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1.
Preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was used to examine histone phosphorylation in synchronized Chinese hamster cells (line CHO). Results showed that histone f1 phosphorylation, absent in G1-arrested and early G1-traversing cells, commences 2 h before entry of traversing cells into the S phase. It is concluded that f1 phosphorylation is one of the earliest biochemical events associated with conversion of nonproliferating cells to proliferating cells occurring on old f1 before synthesis of new f1 during the S phase. Results also showed that f3 and a subfraction of f1 were rapidly phosphorylated only during the time when cells were crossing the G2/M boundary and traversing prophase. Since these phosphorylation events do not occur in G1, S, or G2 and are reduced greatly in metaphase, it is concluded that these two specific phosphorylation events are involved with condensation of interphase chromatin into mitotic chromosomes. This conclusion is supported by loss of prelabeled 32PO4 from those specific histone fractions during transition of metaphase cells into interphase G1 cells. A model of the relationship of histone phosphorylation to the cell cycle is presented which suggests involvement of f1 phosphorylation in chromatin structural changes associated with a continuous interphase "chromosome cycle" which culminates at mitosis with an f3 and f1 phosphorylation-mediated chromosome condensation.  相似文献   

2.
Measurements of actinomycin-3H binding in synchronized HeLa cells reveal that the binding capacity of chromatin decreases progressively during the S phase despite a doubling of nuclear DNA content, reaches a minimal level during G2 and mitosis, and then increases gradually throughout the subsequent G1 interval. Since this pattern was evident in experiments with living cells, ethanol-fixed cells, and isolated nuclei, but not with purified DNA, the actinomycin binding profile may reflect changes in the degree of association between DNA and chromosomal proteins at different stages of the cell cycle.  相似文献   

3.
To ascertain the activity and substrate specificity of nuclear protein kinases during various stages of the cell cycle of HeLa S3 cells, a nuclear phospho-protein-enriched sample was extracted from synchronised cells and assayed in vitro in the presence of homologous substrates. The nuclear protein kinases increased in activity during S and G2 phase to a level that was twice that of kinases from early S phase cells. The activity was reduced during mitosis but increased again in G1 phase. When the phosphoproteins were separated into five fractions by cellulose-phosphate chromatography each fraction, though not homogenous, exhibited differences in activity. Variations in the activity of the protein kinase fractions were observed during the cell cycle, similar to those observed for the unfractionated kinases. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic analysis of the proteins phosphorylated by each of the five kinase fractions demonstrated a substrate specificity. The fractions also exhibited some cell cycle stage-specific preference for substrates; kinases from G1 cells phosphorylated mainly high molecular weight polypeptides, whereas lower molecular weight species were phosphorylated by kinases from the S, G2 and mitotic stages of the cell cycle. Inhibition of DNA and histone synthesis by cytosine arabinoside had no effect on the activity or substrate specificity of S phase kinases. Some kinase fractions phosphorylated histones as well as non-histone chromosomal proteins and this phosphorylation was also cell cycle stage dependent. The presence of histones in the in vitro assay influenced the ability of some fractions to phosphorylate particular non-histone polypeptides; non-histone proteins also appeared to affect the in vitro phosphorylation of histones.  相似文献   

4.
Phosphorylation of nuclear proteins   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Many nuclear proteins are phosphorylated: they range from enzymes to several structural proteins such as histones, non-histone chromosomal proteins and the nuclear lamins. The pattern of phosphorylation varies through the cell cycle. Although histone H1 is phosphorylated during interphase its phosphorylation increases sharply during mitosis. Histone H3, chromosomal protein HMG 14 and lamins A, B and C all show reversible phosphorylation during mitosis. Several nuclear kinases have been characterized, including one that increases during mitosis and phosphorylates H1 in vitro. Factors have been demonstrated in maturing amphibian oocytes and mitotic mammalian cells that induce chromosome condensation and breakdown of the nuclear membrane. The possibility that they are autocatalytic protein kinases is considered. The location of histone phosphorylation sites within the nucleosome is consistent with a role for phosphorylation in modulating chromatin folding.  相似文献   

5.
Lamins, major components of the nuclear lamina, undergo phosphorylation at multiple residues during cell cycle progression, but their detailed phosphorylation kinetics remain largely undetermined. Here, we examined changes in the phosphorylation of major phosphorylation residues (Thr14, Ser17, Ser385, Ser387, and Ser401) of lamin B2 and the homologous residues of lamin B1, A/C during the cell cycle using novel antibodies to the site-specific phosphorylation. The phosphorylation levels of these residues independently changed during the cell cycle. Thr14 and Ser17 were phosphorylated during G2/M phase to anaphase/telophase. Ser385 was persistently phosphorylated during mitosis to G1 phase, whereas Ser387 was phosphorylated discontinuously in prophase and G1 phase. Ser401 phosphorylation was enhanced in the G1/S boundary. Immunoprecipitation using the phospho-antibodies suggested that metaphase-phosphorylation at Thr14, Ser17, and Ser385 of lamins occurred simultaneously, whereas G1-phase phosphorylation at Ser385 and Ser387 occurred in distinct pools or with different timings. Additionally, we showed that lamin B2 phosphorylated at Ser17, but not Ser385, Ser387 and Ser401, was exclusively non-ionic detergent soluble, depolymerized forms in growing cells, implicating specific involvement of Ser17 phosphorylation in lamin depolymerization and nuclear envelope breakdown. These results suggest that the phosphorylations at different residues of lamins might play specific roles throughout the cell cycle.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of acidic residual chromosomal protein synthesis and transport were studied throughout the cell cycle in HeLa S-3 cells synchronized by 2 mM thymidine block and selective detachment of mitotic cells. Pulse labeling the cells with leucine-3H for 2 min and then "chasing" the radioactive proteins for up to 3 hr showed that the amount of protein synthesized, transported, and retained in the acidic residual chromosomal protein fraction is greater immediately after mitosis and later in G1 than in the S or G2 phases of the cell cycle. During S, only 20–25% of the proteins synthesized and transported to the acidic residual chromosomal protein fraction are chased during the first 2 hr after pulse labeling, whereas up to 40% of the material entering the residual nuclear fraction in mitosis, G1, and G2 leaves during a 2 hr chase. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic profiles of these proteins, at various times after pulse labeling, reveal that the turnover of individual polypeptides within this fraction has kinetics of synthesis and turnover which are markedly different from one another and undergo stage-specific changes.  相似文献   

7.
HAT HBO1 interacts with 2 isoforms of JADE1: JADE1S and JADE1L. JADE1 promotes acetylation of nucleosomal histones by HBO1. HBO1–JADE1 complex facilitates cell proliferation by unclear mechanisms. Here we report intracellular chromatin shuttling of HBO1–JADE1 complex during mitosis coupled to phosphorylation of JADE1. In interphase of dividing cells JADE1S was localized to the nucleus and associated with chromatin. As cells approached mitosis, specifically prophase, JADE1S dissociated from chromatin and associated with cytoplasm. JADE1S chromatin re-association began in telophase and paralleled nuclear envelope membrane reassembly. By early G1, JADE1S was re-associated with chromatin and localized to the nucleus. Importantly, cytoplasmic but not chromatin-associated JADE1 protein was phosphorylated. Mass-Spectrometric analysis of JADE1S protein isolated from G2/M-arrested cells identified 6 phosphorylated amino acid residues: S89, T92, S102, S121, S392, and T468, including 3 novel sites. Temporally, JADE1S phosphorylation and dephosphorylation during mitosis correlated with JADE1S chromatin dissociation and recruitment. JADE1S chromatin recruitment was accompanied by the global histone H4 acetylation. Pharmacological inhibitor of Aurora A kinase prevented JADE1S protein band shift and chromatin dissociation, suggesting regulatory function for phosphorylation. In vivo experiments supported our in vitro results. In mouse kidneys, JADE1S transiently accumulated in the cytoplasm of tubular epithelial cells during kidney regeneration. The transient increase in the number of cells with cytoplasmic JADE1S directly correlated with activation of tubular cell proliferation and inversely correlated with the number of cells with nuclear JADE1S staining, supporting biological role of HBO1–JADE1 shuttling during organ regeneration.  相似文献   

8.
Translation mechanisms at different stages of the cell cycle have been studied for many years, resulting in the dogma that translation rates are slowed during mitosis, with cap-independent translation mechanisms favored to give expression of key regulatory proteins. However, such cell culture studies involve synchronization using harsh methods, which may in themselves stress cells and affect protein synthesis rates. One such commonly used chemical is the microtubule de-polymerization agent, nocodazole, which arrests cells in mitosis and has been used to demonstrate that translation rates are strongly reduced (down to 30% of that of asynchronous cells). Using synchronized HeLa cells released from a double thymidine block (G1/S boundary) or the Cdk1 inhibitor, RO3306 (G2/M boundary), we have systematically re-addressed this dogma. Using FACS analysis and pulse labeling of proteins with labeled methionine, we now show that translation rates do not slow as cells enter mitosis. This study is complemented by studies employing confocal microscopy, which show enrichment of translation initiation factors at the microtubule organizing centers, mitotic spindle, and midbody structure during the final steps of cytokinesis, suggesting that translation is maintained during mitosis. Furthermore, we show that inhibition of translation in response to extended times of exposure to nocodazole reflects increased eIF2α phosphorylation, disaggregation of polysomes, and hyperphosphorylation of selected initiation factors, including novel Cdk1-dependent N-terminal phosphorylation of eIF4GII. Our work suggests that effects on translation in nocodazole-arrested cells might be related to those of the treatment used to synchronize cells rather than cell cycle status.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Evidence is presented that association of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) with nuclear chromatin in human fibroblasts is related to the phosphorylation status of the protein. Using a hypotonic lysis procedure to extract the soluble form of PCNA, it has been shown that the remaining nuclear-bound form, predominantly in S-phase cells, is highly phosphorylated. Cells in early G1, or in G2 + M phases, contain basal levels of the bound form of the protein that is only weakly phosphorylated. Using fractionated immunoprecipitation techniques, PCNA was found to be associated with cyclin A in both soluble and insoluble fractions. In contrast, association of PCNA with cyclin D1 was found in the soluble fraction, while no detectable levels were present in the insoluble fraction. Immunofluorescence labeling and flow cytometric analysis of the cell cycle distribution of cyclin D1 and cyclin A showed that, like PCNA, maximal levels of both proteins were bound to nuclear structures at the G1/S phase boundary. These results suggest that binding of PCNA to DNA synthesis sites occurs after phosphorylation. Association with cyclin D1 and cyclin A might occur in a macromolecular complex assembled at the G1/S phase boundary to drive activation of DNA replication factors.  相似文献   

11.
This study shows an overall analysis of gene expression during the cell cycle in synchronous suspension cultures of Catharanthus roseus cells. First, the cellular cytoplasmic proteins were fractionated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and visualized by staining with silver. Seventeen polypeptides showed qualitative or quantitative changes during the cell cycle. Second, the rates of synthesis of cytoplasmic proteins were also investigated by autoradiography by labeling cells with [35S]methionine at each phase of the cell cycle. The rates of synthesis of 13 polypeptides were found to vary during the cell cycle. The silverstained electrophoretic pattern of proteins in the G2 phase in particular showed characteristic changes in levels of polypeptides, while the rates of synthesis of polypeptides synthesized during the G2 phase did not show such phase-specific changes. This result suggests that posttranslational processing of polypeptides occurs during or prior to the G2 phase. In the G1 and S phases and during cytokinesis, several other polypeptides were specifically synthesized. Finally, the variation of mRNAs was analyzed from the autoradiograms of in vitro translation products of poly(A)+ RNA isolated at each phase. Three poly(A)+ RNAs increased in amount from the G1 to the S phase and one poly (A)+ RNA increased preferentially from the G2 phase to cytokinesis.  相似文献   

12.
The biosynthesis and phosphorylation of histone fractions were measured in synchronized CHO Chinese hamster cells arrested in late G1 by hydroxyurea treatment. Hydroxyurea was found to inhibit the initiation of both DNA and histone synthesis, thus confirming the conclusion that it arrests cells in G1 slightly before the G1S boundary. However, hydroxyurea did not inhibit the phosphorylation of histone f1 or histone f2a2. The phosphorylation of histone f1, which normally is absent in early G1, begins 2 hr prior to DNA synthesis. In the presence of hydroxyurea, f1 phosphorylation occurs on schedule at this same time in G1, resulting in significant G1-phase f1 phosphorylation. This offers strong evidence that (a) f1 phosphorylation is not restricted to S phase; (b) “old” f1 which was synthesized in previous cell cycles is phosphorylated in G1 before “new” f1 which is synthesized in S phase; and (c) G1-phase f1 phosphorylation does not require new histone or new DNA synthesis.Histone f1 phosphorylation was observed to occur at accelerated rates in S phase over phosphorylation rates observed in late G1-arrest. Data support the proposal that three different levels of f1 phosphorylation occur during the cell cycle: (1) a G1-related phosphorylation of “old” f1; (2) an S-related phosphorylation of both “old” and “new” f1; and (3) a superphosphorylation of f1 associated with chromosome condensation during the G2 to M transition. It is also possible that a limited proportion of f1 may be phosphorylated in G1, perhaps at the initial DNA synthesis sites, and that an increased proportion of f1 is phosphorylated in S as DNA is synthesized. Similarities between the kinetics of histone f1 phosphorylation and the association of DNA with lipoprotein in synchronized control and hydroxyurea-treated cells suggest an involvement of f1 phosphorylation in cell-cycle-dependent chromatin structural changes.  相似文献   

13.
The phosphorylation of nonhistone chromatin proteins during development was studied in the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. The rate of phosphorylation was found to be maximal during gastrula, slightly lower during prism and almost 70% lower in pluteus stage embryos. Analysis of the phosphorylated nonhistone chromatin proteins by SDS-acrylamide gel electrophoresis showed significant variations in the labeling pattern during different stages of development. A specific protein which is actively phosphorylated during gastrula and prism stages is nearly absent from the pluteus stage.  相似文献   

14.
Cells are constantly challenged by DNA damage and protect their genome integrity by activation of an evolutionary conserved DNA damage response pathway (DDR). A central core of DDR is composed of a spatiotemporally ordered net of post-translational modifications, among which protein phosphorylation plays a major role. Activation of checkpoint kinases ATM/ATR and Chk1/2 leads to a temporal arrest in cell cycle progression (checkpoint) and allows time for DNA repair. Following DNA repair, cells re-enter the cell cycle by checkpoint recovery. Wip1 phosphatase (also called PPM1D) dephosphorylates multiple proteins involved in DDR and is essential for timely termination of the DDR. Here we have investigated how Wip1 is regulated in the context of the cell cycle. We found that Wip1 activity is downregulated by several mechanisms during mitosis. Wip1 protein abundance increases from G1 phase to G2 and declines in mitosis. Decreased abundance of Wip1 during mitosis is caused by proteasomal degradation. In addition, Wip1 is phosphorylated at multiple residues during mitosis, and this leads to inhibition of its enzymatic activity. Importantly, ectopic expression of Wip1 reduced γH2AX staining in mitotic cells and decreased the number of 53BP1 nuclear bodies in G1 cells. We propose that the combined decrease and inhibition of Wip1 in mitosis decreases the threshold necessary for DDR activation and enables cells to react adequately even to modest levels of DNA damage encountered during unperturbed mitotic progression.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Antisera to 0.35 M NaCl extracts and residues of S phase HeLa nuclei were reacted with electrophoretically separated proteins from the nuclei or nuclear material of HeLa cells synchronized in G1, S, G2 or M phases of the cell cycle. Quantitative evaluation of the peroxidase-antiperoxidase stained nitrocellulose transfers (Western blots) revealed significant changes in the quantities of nuclear non-histone proteins during the cell cycle. Immunochemical staining of electrophoretically separated nuclear antigens permits their selective detection in minute quantities and in the presence of many additional proteins.  相似文献   

16.
The incorporation of 5-3H-uridine and 5-3H-cytidine into nucleolar and nonnucleolar RNA in the nucleus of monkey and pig kidney cells was measured in vitro during the cell life cycle. Time-lapse cinematographic records were made of cells during asynchronous exponential proliferation, in order to identify the temporal position of individual cells in relation to the preceding mitosis. Immediately following cinematography, cells were labeled with uridine-3H and cytidine-3H for a short period, fixed, and analyzed by radioautography. Since the data permit correlation of the rate of RNA labeling with the position of a cell within the cycle, curves could be constructed describing the rate of RNA synthesis over the average cell cycle. RNA synthesis was absent in early telophase, and rose very abruptly in rate in late telophase and in very early G1 in both the nucleus and the reconstituting nucleolus. Thereafter, through the G1 and S periods the rate of nuclear RNA synthesis rose gradually. When we used a 10-min pulse, there was no detectable change in the rate for nucleolar RNA labeling in monkey kidney cells during G1 or S. When we used a 30-min labeling time, the rate of nucleolar RNA labeling rose gradually in pig kidney cells. With increasing time after mitosis, the data became more variable, which may, in part, be related to the variation in generation times for individual cells.  相似文献   

17.
Minichromosome maintenance (MCM) proteins are essential DNA replication factors conserved among eukaryotes. MCMs cycle between chromatin bound and dissociated states during each cell cycle. Their absence on chromatin is thought to contribute to the inability of a G2 nucleus to replicate DNA. Passage through mitosis restores the ability of MCMs to bind chromatin and the ability to replicate DNA. In Drosophila early embryonic cell cycles, which lack a G1 phase, MCMs reassociate with condensed chromosomes toward the end of mitosis. To explore the coupling between mitosis and MCM–chromatin interaction, we tested whether this reassociation requires mitotic degradation of cyclins. Arrest of mitosis by induced expression of nondegradable forms of cyclins A and/or B showed that reassociation of MCMs to chromatin requires cyclin A destruction but not cyclin B destruction. In contrast to the earlier mitoses, mitosis 16 (M16) is followed by G1, and MCMs do not reassociate with chromatin at the end of M16. dacapo mutant embryos lack an inhibitor of cyclin E, do not enter G1 quiescence after M16, and show mitotic reassociation of MCM proteins. We propose that cyclin E, inhibited by Dacapo in M16, promotes chromosome binding of MCMs. We suggest that cyclins have both positive and negative roles in controlling MCM–chromatin association.  相似文献   

18.
In eukaryotic cells, genomic DNA is organized into a chromatin structure, which not only serves as the template for DNA-based nuclear processes, but also as a platform integrating intracellular and extracellular signals. Although much effort has been spent to characterize chromatin modifying/remodeling activities, little is known about cell signaling pathways targeting these chromatin modulators. Here, we report that cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) phosphorylates the histone H2A deubiquitinase Ubp-M at serine 552 (S552P), and, importantly, this phosphorylation is required for cell cycle progression. Mass spectrometry analysis confirmed Ubp-M is phosphorylated at serine 552, and in vitro and in vivo assays demonstrated that CDK1/cyclin B kinase is responsible for Ubp-M S552P. Interestingly, Ubp-M S552P is not required for Ubp-M tetramer formation, deubiquitination activity, substrate specificity, or regulation of gene expression. However, Ubp-M S552P is required for cell proliferation and cell cycle G2/M phase progression. Ubp-M S552P reduces Ubp-M interaction with nuclear export protein CRM1 and facilitates Ubp-M nuclear localization. Therefore, these studies confirm that Ubp-M is phosphorylated at S552 and identify CDK1 as the enzyme responsible for the phosphorylation. Importantly, this study specifically links Ubp-M S552P to cell cycle G2/M phase progression.  相似文献   

19.
Growth deceleration of an Ehrlich ascites tumor with increasing mass is associated with a prolongation of the cell cycle and a decline in the growth fraction. These effects are reversed upon transfer of cells from an older tumor into a new host. Studies were made to locate the stages at which a cell cycle could be suspended or resumed. Transplantation caused a prompt rise in both mitotic and flash H3TdR labeling indices. When all the cells in cycle including mitoses were prelabeled with H3TdR in older tumors, the fraction of labeled mitoses did not decline for a considerable period after transplantation into new hosts. This suggests that the early rise in mitoses is not due to a flow of resting (Go) cells from a G2 store (G2-Go transition). It appears rather to be a reflection of a lag of the mitotic process relative to other stages during the initial readjustment of the cycle. A prompt rise in flash H3TdR indices in the transplants suggested cell entry into S from either a suspended GI (G1-Go transition) or a suspended S (S-Go transition). These possibilities were examined by relating micro-spectrophotometric estimates of DNA to the cell cycle stage as revealed by H3TdR autoradiography. Since Go cells had DNA values corresponding to GI, it was concluded that decycling or recycling could occur only after mitosis and before DNA synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The monoclonal antibody MPM-2, which interacts with a mitosis-specific phosphorylated epitope, has been used to study phosphorylation of proteins in microspores and pollen ofBrassica napus. One- (1-D) and two-dimensional (2-D) immunoblots revealed that MPM-2 recognized a family of phosphorylated proteins in freshly isolated microspores and pollen. The same set of phosphorylated proteins was found after 8 h of culture at embryogenie (32 °C) and non-embryogenic (18 °C) conditions. Two major spots were observed on 2-D immunoblots, one of which (Mr75 kDa, pI5.1) co-localized with the 70 kDa heat shock protein. Immunolabelling of sectioned microspores and pollen showed that MPM-2 reactive epitopes were predominantly observed in the nucleoplasm from G1 until G2-phase, and in the cytoplasm during mitosis. This may be due to a cell cycle related translocation of phosphoproteins from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, or alternate phosphorylation and dephosphorylation in nucleus and cytoplasm. Detectability of epitopes on sections depended on the embedding procedure. Cryo processing revealed epitope reactivity in all stages of the cell cycle whereas polyethylene glycol embedded material showed no labelling in the cytoplasm during mitosis. Processing might reduce the antigenicity of cytoplasmic MPM-2 detectable proteins, probably due to dephosphorylation. The MPM-2 detectable epitope was observed in all cells investigated, irrespective of culture conditions, and its intracellular distribution depended on the cell cycle stage and was not related to the developmental fate of the microspores and pollen.  相似文献   

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