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 46 毫秒
1.
Downregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)-mitotic cyclin complexes is important during cell cycle progression and in G(1) arrested cells undergoing differentiation. srw1p, a member of the Fizzy-related protein family in fission yeast, is required for the degradation of cdc13p mitotic cyclin B during G(1) arrest. Here we show that srw1p is not required for the degradation of cdc13p during mitotic exit demonstrating that there are two systems operative at different stages of the cell cycle for cdc13p degradation, and that srw1p is phosphorylated by Cdk-cdc13p only becoming dephosphorylated during G(1) arrest. We propose that this phosphorylation targets srw1p for proteolysis and inhibits its activity to promote cdc13p turnover.  相似文献   

2.
Cdc20, an activator of the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase, initiates the destruction of key mitotic regulators to facilitate mitosis, while it is negatively regulated by the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) to prevent premature anaphase entry. Activation of the p38 mitogen‐activated protein kinase could contribute to mitotic arrest, but the underlying mechanism is unknown. Here we report a novel pathway in which the p38 signaling triggers Cdc20 destruction under SAC elicited by cadmium, a human carcinogen. We found that the cadmium‐induced prometaphase arrest was linked to decreased Cdc20 and accumulated cyclin A protein levels in human cells, whereas the activity of cyclin B1–Cdk1 was unaffected. The Cdc20 half‐life was markedly shortened along with its ubiquitination and degradation via 26S proteasome in cadmium‐treated asynchronous or G2‐enriched cells. Depletion of APC3 markedly suppressed the cadmium‐induced Cdc20 ubiquitination and proteolysis, while depletion of Cdh1, another activator of APC/C, did not. Intriguingly, blockage of p38 activity restored the Cdc20 levels for continuing mitosis under cadmium, while inhibition of JNK activity had no effect. The cadmium‐induced Cdc20 proteolysis was also suppressed during transient depletion of p38α or stable expression a dominant negative form of p38. Inhibition of p38 abolished the induction of Mad2–Cdc20–APC3 complex by cadmium. Moreover, forced expression of MKK6–p38 signaling could promote Cdc20 degradation in a Cdh1‐independent APC/C pathway. In summary, accelerated ubiquitination and proteolysis of Cdc20 is essential for prometaphase arrest that is mediated via the p38 signaling during SAC activation. J. Cell. Physiol. 223: 327–334, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The p53 tumor suppressor responds to chemotherapeutic stress by triggering apoptosis or eliciting pro-survival pathway through arresting cell cycle progression for DNA damage repair. Here we examined the pro-survival activity of p53 on the adriamycin-induced stress using H1299 cells stably expressing tsp53 V143A, a temperature-sensitive mutant activating only the subset of p53 target genes related to growth arrest and DNA repair, but not apoptosis. At 38 degrees C, cells evaded from adriamycin-induced G2 arrest and died of apoptosis and mitotic catastrophe, which could be inhibited by Cdk inhibitors. Activation of functional tsp53 V143A at 32 degrees C led to suppression of Cdk1/2 activities and Cyclin B1/Cdk1 expression, cells exhibited prolonged G2 arrest, regained reproductive potential and were protected from mitotic catastrophe induced by adriamycin. Inhibition of mitotic catastrophe and Cyclin B1/Cdk1 expression was ablated upon silencing p21 Waf1 expression in tsp53 V143A-H1299 cells or in HCT116 cells. Together we show that p21 Waf1 is a key component of G2 checkpoint necessary and sufficient for protecting tumor cells against adriamycin-induced mitotic catastrophe.  相似文献   

5.
Some hepatitis C virus (HCV) proteins, including core protein, deregulate the cell cycle of infected cells, thereby playing an important role in the viral pathogenesis of HCC. Thus far, there are only few studies that have deeply investigated in depth the effects of the HCV core protein expression on the progression through the G1/S and G2/M phases of the cell cycle. To shed light on the molecular mechanisms by which the HCV core protein modulates cell proliferation, we have examined its effects on cell cycle in hepatocarcinoma cells. We show here that HCV core protein perturbs progression through both the G1/S and the G2/M phases, by modulating the expression and the activity of several cell cycle regulatory proteins. In particular, our data provided evidence that core-dependent deregulation of the G1/S phase and its related cyclin-CDK complexes depends upon the ERK1/2 pathway. On the other hand, the viral protein also increases the activity of the cyclin B1-CDK1 complex via the p38 MAPK and JNK pathways. Moreover, we show that HCV core protein promotes nuclear import of cyclin B1, which is affected by the inhibition of both the p38 and the RNA-dependent protein kinase (PKR) activities. The important role of p38 MAPK in regulating G2/M phase transition has been previously documented. It is becoming clear that PKR has an important role in regulating both the G1/S and the G2/M phase, in which it induces M phase arrest. Based on our model, we now show, for the first time, that HCV core expression leads to deregulation of the mitotic checkpoint via a p38/PKR-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

6.
We investigated the effect of Adriamycin on FL-amnion (FL) cells. After treatment with the drug, the cells arrested at G2, but we did not detect an increase in the p21 levels. We established a p53-deficient derivative of these cells, in which G2 arrest also occurred after treatment with Adriamycin, suggesting that the arrest we observed in these cells is independent of the p53 pathway. Low doses of Adriamycin (100-200 ng/ml) induced G2 arrest, while late S-phase arrest was observed at high doses (500-1000 ng/ml) in both FL and p53-deficient FL cells. Accumulation of cyclin B1 was detected only in cells arrested at G2, and not in those arrested at S phase, suggesting that the S-phase checkpoint functioned efficiently even in p53-deficient FL cells. In both cell lines, caffeine-induced activation of CDC2 kinase was detected only in cells arrested at G2 and CDC2 kinase-activated cells died exhibiting features of apoptosis. CDC2 kinase activation was inhibited by cycloheximide. Furthermore, cycloheximide inhibited activation of CDK2:cyclin A, which normally precedes CDC2 kinase activation in caffeine-treated cells. These results suggest that p53 and p21 do not have special roles in the S- and G2-phase checkpoints and that CDK2:cyclin A could be the target of the G2-phase DNA damage checkpoint.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Loss of centrosome integrity induces p38-p53-p21-dependent G1-S arrest   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Centrosomes organize the microtubule cytoskeleton for both interphase and mitotic functions. They are implicated in cell-cycle progression but the mechanism is unknown. Here, we show that depletion of 14 out of 15 centrosome proteins arrests human diploid cells in G1 with reduced Cdk2-cyclin A activity and that expression of a centrosome-disrupting dominant-negative construct gives similar results. Cell-cycle arrest is always accompanied by defects in centrosome structure and function (for example, duplication and primary cilia assembly). The arrest occurs from within G1, excluding contributions from mitosis and cytokinesis. The arrest requires p38, p53 and p21, and is preceded by p38-dependent activation and centrosomal recruitment of p53. p53-deficient cells fail to arrest, leading to centrosome and spindle dysfunction and aneuploidy. We propose that loss of centrosome integrity activates a checkpoint that inhibits G1-S progression. This model satisfies the definition of a checkpoint in having three elements: a perturbation that is sensed, a transducer (p53) and a receiver (p21).  相似文献   

9.
Most cell lines that lack functional p53 protein are arrested in the G2 phase of the cell cycle due to DNA damage. When the G2 checkpoint is abrogated, these cells are forced into mitotic catastrophe. A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells, in which p53 was eliminated with the HPV16 E6 gene, exhibited efficient arrest in the G2 phase when treated with adriamycin. Administration of caffeine to G2-arrested cells induced a drastic change in cell phenotype, the nature of which depended on the status of p53. Flow cytometric and microscopic observations revealed that cells that either contained or lacked p53 resumed their cell cycles and entered mitosis upon caffeine treatment. However, transit to the M phase was slower in p53-negative cells than in p53-positive cells. Consistent with these observations, CDK1 activity was maintained at high levels, along with stable cyclin B1, in p53-negative cells. The addition of butyrolactone I, which is an inhibitor of CDK1 and CDK2, to the p53-negative cells reduced the floating round cell population and induced the disappearance of cyclin B1. These results suggest a relationship between the p53 pathway and the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of mitotic cyclins and possible cross-talk between the G2-DNA damage checkpoint and the mitotic checkpoint.  相似文献   

10.
The spindle assembly checkpoint prevents cells from initiating anaphase until the spindle has been fully assembled. We previously isolated mitotic arrest deficient (mad) mutants that inactivate this checkpoint and thus increase the sensitivity of cells to benomyl, a drug that interferes with mitotic spindle assembly by depolymerizing microtubules. We have cloned the MAD1 gene and show that when it is disrupted yeast cells have the same phenotype as the previously isolated mad1 mutants: they fail to delay the metaphase to anaphase transition in response to microtubule depolymerization. MAD1 is predicted to encode a 90-kD coiled-coil protein. Anti-Mad1p antibodies give a novel punctate nuclear staining pattern and cell fractionation reveals that the bulk of Mad1p is soluble. Mad1p becomes hyperphosphorylated when wild-type cells are arrested in mitosis by benomyl treatment, or by placing a cold sensitive tubulin mutant at the restrictive temperature. This modification does not occur in G1- arrested cells treated with benomyl or in cells arrested in mitosis by defects in the mitotic cyclin proteolysis machinery, suggesting that Mad1p hyperphosphorylation is a step in the activation of the spindle assembly checkpoint. Analysis of Mad1p phosphorylation in other spindle assembly checkpoint mutants reveals that this response to microtubule- disrupting agents is defective in some (mad2, bub1, and bub3) but not all (mad3, bub2) mutant strains. We discuss the possible functions of Mad1p at this cell cycle checkpoint.  相似文献   

11.
The p53 tumor suppressor is a mutational target of environmental carcinogen anti-benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-diol-9,10-epoxide (BPDE). We now demonstrate that p53 plays an important role in regulation of cellular responses to BPDE. Exposure of p53-null H1299 human lung cancer cells to BPDE resulted in S and G2 phase cell cycle arrest, but not mitotic block, which correlated with induction of cyclin B1 protein expression, down-modulation of cell division cycle 25C (Cdc25C) and Cdc25B protein levels, and hyperphosphorylation of Cdc25C (S216), cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1; Y15), checkpoint kinase 1 (Chk1; S317 and S345) and Chk2 (T68). The BPDE-induced S phase block, but not the G2/M phase arrest, was significantly attenuated by knockdown of Chk1 protein level. The BPDE-mediated accumulation of sub-diploid fraction (apoptotic cells) was significantly decreased in H1299 cells transiently transfected with both Chk1 and Chk2 specific siRNAs. The H460 human lung cancer cell line (wild-type p53) was relatively more sensitive to BPDE-mediated growth inhibition and enrichment of sub-diploid apoptotic fraction compared with H1299 cells. The BPDE exposure failed to activate either S or G2 phase checkpoint in H460 cells. Instead, the BPDE-treated H460 cells exhibited a nearly 8-fold increase in sub-diploid apoptotic cells that was accompanied by phosphorylation of p53 at multiple sites. Knockdown of p53 protein level in H460 cells attenuated BPDE-induced apoptosis but enforced activation of S and G2 phase checkpoints. In conclusion, the present study points towards an important role of p53 in regulation of cellular responses to BPDE in human lung cancer cells.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Our previous studies showed that TGEV infection could induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis via activation of p53 signaling in cultured host cells. However, it is unclear which viral gene causes these effects. In this study, we investigated the effects of TGEV nucleocapsid (N) protein on PK-15 cells. We found that TGEV N protein suppressed cell proliferation by causing cell cycle arrest at the S and G2/M phases and apoptosis. Characterization of various cellular proteins that are involved in regulating cell cycle progression demonstrated that the expression of N gene resulted in an accumulation of p53 and p21, which suppressed cyclin B1, cdc2 and cdk2 expression. Moreover, the expression of TGEV N gene promoted translocation of Bax to mitochondria, which in turn caused the release of cytochrome c, followed by activation of caspase-3, resulting in cell apoptosis in the transfected PK-15 cells following cell cycle arrest. Further studies showed that p53 inhibitor attenuated TGEV N protein induced cell cycle arrest at S and G2/M phases and apoptosis through reversing the expression changes of cdc2, cdk2 and cyclin B1 and the translocation changes of Bax and cytochrome c induced by TGEV N protein. Taken together, these results demonstrated that TGEV N protein might play an important role in TGEV infection-induced p53 activation and cell cycle arrest at the S and G2/M phases and apoptosis occurrence.  相似文献   

14.
The conditional kinase DeltaMEKK3:ER allows activation of JNK, p38 and ERK1/2 without overt cellular stress or damage and has proved useful in understanding how these pathways regulate apoptosis and cell cycle progression. We have previously shown that activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER causes a sustained G(1) cell cycle arrest which requires p21(CIP1), with ERK1/2 and p38 cooperating to promote p21(CIP1) expression. In cells lacking p21(CIP1), DeltaMEKK3:ER causes only a transient delay in cell cycle re-entry. We now show that this delay in cell cycle re-entry is due to a reduction in cyclin D1 levels. Activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER promotes the proteasome-dependent turnover of cyclin D1; this requires phosphorylation of threonine 286 (T(286)) and expression of cyclin D1T(286)A rescues the delay in G(1)/S progression. DeltaMEKK3:ER-dependent phosphorylation of T(286) does not appear to be mediated by GSK3beta but requires activation of the ERK1/2 and p38 pathways. ERK1/2 can physically associate with cyclin D1 but activation of ERK1/2 alone is not sufficient for phosphorylation of T(286). Rather, cyclin D1 phosphorylation appears to require coincident activation of ERK1/2 and p38. Thus activation of DeltaMEKK3:ER promotes a sustained G(1) cell cycle arrest by a bipartite mechanism involving the rapid destruction of cyclin D1 and the slower more prolonged expression of p21(CIP1). This has parallels with the bipartite response to ionizing radiation and p53-independent mechanisms of G(1) cell cycle arrest in simple organisms such as yeast.  相似文献   

15.
Primary human fibroblasts arrest growth in response to the inhibition of mitosis by mitotic spindle-depolymerizing drugs. We show that the mechanism of mitotic arrest is transient and implicates a decrease in the expression of cdc2/cdc28 kinase subunit Homo sapiens 1 (CKsHs1) and a delay in the metabolism of cyclin B. Primary human fibroblasts infected with a retroviral vector that drives the expression of a mutant p53 protein failed to downregulate CKsHs1 expression, degraded cyclin B despite the absence of chromosomal segregation, and underwent DNA endoreduplication. In addition, ectopic expression of CKsHs1 interfered with the control of cyclin B metabolism by the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint and resulted in a higher tendency to undergo DNA endoreduplication. These results demonstrate that an altered regulation of CKsHs1 and cyclin B in cells that carry mutant p53 undermines the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint and facilitates the development of aneuploidy. These data may contribute to the understanding of the origin of heteroploidy in mutant p53 cells.  相似文献   

16.
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) X protein (pX) is implicated in hepatocarcinogenesis of chronically infected HBV patients. To understand mechanism(s) of pX-mediated cellular transformation, we employed two tetracycline-regulated, pX-expressing cell lines, constructed in AML12 immortalized hepatocytes: one a differentiated (3pX-1) and the other a de-differentiated (4pX-1) hepatocyte cell line. Only 3pX-1 cells undergo pX-mediated transformation, via sustained Ras-Raf-mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway activation. pX-nontransforming 4pX-1 cells display sustained, pX-dependent JNK pathway activation. To understand how pX mediates different growth characteristics in 3pX-1 and 4pX-1 cells, we report, herein, comparative cell cycle analyses. pX-transforming 3pX-1 cells display pX-dependent G(1), S, and G(2)/M progression evidenced by cyclin D(1), A, and B(1) induction, and Cdc2 kinase activation. pX-nontransforming 4pX-1 cells display pX-dependent G(1) and S phase entry, followed by S phase pause and absence of Cdc2 kinase activation. Interestingly, 4pX-1 cells exhibit selective pX-induced expression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(Cip1), tumor suppressor p19(ARF), and proapoptotic genes bax and IGFBP-3. Despite the pX-mediated induction of growth arrest and apoptotic genes and the absence of pX-dependent Cdc2 activation, 4pX-1 cells do not undergo pX-dependent G(2)/M arrest or apoptosis. Nocodazole-treated, G(2)/M-arrested 4pX-1 cells exhibit pX-dependent formation of multinucleated cells, similar to human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I Tax-expressing cells. We propose that in 4pX-1 cells, pX deregulates the G(2)/M checkpoint, thus rescuing cells from pX-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

17.
The antimitotic anti‐cancer drugs, including taxol, perturb spindle dynamics, and induce prolonged, spindle checkpoint‐dependent mitotic arrest in cancer cells. These cells then either undergo apoptosis triggered by the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway or exit mitosis without proper cell division in an adaptation pathway. Using a genome‐wide small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen in taxol‐treated HeLa cells, we systematically identify components of the mitotic apoptosis and adaptation pathways. We show that the Mad2 inhibitor p31comet actively promotes mitotic adaptation through cyclin B1 degradation and has a minor separate function in suppressing apoptosis. Conversely, the pro‐apoptotic Bcl2 family member, Noxa, is a critical initiator of mitotic cell death. Unexpectedly, the upstream components of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway and the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 contribute to mitotic adaption. Our results reveal crosstalk between the apoptosis and adaptation pathways during mitotic arrest.  相似文献   

18.
Mitotic catastrophe is a poorly defined type of cell death linked to the abnormal activation of cyclin B/Cdk1. Here we propose that a conflict in cell cycle progression or DNA damage can lead to mitotic catastrophe, provided that cell cycle checkpoints are inhibited, in particular the DNA structure checkpoints and the spindle assembly checkpoint. Two subtypes of mitotic catastrophe can be distinguished. First, mitotic catastrophe can kill the cell during or close to the metaphase, in a p53-independent fashion, as this occurs in Chk2-inhibited heterokarya generated by fusion. Second, mitotic catastrophe can occur after failed mitosis, during the activation of the polyploidy checkpoint, in a partially p53-dependent fashion. In these conditions, cells die as a result of caspase activation and mitochondrial membrane permeabilization that constitute hallmarks of apoptosis. Prevention of caspase activation and/or mitochondrial damage avoids mitotic catastrophe, indicating that this form of cell death indeed constitutes a special case of apoptosis. Importantly, the suppression of mitotic catastrophe can favor asymmetric division and the generation of aneuploid cells. This delineates a molecular pathway through which failure to arrest the cell cycle and inhibition of apoptosis can favor the occurrence of cytogenetic abnormalities which are likely to participate in oncogenesis.  相似文献   

19.
We studied the effect of 2-(6-(2-thieanisyl)-3(Z)-hexen-1,5-diynyl)aniline(THDA), a newly developed anti-cancer agent, on cell proliferation, cell cycle progression, and induction of apoptosis in K562 cells. THDA was found to inhibit the growth of K562 cells in a time-and dose-dependent manner. Cell cycle analysis showed G2/M phase arrest and apoptosis in K562 cells following 24 h exposure to THDA. During the G2/M arrest, cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs), p21 and p27 were increased in a time-dependent manner. Analysis of the cell cycle regulatory proteins demonstrated that THDA did not change the steady-state levels of cyclin B1, cyclin D3 and Cdc25C, but decreased the protein levels of Cdk1, Cdk2 and cyclin A. THDA also caused a marked increase in apoptosis, which was associated with activation of caspase-3 and proteolytic cleavage of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase. These molecular alterations provide an insight into THDA-caused growth inhibition, G2/M arrest and apoptotic death of K562 cells.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the response of human transformed cells to mitotic spindle inhibition. Two paired cell lines, K562 and its parvovirus-resistant KS derivative clone, respectively nonexpressing and expressing p53, were continuously exposed to nocodazole. Apoptotic cells were observed in both lines, indicating that mitotic spindle impairment induced p53-independent apoptosis. After a transient mitotic delay, both cell lines exited mitosis, as revealed by flow-cytometric determination of MPM2 antigen and cyclin B1 expression, coupled to cytogenetic analysis of sister centromere separation. Both cell lines exited mitosis without chromatid segregation. K562 p53-deficient cells further resumed DNA synthesis, giving rise to cells with a DNA content above 4C, and reentered a polyploid cycle. In contrast, KS cells underwent a subsequent G1 arrest in the tetraploid state. Thus, G1 arrest in tetraploid cells requires p53 function in the rereplication checkpoint which prevents the G1/S transition following aberrant mitosis; in contrast, p53 expression is dispensable for triggering the apoptotic response in the absence of mitotic spindle.  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