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1.
We determined the expression and subcellular localization of nuclear protein NP95 during the cell cycle in mouse 3T3 cells. The levels of NP95 mRNA and protein were extremely low in quiescent cells; however, stimulation with 10% serum increased their expressions in a time course similar to that of the late growth-regulated gene proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Subnuclear location of NP95 dynamically changed during the cell cycle. Double immunostaining for NP95 and chromatin-bound PCNA, a marker of DNA replication sites, revealed that NP95 was almost exclusively colocalized with chromatin-bound PCNA throughout the nucleus in early S phase and partly in mid-S phase. Distinct localization of the two proteins, however, became evident in mid-S phase, and thereafter, many chromatin-bound PCNA foci not carrying NP95 foci could be detected. In G2 phase, nodular NP95 foci were still identified without any chromatin-bound PCNA foci. Chromatin-bound PCNA was observed as a pre-DNA replication complex at the G1/S boundary synchronized by hydroxyurea treatment, while NP95 was detected in nucleolar regions as unique large foci. There was no significant redistribution of NP95 foci shortly after DNA damage by gamma-irradiation. Nodular NP95 foci characteristically seen in G2 phase were also detected in G2-arrested cells following gamma-irradiation. Taken together, our results indicate that NP95 is assigned to a late growth-regulated gene and suggest that NP95 does not take a direct part in DNA replication as part of the DNA synthesizing machinery, like PCNA, but is presumably involved in other DNA replication-linked nuclear events.  相似文献   

2.
The expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), also called cyclin, was quantified in the cell lines SP2/0 and MOLT-4 and in mouse splenocytes induced to proliferate in vitro with mitogens. Autoantibody from a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus was used to label PCNA in cell suspensions after the cells had been fixed and permeabilized. In the same cells DNA was stained by propidium iodide. The cells were then analysed by flow cytometry for PCNA and DNA content. The PCNA profiles in proliferating spleen cells and the cell lines were similar. Most G0-G1 cells did not express significant amount of PCNA. A dramatic increase in PCNA immunofluorescence was observed in late G1 cells, and further increases were observed in S-phase cells. G2-M cells showed a reduced level of PCNA immunofluorescence relative to S-phase cells but were still elevated relative to G0-G1 cells. Proliferating cells arrested at the G1-S boundary by exposure to cytosine arabinoside showed an increased PCNA immunofluorescence as compared to unstimulated cells.  相似文献   

3.
Cell cycle-related proteins: a flow cytofluorometric study in human tumors   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We used 2-parameter flow cytometry (FCM) to investigate the relationship between the cell cycle phases and 3 proteins whose expression is known to increase in proliferating cells: the surface antigen transferrin receptor (Trf-r), the "cyclin" (a proliferating cell nuclear antigen, PCNA), and the nuclear antigen recognized by the monoclonal antibody (MoAb) Ki-67. FITC-labeled antibodies against Trf-r, PCNA, and the Ki-67-reactive antigen, as well as propidium iodide-DNA distribution, were simultaneously measured on human leukemia HL-60 and K562, and breast carcinoma MCF-7 cell lines and on fresh human leukemic and glioblastoma cells. The 70% ethanol fixation for Trf-r and PCNA and the 95% acetone fixation for Ki-67 plus permeabilization (with 0.1% and 1% Triton X100, respectively, for the surface and the nuclear antigens) produced cell suspensions with negligible cell clumping, high-quality DNA profiles, and bright specific immunofluorescent staining. The investigated proteins have different relationships with the proliferative state of the cell. Trf-r is expressed mainly at the transition from G0/G1 to S-phase. PCNA expression is prominent in late G1 and through S-phase and decreases in G2-M. The Ki-67-reactive antigen is widely distributed in G1, S, and G2-M phases. Knowledge regarding the relationships between proliferation-associated antigens and cell cycle phase in normal and neoplastic cells could improve our understanding of the mechanisms underlying growth regulation and neoplastic transformation. Bivariate FCM is an easy method for obtaining these data from large numbers of cells.  相似文献   

4.
The biochemical and cell cycle-dependent properties of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (OsPCNA) and flap endonuclease-1 (OsFEN-1) were characterized from rice (Oryza sativa). OsPCNA was physically associated with OsFEN-1 and increased the flap-endonuclease activity of OsFEN-1 by 2.5-fold. Northern and Western blotting analysis revealed that OsPCNA and OsFEN-1 were present in meristematic tissues such as cultured cells, shoot apical meristem and root apical meristem. No expression was detected in the mature leaves, although they were exposed to UV. Both of these proteins were localized in the nuclei of the interphase cells including G1, S and G2, and in the nuclear region at telophase. The distribution patterns of plant PCNA and FEN-1 in meiotic cell progression were investigated using microsporocytes of lily (Lilium longiflorum cv. Hinomoto). During the leptotene to pachytene stages, PCNA and FEN-1 were localized in the nuclear region. The florescence gradually disappeared from diplotene to metaphase I. Interestingly, signals for PCNA formed 10-20 intense spots at leptotene. The number of spots decreased to 1-5 at zygotene and finally to 1 at pachytene. The roles of OsPCNA and OsFEN-1 in mitotic and meiotic cell cycles are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
We previously obtained a monoclonal antibody (Th-10a mAb) that recognizes a single 95-kDa mouse nuclear protein (NP95). Immunostaining analyses revealed that the NP95 was specifically stained in the S phase of normal mouse thymocytes. In contrast, mouse T cell lymphoma cells exhibited a constantly high level of NP95 accumulation irrespective of cell stages during the cell cycle. In the present study, we isolated the cDNA encoding the NP95 from a λgt-11 cDNA expression library, using the Th-10a mAb. Sequencing of the whole 3.5-kb cDNA revealed that NP95 is a novel nuclear protein with an open reading frame (ORF) consisting of 782 amino acids. The ORF contains a zinc finger motif, a potential ATP/GTP binding site, a putative cyclin A/E-cdk2 phosphorylation site, and the retinoblastoma protein (RB)-binding motif ``IXCXE'. The chromosomal location of Np95 gene was determined by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Np95 gene locates on mouse Chromosome (Chr) 17DE1.1. and rat Chr 9q11.2–q12.1. Np95 was strongly expressed in the testis, spleen, thymus, and lung tissues, but not in the brain, liver, or skeletal muscles. These results collectively implicate this novel nuclear protein in cell cycle progression and/or DNA replication. Received: 24 June 1998 / Accepted: 12 August 1998  相似文献   

6.
Mitkova AV  Biswas EE  Biswas SB 《Biochemistry》2002,41(16):5255-5265
Plasmid DNA replication in nuclear extracts of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in vitro has been shown to be S-phase specific, similar to that observed in vivo. We report here a reconstituted in vitro system with partially purified replication proteins, purified replication protein A (RPA), and recombinant proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Nuclear extracts from S-phase, G(1)-phase, and unsynchronized yeast cells were fractionated by phosphocellulose chromatography. Protein fraction (polymerase fraction) enriched with replication proteins, including DNA polymerases (alpha, delta, etc.), was isolated, which was not capable of in vitro replication of supercoiled plasmid DNA. However, when purified yeast RPA and recombinant PCNA together were added to the polymerase fraction obtained from S-phase synchronized cells, in vitro plasmid DNA replication was restored. In vitro plasmid DNA replication with polymerase fractions from unsynchronized and G(1)-phase cells could not be reconstituted upon addition of purified RPA and PCNA. RPA and PCNA isolated from various phases of the cell cycle complemented the S-phase polymerase pool to the same extent. Reconstituted systems with the S-phase polymerase pool, complemented with either the RPA- and PCNA-containing fraction or purified RPA and recombinant PCNA together, were able to produce replication intermediates (ranging in size from 50 to 1500 bp) similar to that observed with the S-phase nuclear extract. Results presented here demonstrate that both RPA and PCNA are cell cycle-independent in their ability to stimulate in vitro plasmid DNA replication, whereas replication factors in the polymerase fractions are strictly S-phase dependent.  相似文献   

7.
In human cells APE1 is the major AP endonuclease and it has been reported to have no functional mitochondrial targeting sequence (MTS). We found that APE2 protein possesses a putative MTS. When its N-terminal 15 amino acid residues were fused to the N-terminus of green fluorescent protein and transiently expressed in HeLa cells the fusion protein was localized in the mitochondria. By electron microscopic immunocytochemistry we detected authentic APE2 protein in mitochondria from HeLa cells. Western blotting of the subcellular fraction of HeLa cells revealed most of the APE2 protein to be localized in the nuclei. We found a putative proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-binding motif in the C-terminal region of APE2 and showed this motif to be functional by immunoprecipitation and in vitro pull-down binding assays. Laser scanning immunofluorescence microscopy of HeLa cells demonstrated both APE2 and PCNA to form foci in the nucleus and also to be co-localized in some of the foci. The incubation of HeLa cells in HAT medium containing deoxyuridine significantly increased the number of foci in which both molecules were co-localized. Our results suggest that APE2 participates in both nuclear and mitochondrial BER and also that nuclear APE2 functions in the PCNA-dependent BER pathway.  相似文献   

8.
The aim of the present study was to investigate bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) uptake and coordinated distribution of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and p34-cdc2-kinase, two important proteins involved in cell cycle regulation and progression. Flow cytometric analysis of marker proteins in freshly plated mouse T-lymphoma cells (Yac-1 cells), using fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-labeled specific antibodies, showed PCNA distributed throughout the cell cycle with increased intensity in S-phase. PCNA is essential for cells to cycle through S-phase and its synthesis is initiated during late G1-phase before incorporation of BrdU and remains high during active DNA replication. The intensity of PCNA fluorescence increases with the duration of incubation after plating. The cdc2-kinase was detectable in all phases of the cell cycle and the G2-M-phase appears to have the maximum concentrations. The cell cycle analysis of high dose colcemid (2 μg/ml) treated Yac-1 cells showed an aneuploid or hypodiploid population. Although the G2-M-phase seems to be the dominating population in aneuploid cells, the concentrations of cdc2-kinase were variable in this phase of cell cycle. The colcemid treatment at 25 ng/ml arrested 96% of cells in S-phase and G2-M-phase, but PCNA expression was evident in a portion of the cell population in G2-M-phase. Although cells blocked in M-phase seem to have high levels of cdc2-kinase, colcemid renders them inactive. From these data, it appears that the down regulation and/or inactivation of cdc2-kinase could be responsible for the colcemid arrest of cells in M-phase.  相似文献   

9.
Cdt1, a protein essential in G1 for licensing of origins for DNA replication, is inhibited in S-phase, both by binding to geminin and degradation by proteasomes. Cdt1 is also degraded after DNA damage to stop licensing of new origins until after DNA repair. Phosphorylation of Cdt1 by cyclin-dependent kinases promotes its binding to SCF-Skp2 E3 ubiquitin ligase, but the Cdk2/Skp2-mediated pathway is not essential for the degradation of Cdt1. Here we show that the N terminus of Cdt1 contains a second degradation signal that is active after DNA damage and in S-phase and is dependent on the interaction of Cdt1 with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) through a PCNA binding motif. The degradation involves N-terminal ubiquitination and requires Cul4 and Ddb1 proteins, components of an E3 ubiquitin ligase implicated in protein degradation after DNA damage. Therefore PCNA, the matchmaker for many proteins involved in DNA and chromatin metabolism, also serves to promote the targeted degradation of associated proteins in S-phase or after DNA damage.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The cellular distribution of prothymosin alpha (ProT) was studied in ovarian follicles of adult cycling rats. We found positive granulosa and theca cells throughout follicular maturation. When both ProT and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) immunoreactivity was studied, we observed that both proteins were expressed in the same granulosa and theca cells, although sometimes ProT immunoreactivity was weak or absent in the mitotic (M) phase. Moreover, both peptides share the nuclear distribution, but ProT immunoreactivity was never seen in nucleoli. Therefore, we conclude that in mitotic cells ProT is expressed only in actively proliferating cells, since all ProT-positive cells were also positive for PCNA. ProT and PCNA immunoreactivities during the meiotic division were studied in oocytes. The presence of PCNA was, unlike ProT, constant throughout follicle development (except atretic oocytes). Oocytes expressed ProT from primordial follicles to the eighth generation, but more developed oocytes and atretic oocytes were not immunoreactive. In hypophysectomized rats, all oocytes were immunoreactive. Interestingly, in hypophysectomized rats treated with follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) that promoted follicle development, the more developed oocytes did not show ProT immunoreactivity. Since hypophysectomized rats were not treated with luteinizing hormone we conclude that ProT expression is not required to complete meiotic division I.  相似文献   

11.
DNA ligase I is thought to be essential for DNA replication, repair and recombination, at least in the mitotic cell cycle, but whether this is also the case during the meiotic cell cycle is still obscure. To investigate the role of DNA ligase I during the meiotic cell cycle, we cloned the Coprinus cinereus DNA ligase I cDNA (CcLIG1). Northern blotting analysis indicated that CcLIG1 is expressed not only in the premeiotic S-phase but also during the meiotic cell cycle itself. Especially, intense signals were observed in the leptotene and zygotene stages. Western blotting analysis indicated that CcLIG1 is expressed through the meiotic cell cycle and immunofluorescence also showed CcLIG1 protein staining in meiotic cells. Interestingly, the patterns was similar to that for the C. cinereus proliferating cell nuclear antigen gene (CcPCNA) and immunoprecipitation analysis suggested that CcPCNA binds to CcLIG1 in crude extracts of meiotic prophase I tissues. Based on these observations, relationships and roles during the meiotic cell cycle are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
MCL1 (ML1 myeloid cell leukemia 1), a Bcl-2 (B- cell lymphoma-leukemia 2) homologue, is known to function as an anti-apoptotic protein. Here we show in vitro and in vivo that MCL1 interacts with the cell cycle regulator, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). This finding prompted us to investigate whether MCL1, in addition to its anti-apoptotic function, has an effect on cell cycle progression. A bromodeoxyuridine uptake assay showed that the overexpression of MCL1 significantly inhibited the cell cycle progression through the S-phase. The S-phase of the cell cycle is also known to be regulated by PCNA. A mutant of MCL1 that lacks PCNA binding (MCL1(Delta)(4A)) could not inhibit cell cycle progression as effectively as wild type MCL1. In contrast, MCL1(Delta)(4A) retained its anti-apoptotic function in HeLa cells when challenged by Etoposide. In addition, the intracellular localization of MCL1(Delta)(4A) was identical to that of wild type MCL1. An in vitro pull-down assay suggested that MCL1 is the only Bcl-2 family protein to interact with PCNA. In fact, MCL1, not other Bcl-2 family proteins, contained the PCNA-binding motif described previously. Taken together, MCL1 is a regulator of both apoptosis and cell cycle progression, and the cell cycle regulatory function of MCL1 is mediated through its interaction with PCNA.  相似文献   

13.
DNA ligase I (Lig I) has key roles in chromosomal DNA replication and repair in the eukaryotic cell nucleus. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae the Lig I enzyme Cdc9p is also required for mitochondrial DNA replication and repair. In this report, dual nuclear–mitochondrial localization is demonstrated to be a property of the essential Lig I enzyme Cdc17 from the distantly related fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Expression of nuclear and mitochondrial forms of Cdc17 from separate genes shows that, whereas expression of either protein alone is insufficient to restore viability to cells lacking endogenous Cdc17, co-expression restores full viability. In the nucleus, Lig I interacts with the sliding clamp proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) via a conserved PCNA interacting sequence motif known as a PIP box. Deletion of the PIP motif from the N-terminus of the nuclear form of Cdc17 fails to abolish Cdc17 function, indicating that PCNA binding by Cdc17 is not an absolute requirement for completion of S-phase.  相似文献   

14.
The cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor roscovitine is under evaluation in clinical trials for its antiproliferative properties. Roscovitine arrests cell cycle progression in G1 and in G2 phase by inhibiting CDK2 and CDK1, and possibly CDK7 and CDK9. However, the effects of CDK2 inhibition in S-phase cells have been not fully investigated. Here, we show that a short-term treatment with roscovitine is sufficient to inhibit DNA synthesis, and to activate a DNA damage checkpoint response, as indicated by phosphorylation of p53-Ser15, replication protein A, and histone H2AX. Analysis of DNA replication proteins loaded onto DNA during S phase showed that the amount of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), a cofactor of DNA replication enzymes, was significantly reduced by roscovitine. In contrast, chromatin-bound levels of DNA polymerase δ, DNA ligase I and CDK2, were stabilized. Checkpoint inhibition with caffeine could rescue PCNA disassembly only partially, pointing to additional effects due to CDK2 inhibition and the presence of replication stress. These results suggest that in S-phase cells, roscovitine induces checkpoint-dependent and -independent effects, leading to stabilization of replication forks and an uncoupling between PCNA and PCNA-interacting proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The initiation of DNA replication in S phase requires the prior assembly of an origin recognition complex (ORC)-dependent pre-replicative complex on chromatin during G1 phase of the cell division cycle. In human cells, the Orc2 subunit localized to the nucleus as expected, but it also localized to centrosomes throughout the entire cell cycle. Furthermore, Orc2 was tightly bound to heterochromatin and heterochromatin protein 1alpha (HP1alpha) and HP1beta in G1 and early S phase, but during late S, G2 and M phases tight chromatin association was restricted to centromeres. Depletion of Orc2 by siRNA caused multiple phenotypes. A population of cells showed an S-phase defect with little proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) on chromatin, although MCM proteins remained. Orc2 depletion also disrupted HP1 localization, but not histone-H3-lysine-9 methylation at prominent heterochromatic foci. Another subset of Orc2-depleted cells containing replicated DNA arrested with abnormally condensed chromosomes, failed chromosome congression and multiple centrosomes. These results implicate Orc2 protein in chromosome duplication, chromosome structure and centrosome copy number control, suggesting that it coordinates all stages of the chromosome inheritance cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Synthesis of cyclin in serum-stimulated quiescent 3T3 cells increases shortly before DNA synthesis after 10 h of stimulation, reaching a maximum after 16 h. Inhibition of DNA synthesis by hydroxyurea does not affect the increase of cyclin following stimulation, as determined by quantitative two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The levels of cyclin decrease dramatically at the end of the S-phase. Cells kept in the presence of hydroxyurea (G1/S boundary) do not show this decrease in cyclin, indicating that its amounts are regulated by events occurring during the S-phase. Immunofluorescence studies of serum-stimulated quiescent cells in the presence of hydroxyurea, using proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) autoantibodies, confirm the results obtained by protein analysis. They also reveal that there are dramatic changes in the nuclear distribution of cyclin and that these depend on DNA synthesis or events occurring during the S-phase. Cyclin (PCNA) is no longer detectable at the end of the S-phase. However, pulse-chase experiments indicate that this protein is very stable, suggesting that it possibly interacts with other macromolecules rendering it inaccessible to the antibody. These results strengthen the notion that cyclin is an important component of the events leading to DNA replication and cell division.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is proving to be an useful and accurate model for eukaryotic DNA replication. It contains both DNA polymerase alpha (I) and delta (III). Recently, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), which in mammalian cells is an auxiliary subunit of DNA polymerase delta and is essential for in vitro leading strand SV40 DNA replication, was purified from yeast. We have now cloned the gene for yeast PCNA (POL30). The gene codes for an essential protein of 29 kDa, which shows 35% homology with human PCNA. Cell cycle expression studies, using synchronized cells, show that expression of both the PCNA (POL30) and the DNA polymerase delta (POL3, or CDC2) genes of yeast are regulated in an identical fashion to that of the DNA polymerase alpha (POL1) gene. Thus, steady state mRNA levels increase 10-100-fold in late G1 phase, peak in early S-phase, and decrease to low levels in late S-phase. In addition, in meiosis mRNA levels increase prior to initiation of premeiotic DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
The aim of the study was to determine the expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen protein (PCNA) in the pig ovary. The localization of PCNA was demonstrated in paraffin sections of pig ovarian tissue using primary mouse monoclonal anti-PCNA antibody. In primordial follicles, no remarkable staining for PCNA either in granulosa cells or in the oocytes was observed. In primary to secondary follicles, positive staining in oocytes and in some granulosa cells was detected. The advanced preantral and particularly actively growing small to large antral follicles showed extensive PCNA labeling in the layers of granulosa and theca cells and in the cumulus cells encircling the oocyte. PCNA labeling was expressed in nuclei of oocytes in preantral and small antral follicles. In atretic follicles, the level of PCNA protein expression was dependent on the stage of atresia. Follicles demonstrating advanced atresia showed only limited or no PCNA labeled granulosa and theca cells. The results of the study demonstrate that follicular growth and development in pig ovary may be effectively monitored by determining the granulosa cell expression of PCNA.  相似文献   

20.
Immunolocalization of cyclin/PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen) was performed with monoclonal antibody using immunogold methods on ultrathin cryosections of fertilized mouse eggs. Immunolabeling in pronuclei was checked 20, 22, 24 and 26 h after HCG injection. A relation between onset of pronuclei migration (early S-phase) and appearance of colloidal particle clusters was found. Afterwards, (mid S-phase) the increase of labelling and the localization of cyclin/PCNA were found throughout the pronuclei, except in the nucleolar bodies. Lower labelling appeared at the time of close reciprocal pronuclei contact (late S-phase). It is concluded that bulk and distribution of cyclin/PCNA in pronuclei is closely related to the progression of first interphase after fertilization.  相似文献   

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