+ encodes a protein phosphatase that dephosphorylates p34cdc2.   总被引:38,自引:12,他引:26       下载免费PDF全文
To determine how the human cdc25 gene product acts to regulate p34cdc2 at the G2 to M transition, we have overproduced the full-length protein (cdc25Hs) as well as several deletion mutants in bacteria as glutathione-S-transferase fusion proteins. The wild-type cdc25Hs gene product was synthesized as an 80-kDa fusion protein (p80GST-cdc25) and was judged to be functional by several criteria: recombinant p80GST-cdc25 induced meiotic maturation of Xenopus oocytes in the presence of cycloheximide; p80GST-cdc25 activated histone H1 kinase activity upon addition to extracts prepared from Xenopus oocytes; p80GST-cdc25 activated p34cdc2/cyclin B complexes (prematuration promoting factor) in immune complex kinase assays performed in vitro; p80GST-cdc25 stimulated the tyrosine dephosphorylation of p34cdc2/cyclin complexes isolated from Xenopus oocyte extracts as well as from overproducing insect cells; and p80GST-cdc25 hydrolyzed p-nitrophenylphosphate. In addition, deletion analysis defined a functional domain residing within the carboxy-terminus of the cdc25Hs protein. Taken together, these results suggest that the cdc25Hs protein is itself a phosphatase and that it may function directly in the tyrosine dephosphorylation and activation of p34cdc2 at the G2 to M transition.  相似文献   

13.
The Vpr protein of primate lentiviruses arrests cell cycling at the G(2)/M phase through an inactivation of cyclin B-p34(cdc2) and its upstream regulator cdc25. We provide here biochemical and functional evidence demonstrating that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Vpr mediates G(2) arrest by forming a complex with protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), an upstream regulator of cdc25. Vpr associates with PP2A through a specific interaction with the B55 regulatory subunit. This interaction is necessary but not sufficient for G(2) arrest. Interestingly, we found that Vpr association with B55-containing PP2A targets the enzymatic complex to the nucleus and, importantly, enhances the recruitment and dephosphorylation of the cdc25 substrate. Our data suggest that Vpr mediates G(2) arrest by enhancing the nuclear import of PP2A and by positively modulating its catalytic activity towards active phosphorylated nuclear cdc25.  相似文献   

14.
M-phase Promoting Factor (MPF; the cyclin B-cdk 1 complex) is activated at M-phase onset by removal of inhibitory phosphorylation of cdk1 at thr-14 and tyr-15. At M-phase exit, MPF is destroyed by ubiquitin-dependent cyclin proteolysis. Thus, control of MPF activity via inhibitory phosphorylation is believed to be particularly crucial in regulating transition into, rather than out of, M-phase. Using the in vitro cell cycle system derived form Xenopus eggs, here we show, however, that inhibitory phosphorylation of cdk1 contributes to control MPF activity during M-phase exit. By sampling extracts at very short intervals during both meiotic and mitotic exit, we found that cyclin B1-associated cdk1 underwent transient inhibitory phosphorylation at tyr-15 and that cyclin B1-cdk1 activity fell more rapidly than the cyclin B1 content. Inhibitory phosphorylation of MPF correlated with phosphorylation changes of cdc25C, the MPF phosphatase, and physical interaction of cdk1 with wee1, the MPF kinase, during M-phase exit. MPF down-regulation required Ca(++)/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) activities at meiosis and mitosis exit, respectively. Treatment of M-phase extracts with a mutant cyclin B1-cdk1AF complex, refractory to inhibition by phosphorylation, impaired binding of the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C) to its co-activator Cdc20 and altered M-phase exit. Thus, timely M-phase exit requires a tight coupling of proteolysis-dependent and proteolysis-independent mechanisms of MPF inactivation.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.

Background

The dual specificity phosphatase cdc25C was the first human cdc25 family member found to be essential in the activation of cdk1/cyclin B1 that takes place at the entry into mitosis. Human cdc25C is phosphorylated on Proline-dependent SP and TP sites when it becomes active at mitosis and the prevalent model is that this phosphorylation/activation of cdc25C would be part of an amplification loop with cdk1/cyclin B1.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Using highly specific antibodies directed against cdc25C phospho-epitopes, pT67 and pT130, we show here that these two phospho-forms of cdc25C represent distinct pools with differential localization during human mitosis. Phosphorylation on T67 occurs from prophase and the cdc25C-pT67 phospho-isoform closely localizes with condensed chromosomes throughout mitosis. The phospho-T130 form of cdc25C arises in late G2 and associates predominantly with centrosomes from prophase to anaphase B where it colocalizes with Plk1. As shown by immunoprecipitation of each isoform, these two phospho-forms are not simultaneously phosphorylated on the other mitotic TP sites or associated with one another. Phospho-T67 cdc25C co-precipitates with MPM2-reactive proteins while pT130-cdc25C is associated with Plk1. Interaction and colocalization of phosphoT130-cdc25C with Plk1 demonstrate in living cells, that the sequence around pT130 acts as a true Polo Box Domain (PBD) binding site as previously identified from in vitro peptide screening studies. Overexpression of non-phosphorylatable alanine mutant forms for each isoform, but not wild type cdc25C, strongly impairs mitotic progression showing the functional requirement for each site-specific phosphorylation of cdc25C at mitosis.

Conclusions/Significance

These results show for the first time that in human mitosis, distinct phospho-isoforms of cdc25C exist with different localizations and interacting partners, thus implying that the long-standing model of a cdc25C/cdk1 multi-site auto amplification loop is implausible.  相似文献   

18.
Cellular differentiation of neoplastic cells after exposure to 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D(3) (1,25 D(3)) is accompanied by altered cell cycle regulation. In previous studies, blocks in both G(1)/S and G(2)/M checkpoints have been observed in 1,25D(3)-treated HL60 cells, but the mechanism of the 1,25D(3)-induced G(2)/M block has not been previously reported. In this study, we show by cell cycle analysis, using bromodeoxyuridine pulse-chase labeling, that the G(2)/M block in 1,25D(3)-treated HL60 cells is incomplete. We also demonstrate that although the 1,25D(3)-treated cells exhibit elevated levels of cyclin B1, Cdc25C, and Cdk7, which are positive regulators of the G(2)/M traverse, these cells have decreased protein levels of p34(cdc2) and decreased p34(cdc2) kinase activity. This provides potential mechanisms for the observed accumulation of cells in the G(2) cell cycle compartment and occasional polyploidization following treatment of HL60 cells with 1,25D(3). The data also suggest that the ability of some cells to traverse this block may be the result of cellular compensatory mechanisms responding to decreased p34(cdc2) activity by increasing the levels of other regulators of the G(2) traverse, such as cyclin B1, Cdc25C, and Cdk7.  相似文献   

19.
The cdc25 phosphatase is a mitotic inducer that activates p34cdc2 at the G2/M transition by dephosphorylation of Tyr15 in p34cdc2. cdc25 itself is also regulated through periodic changes in its phosphorylation state. To elucidate the mechanism for induction of mitosis, phosphorylation of cdc25 has been investigated using recombinant proteins. cdc25 is phosphorylated by both cyclin A/p34cdc2 and cyclin B/p34cdc2 at similar sets of multiple sites in vitro. This phosphorylation retards its electrophoretical mobility and activates its ability to increase cyclin B/p34cdc2 kinase activity three- to fourfold in vitro, as found for endogenous Xenopus cdc25 in M-phase extracts. The threonine and serine residues followed by proline that are conserved between Xenopus and human cdc25 have been mutated. Both the triple mutation of Thr48, Thr67, and Thr138 and the quintuple mutation of these three threonine residues plus Ser205 and Ser285, almost completely abolish the shift in electrophoretic mobility of cdc25 after incubation with M-phase extracts or phosphorylation by p34cdc2. These mutations inhibit the activation of cdc25 by phosphorylation with p34cdc2 by 70 and 90%, respectively. At physiological concentrations these mutants cannot activate cyclin B/p34cdc2 in cdc25-immunodepleted oocyte extracts, suggesting that a positive feed-back loop between cdc2 and cdc25 is necessary for the full activation of cyclin B/p34cdc2 that induces abrupt entry into mitosis in vivo.  相似文献   

20.
Current models suggest that cyclin B1/cdk1 regulates the G2 to M transition and that its activity is maximal during the period from prophase to metaphase in mammalian cells. Although data are lacking, the idea that cyclin B1/cdk1 regulates the transit time from prophase to metaphase is reasonable. Development of small molecule inhibitors of cyclin dependent kinases (cdk’s) as cancer therapeutics presents an opportunity to evaluate the effects of inhibiting cdk’s in asynchronous cell populations. Analysis of cdk1 inhibitors is complicated by their ability to inhibit other cdk’s in vitro at higher concentrations. In this study we measured the effects of two cdk1 inhibitors on S, G2, and M transit for Hela cells and correlated these effects on cyclin B1/cdk1 and cyclin A/cdk2 activities. Dose responses demonstrate that low concentrations of both compounds inhibited the activity of cdk1 but not cdk2 in HeLa cells. The partial loss of cdk1 activity at low doses induced a prophase accumulation during a 3 h period and an increased transit time through mitosis. In addition, both inhibitors lengthened the G2 transit time with progressively greater effect on mid and late G2. High doses of both inhibitors increased the S phase time, which correlated with the inhibition of cdk2 activity. These results suggest that cdk1-cyclin activity is rate limiting for cell cycle progression during a period from mid G2 through prophase.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号