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1.
The mouse FT210 cell line is a temperature-sensitive cdc2 mutant. FT210 cells are found to arrest specifically in G2 phase and unlike many alleles of cdc2 and cdc28 mutants of yeasts, loss of p34cdc2 at the nonpermissive temperature has no apparent effect on cell cycle progression through the G1 and S phases of the division cycle. FT210 cells and the parent wild-type FM3A cell line each possess at least three distinct histone H1 kinases. H1 kinase activities in chromatography fractions were identified using a synthetic peptide substrate containing the consensus phosphorylation site of histone H1 and the kinase subunit compositions were determined immunochemically with antisera prepared against the "PSTAIR" peptide, the COOH-terminus of mammalian p34cdc2 and the human cyclins A and B1. The results show that p34cdc2 forms two separate complexes with cyclin A and with cyclin B1, both of which exhibit thermal lability at the non-permissive temperature in vitro and in vivo. A third H1 kinase with stable activity at the nonpermissive temperature is comprised of cyclin A and a cdc2-like 34-kD subunit, which is immunoreactive with anti-"PSTAIR" antiserum but is not recognized with antiserum specific for the COOH-terminus of p34cdc2. The cyclin A-associated kinases are active during S and G2 phases and earlier in the division cycle than the p34cdc2-cyclin B1 kinase. We show that mouse cells possess at least two cdc2-related gene products which form cell cycle regulated histone H1 kinases and we propose that the murine homolog of yeast p34cdc/CDC28 is essential only during the G2-to-M transition in FT210 cells.  相似文献   

2.
Serotype 3 reoviruses inhibit cellular proliferation by inducing a G(2)/M phase cell cycle arrest. Reovirus-induced G(2)/M phase arrest requires the viral S1 gene-encoded sigma1s nonstructural protein. The G(2)-to-M transition represents a cell cycle checkpoint that is regulated by the kinase p34(cdc2). We now report that infection with serotype 3 reovirus strain Abney, but not serotype 1 reovirus strain Lang, is associated with inhibition and hyperphosphorylation of p34(cdc2). The sigma1s protein is necessary and sufficient for inhibitory phosphorylation of p34(cdc2), since a viral mutant lacking sigma1s fails to hyperphosphorylate p34(cdc2) and inducible expression of sigma1s is sufficient for p34(cdc2) hyperphosphorylation. These studies establish a mechanism by which reovirus can perturb cell cycle regulation.  相似文献   

3.
The human INK4a gene locus encodes two structurally unrelated tumor suppressor proteins, p16(INK4a) and p14(ARF). Although primarily proposed to require a functional p53.Mdm-2 signaling axis, recently p14(ARF) has been implicated in p53-independent cell cycle regulation. Here we show that p14(ARF) preferentially induces a G(2) arrest in tumor cells lacking functional p53 and/or p21. Expression of p14(ARF) impaired mitotic entry and enforced a primarily cytoplasmic localization of p34(cdc2) that was associated with a decrease in p34(cdc2) kinase activity and reduced p34(cdc2) protein expression. A direct physical interaction between p14(ARF) and p34(cdc2) was, nevertheless, ruled out by lack of co-immunoprecipitation. The p14(ARF)-induced depletion of p34(cdc2) was associated with impaired cdc25C phosphatase expression and a prominent shift to inhibitory Tyr-15-phosphorylation in G(2)-arrested cells lacking either p53, p21, or both. Finally, reconstitution of p34(cdc2) using a constitutively active, phosphorylation-deficient p34(cdc2AF) mutant alleviated this p14(ARF)-induced G(2) arrest, thereby allowing cell cycle progression. Taken together, these data indicate that p14(ARF) arrests cells lacking functional p53/p21 in the G(2) phase of the cell cycle by targeting p34(cdc2) kinase. This may represent an important fail-safe mechanism by which p14(ARF) protects p53/p21-deficient cells from unrestrained proliferation.  相似文献   

4.
p34cdc2 is a protein kinase that has an important role in controlling cell cycle progression and may regulate tumor suppressor gene activity. In this work, we show that the arrest of cell growth and induction of differentiation in a tumorigenic neuroblastoma cell line by retinoic acid (RA) is associated with a 75-fold decrease in the level of p34cdc2 protein. The RA induced decrease in p34cdc2 levels does not simply reflect the arrest of cell growth, because p34cdc2 levels are not reduced when neuroblastoma cells are growth arrested by nutrient deprivation. Furthermore, dephosphorylation of the tumor suppressor gene product RB, a substrate for the p34cdc2 kinase activity, is observed only when p34cdc2 levels are decreased in RA treated cells. These studies link regulation of cdc2 level, RB phosphorylation state, and induction of differentiation by RA and suggest that alterations in the cdc2 gene or in genes controlling its regulation contribute to tumorigenesis.  相似文献   

5.
The Vpr accessory gene product of human immunodeficiency virus types 1 and 2 and simian immunodeficiency virus is believed to play a role in permitting entry of the viral core into the nucleus of nondividing cells. A second role for Vpr was recently suggested by Rogel et al. (M. E. Rogel, L. I. Wu, and M. Emerman, J. Virol. 69:882-888, 1995), who showed that Vpr prevents the establishment in vitro of chronically infected HIV producer cell lines, apparently by causing infected cells to arrest in the G2/M phase of the cell cycle. In cycling cells, progression from G2 to M phase is driven by activation of the p34cdc2/cyclin B complex, an event caused, in part, by dephosphorylation of two regulatory amino acids of p34cdc2 (Thr-14 and Tyr-15). We show here that Vpr arrests the cell cycle in G2 by preventing the activation of the p34cdc2/cyclin B complex. Vpr expression in cells caused p34cdc2 to remain in the phosphorylated, inactive state, p34cdc2/cyclin B complexes immunoprecipitated from cells expressing Vpr were almost completely inactive in a histone H1 kinase assay. Coexpression of a constitutively active mutant p34cdc2 molecule with Vpr relieved the G2 arrest. These findings strongly suggest that Vpr arrests cells in G2 by preventing the activation of the p34cdc2/cyclin B complex that is required for entry into M phase. In vivo, Vpr might, by preventing p34cdc2 activation, delay or prevent apoptosis of infected cells. This would increase the amount of virus each infected cell produced.  相似文献   

6.
Cyclin B targets p34cdc2 for tyrosine phosphorylation.   总被引:28,自引:7,他引:21       下载免费PDF全文
L Meijer  L Azzi    J Y Wang 《The EMBO journal》1991,10(6):1545-1554
A universal intracellular factor, the 'M phase-promoting factor' (MPF), triggers the G2/M transition of the cell cycle in all organisms. In late G2, it is present as an inactive complex of tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and unphosphorylated cyclin Bcdc13. In M phase, its activation as an active MPF displaying histone H1 kinase (H1K) originates from the concomitant tyrosine dephosphorylation of the p34cdc2 subunit and the phosphorylation of the cylin Bcdc13 subunit. We have investigated the role of cyclin in the formation of this complex and the tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2, using highly synchronous mitotic sea urchin eggs as a model. As cells leave the S phase and enter the G2 phase, a massive tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 occurs. This large p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation burst does not arise from a massive increase in p34cdc2 concentration. It even appears to affect only a fraction (non-immunoprecipitable by anti-PSTAIR antibodies) of the total p34cdc2 present in the cell. Several observations point to an extremely close association between accumulation of unphosphorylated cyclin and p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation: (i) both events coincide perfectly during the G2 phase; (ii) both tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and cyclin are not immunoprecipitated by anti-PSTAIR antibodies; (iii) accumulation of unphosphorylated cyclin by aphidicolin treatment of the cells, triggers a dramatic accumulation of tyrosine-phosphorylated p34cdc2; and (iv) inhibition of cyclin synthesis by emetine inhibits p34cdc2 tyrosine phosphorylation without affecting the p34cdc2 concentration. These results show that, as it is synthesized, cyclin B binds and recruits p34cdc2 for tyrosine phosphorylation; this inactive complex then requires the completion of DNA replication before it can be turned into fully active MPF. These results fully confirm recent data obtained in vitro with exogenous cyclin added to cycloheximide-treated Xenopus egg extracts.  相似文献   

7.
J Hayles  P Nurse 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(12):2760-2771
We have monitored the tyrosine (Y15) phosphorylated and dephosphorylated forms of p34cdc2 from Schizosaccharomyces pombe as cells proceed through the cell cycle. Y15 is dephosphorylated in G1 before start and becomes phosphorylated only after cells pass start and enter late G1. This transition is associated with a switch from one checkpoint which restrains mitosis in pre-start G1, by a mechanism independent from Y15 phosphorylation, to a second checkpoint acting post-start during late G1 and S phase operating through Y15 phosphorylation. The pre-start checkpoint may act by preventing formation of the p34cdc2/p56cdc13 complex. The complex between Y15-phosphorylated p34cdc2 and p56cdc13 accumulates during S phase and G2, but the level generated is not solely dependent on the amount of p34cdc2 and p56cdc13 present in the cell. The extent of p56cdc13 breakdown at the end of mitosis may be determined by the amount complexed with p34cdc2. We have also shown that an insoluble form of p34cdc2 is associated with the progression of the cell through late G1 into S phase.  相似文献   

8.
X S Ye  R R Fincher  A Tang    S A Osmani 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(1):182-192
It is possible to cause G2 arrest in Aspergillus nidulans by inactivating either p34cdc2 or NIMA. We therefore investigated the negative control of these two mitosis-promoting kinases after DNA damage. DNA damage caused rapid Tyr15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2 and transient cell cycle arrest but had little effect on the activity of NIMA. Dividing cells deficient in Tyr15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2 were sensitive to both MMS and UV irradiation and entered lethal premature mitosis with damaged DNA. However, non-dividing quiescent conidiospores of the Tyr15 mutant strain were not sensitive to DNA damage. The UV and MMS sensitivity of cells unable to tyrosine phosphorylate p34cdc2 is therefore caused by defects in DNA damage checkpoint regulation over mitosis. Both the nimA5 and nimT23 temperature-sensitive mutations cause an arrest in G2 at 42 degrees C. Addition of MMS to nimT23 G2-arrested cells caused a marked delay in their entry into mitosis upon downshift to 32 degrees C and this delay was correlated with a long delay in the dephosphorylation and activation of p34cdc2. Addition of MMS to nimA5 G2-arrested cells caused inactivation of the H1 kinase activity of p34cdc2 due to an increase in its Tyr15 phosphorylation level and delayed entry into mitosis upon return to 32 degrees C. However, if Tyr15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2 was prevented then its H1 kinase activity was not inactivated upon MMS addition to nimA5 G2-arrested cells and they rapidly progressed into a lethal mitosis upon release to 32 degrees C. Thus, Tyr15 phosphorylation of p34cdc2 in G2 arrests initiation of mitosis after DNA damage in A. nidulans.  相似文献   

9.
The mammalian homologue of the cdc2 gene of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe encodes a p34cdc2 cyclin-dependent kinase that regulates the cell cycle of a wide variety of cell types. Resting murine T lymphocytes contained no detectable p34cdc2 protein, histone kinase activity, or specific mRNA for the cdc2 gene. Activation of the T cells by immobilized anti-CD3 resulted in the expression of specific mRNA late in the G1 phase of the cell cycle, and p34cdc2 protein was detectable at or near G1/S. At this point in the cell cycle, the protein was phosphorylated at tyrosine and displayed no H1 histone kinase activity. As the cells progressed through the cycle, the amount of specific mRNA and p34cdc2 increased, and H1 histone kinase activity was detectable when the cells were blocked at G2/M by nocodazole. The activation of T cells by phorbol dibutyrate induced the expression of IL-2R but failed to induce the synthesis of IL-2 or the expression of cdc2-specific mRNA. Under these conditions, the activated cells failed to enter the S phase of the cell cycle. Because the presence of IL-2 added exogenously during activation by phorbol dibutyrate resulted in the expression of cdc2-specific mRNA and progression through the cell cycle, either IL-2 or the interaction with IL-2R may be involved in the expression of cdc2 and regulation of the G1/S transition.  相似文献   

10.
p53 is associated with p34cdc2 in transformed cells.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
J Milner  A Cook    J Mason 《The EMBO journal》1990,9(9):2885-2889
The normal functioning of p53 is thought to involve p53 target proteins. We have previously identified a cellular 35 kd protein associated with p53 and now report evidence identifying this 35 kd protein as p34cdc2, product of the cell cycle control cdc2 gene. The association between p53 and p34cdc2 was detected in SV3T3 and T3T3 cell lines, both expressing the wild-type p53 phenotype, and in 3T3tx cells, expressing 'mutant' p53 phenotype. Binding of the mutant p53 phenotype with p34cdc2 was greatly reduced relative to wild-type. Complexes of p53-p34cdc2 may represent inactivation or activation of either component. The p34cdc2 kinase functions at cell cycle control points and is necessary for entry and passage through mitosis. It also operates in G1 and is involved in the commitment of cells into the proliferative cycle. Since we were unable to detect p53-p34cdc2 complexes in mitotic cells we propose that the interaction between p53 and p34cdc2 may be functional in cell growth control, possibly to promote or to suppress cell proliferation.  相似文献   

11.
As a major component of mammalian cell plasma membranes, cholesterol is essential for cell growth. Accordingly, the restriction of cholesterol provision has been shown to result in cell proliferation inhibition. We explored the potential regulatory role of cholesterol on cell cycle progression. MOLT-4 and HL-60 cell lines were cultured in a cholesterol-deficient medium and simultaneously exposed to SKF 104976, which is a specific inhibitor of lanosterol 14-alpha demethylase. Through HPLC analyses with on-line radioactivity detection, we found that SKF 104976 efficiently blocked the [(14)C]-acetate incorporation into cholesterol, resulting in an accumulation of lanosterol and dihydrolanosterol, without affecting the synthesis of mevalonic acid. The inhibitor also produced a rapid and intense inhibition of cell proliferation (IC(50) = 0.1 microM), as assessed by both [(3)H]-thymidine incorporation into DNA and cell counting. Flow cytometry and morphological examination showed that treatment with SKF 104976 for 48 h or longer resulted in the accumulation of cells specifically at G2 phase, whereas both the G1 traversal and the transition through S were unaffected. The G2 arrest was accompanied by an increase in the hyperphosphorylated form of p34(cdc2) and a reduction of its activity, as determined by assaying the H1 histone phosphorylating activity of p34(cdc2) immunoprecipitates. The persistent deficiency of cholesterol induced apoptosis. However, supplementing the medium with cholesterol, either in the form of LDL or free cholesterol dissolved in ethanol, completely abolished these effects, whereas mevalonate was ineffective. Caffeine, which abrogates the G2 checkpoint by preventing p34(cdc2) phosphorylation, reduced the accumulation in G2 when added to cultures containing cells on transit to G2, but was ineffective in cells arrested at G2 by sustained cholesterol starvation. Cells arrested in G2, however, were still viable and responded to cholesterol provision by activating p34(cdc2) and resuming the cell cycle. We conclude that in both lymphoblastoid and promyelocytic cells, cholesterol availability governs the G2 traversal, probably by affecting p34(cdc2) activity.  相似文献   

12.
Staurosporine has been reported to cause arrest of cells in G1 phase at low concentration and in G2 phase at high concentration. This raises the question of why the effects of staurosporine on the cell cycle depend on the applied concentration. In order to verify these multiple functions of staurosporine in Meth-A cells, we used cyclin E as a landmark of G1/S transition, cyclin B as a landmark of G2/M transition and MPM2 as a hallmark of M phase. We found that staurosporine arrested cells in G1 phase at a low concentration (20 nM) and in G2/M phase at a high concentration (200 nM). However, 200 nM staurosporine increased the expression of cyclin B and cdc2 proteins, suggesting that the cells progressed through the G2/M transition, and increased the expression of MPM2 protein, indicating that the cells entered M phase. Moreover, 200 nM staurosporine increased the expression of p53 and p21 proteins and inhibited the expression of cyclin E and cdk2 proteins, suggesting that the cells were arrested in the G1 phase of the next cycle. Morphological observation showed similar results as well. These data suggest that the G2/M accumulation induced by 200 nM staurosporine does not reflect G2 arrest, but rather results from M phase arrest, followed by progression from M phase to the G1 phase of the next cycle without cytokinesis, and finally arrest of the cells in G1 phase.  相似文献   

13.
L Brizuela  G Draetta    D Beach 《The EMBO journal》1987,6(11):3507-3514
cdc2+ encodes a protein kinase that is required during both G1 and G2 phases of the cell division cycle in fission yeast. suc1+ is an essential gene that was originally identified as a plasmid-borne sequence that could rescue certain temperature-sensitive cdc2 mutants. To investigate the role of the suc1+ gene product in the cell cycle p13suc1 has been expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. An immunoaffinity purified anti-p13suc1 polyclonal serum has been prepared and used to identify p13suc1 in fission yeast. The abundance of this protein did not alter either during the cell cycle or during entry into stationary phase. p13suc1 was found in yeast lysates in a complex with the cdc2+ gene product. Approximately 5% of cellular p34cdc2 was associated with p13suc1, and this fraction of p34cdc2 was active as a protein kinase. The stability of the complex was disrupted in yeast strains carrying temperature-sensitive alleles of cdc2 that are suppressible by overexpression of suc1+. The level of association between p13suc1 and p34cdc2 was not affected by cell cycle arrest in adverse nutritional conditions. p13suc1 is not a substrate of the p34cdc2 protein kinase. We propose instead that it acts as a regulatory component of p34cdc2 that facilitates interaction with other proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Dominant mutants identify new roles for p34cdc2 in mitosis.   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
K Labib  R A Craven  K Crawford    P Nurse 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(10):2155-2165
A large number of dominant mutants have been generated in the fission yeast cdc2 gene, causing lethality when expressed in wild-type cells. The mutants interfere with distinct aspects of p34cdc2 function, producing one of four different phenotypes: mitotic arrest, multiple rounds of S phase in the absence of mitosis, premature mitosis or G2 arrest. The mitotic mutants DL41, DL45 and DL50 are characterized in this paper. Over-expression of DL41 or DL45 causes mitotic arrest, specifically interfering with sister chromatid separation, without preventing spindle elongation. This suggests a role for p34cdc2 in triggering sister chromatid separation at anaphase. DL41 and DL45 also cause abnormal septum formation, suggesting that p34cdc2 may also be involved in regulating this process in fission yeast. These mitotic aspects of p34cdc2 function may involve interaction with p13suc1, since increased expression of suc1 partially suppresses DL41 and DL45. Over-expression of DL50 causes premature mitotic entry in cells that have not completed S phase, resulting in lethality. DL41, DL45 and DL50 correspond to mutation of p34cdc2 residues predicted to be on the surface of the protein, identifying potential sites of interaction with mitotic regulators of p3cdc2, and these residues are conserved amongst cdc2 proteins found in other eukaryotes.  相似文献   

15.
A H Osmani  S L McGuire  S A Osmani 《Cell》1991,67(2):283-291
We show that in Aspergillus nidulans, p34cdc2 tyrosine dephosphorylation accompanies activation of p34cdc2 as an H1 kinase at mitosis. However, the nimA5 mutation arrests cells in G2 with p34cdc2 tyrosine dephosphorylated and fully active as an H1 kinase. Activation of NIMA is therefore not required for p34cdc2 activation. Furthermore, mutation of nimT, which encodes a protein with 50% similarity to fission yeast cdc25, causes a G2 arrest and prevents tyrosine dephosphorylation of p34cdc2 but does not prevent full activation of the NIMA protein kinase. Mitotic activation of p34cdc2 by tyrosine dephosphorylation is therefore not required for activation of NIMA. These data suggest that activation of either the p34cdc2 protein kinase or the NIMA protein kinase alone is not sufficient to initiate mitosis. Parallel activation of both cell cycle-regulated protein kinases is required to trigger mitosis.  相似文献   

16.
In yeast, the protein kinase p34cdc2 plays a role in regulating both the G2 to M and G1 to S phase transitions. The discovery of multiple homologues of the protein in cells of higher eukaryotic organisms suggests that different cell cycle regulatory events may be performed by different kinases in such cells. Here, the synthesis and metabolism of the human forms of these proteins are described in a normal human cell type, peripheral blood T lymphocytes that have been stimulated to enter the cell cycle in vitro. Using a carboxyl-terminus antiserum specific for true p34cdc2, the protein could first be found in T cells at about 24 to 30 h after stimulation, just before the initiation of DNA synthesis. Three forms of the enzyme could be resolved by denaturing gel electrophoresis: an unphosphorylated form with an apparent molecular mass of 34,500 daltons and two phosphorylated derivatives. In cells synchronized at G2/M phase with nocodazole, p34 was almost entirely in the unphosphorylated form whereas the phosphorylated derivatives were more predominant in cultures arrested at the G1/S border with aphidicolin. The relationship of p34 synthesis to the phosphorylation of p110Rb, an event known to be associated with passage through late G1 and/or the G1/S phase transition, was also investigated. It was noted that p110Rb phosphorylation began before p34 synthesis first became detectable. Furthermore, it appeared that the two events could be largely uncoupled by treating cells with deferoxamine (10 microM), an iron chelating agent that arrests T cells at a point in late G1 phase but substantially before the G1 to S phase transition. Under these conditions, p110Rb phosphorylation was almost completely accomplished in the absence of significant p34 synthesis, a finding that suggests that most or all of p110 phosphorylation is performed by kinases other than p34. Because of this observation, extracts were next examined for p34-like molecules using an antibody against the so-called PSTAIRE domain found in all cdc2 homologues identified to date. A species of protein with a mobility slightly less than true p34 was found, even in resting T cells. Upon stimulation, this protein increased slightly in amount, and a second protein with a mobility greater than p34, a putative p33cdk2, was seen. Not only was the appearance of these proteins not inhibited by deferoxamine but they accumulated in cultures treated with the drug, suggesting that p33, and not p34, may be the G1 phase kinase for p110Rb.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Cell cycle regulation of the p34cdc2 inhibitory kinases.   总被引:15,自引:4,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
In cells of higher eukaryotic organisms the activity of the p34cdc2/cyclin B complex is inhibited by phosphorylation of p34cdc2 at two sites within its amino-terminus (threonine 14 and tyrosine 15). In this study, the cell cycle regulation of the kinases responsible for phosphorylating p34cdc2 on Thr14 and Tyr15 was examined in extracts prepared from both HeLa cells and Xenopus eggs. Both Thr14- and Tyr15- specific kinase activities were regulated in a cell cycle-dependent manner. The kinase activities were high throughout interphase and diminished coincident with entry of cells into mitosis. In HeLa cells delayed in G2 by the DNA-binding dye Hoechst 33342, Thr14- and Tyr15-specific kinase activities remained high, suggesting that a decrease in Thr14- and Tyr15- kinase activities may be required for entry of cells into mitosis. Similar cell cycle regulation was observed for the Thr14/Tyr15 kinase(s) in Xenopus egg extracts. These results indicate that activation of CDC2 and entry of cells into mitosis is not triggered solely by activation of the Cdc25 phosphatase but by the balance between Thr14/Tyr15 kinase and phosphatase activities. Finally, we have detected two activities capable of phosphorylating p34cdc2 on Thr14 and/or Tyr15 in interphase extracts prepared from Xenopus eggs. An activity capable of phosphorylating Tyr15 remained soluble after ultracentrifugation of interphase extracts whereas a second activity capable of phosphorylating both Thr14 and Tyr15 pelleted. The pelleted fraction contained activities that were detergent extractable and that phosphorylated p34cdc2 on both Thr14 and Tyr15. The Thr14- and Tyr15-specific kinase activities co-purified through three successive chromatographic steps indicating the presence of a dual-specificity protein kinase capable of acting on p34cdc2.  相似文献   

18.
The activity of p34cdc2 kinase is regulated in the phases of vertebrate cell cycle by mechanisms of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation. In this paper, we demonstrate that casein kinase II (CKII) phosphorylates p34cdc2 in vivo and in vitro at Ser39 during the G1 phase of HeLa cell division cycle. Human p34cdc2 shows a typical phosphorylation sequence motif site for CKII at Ser39 (ES39EEE). In our experiments, either p34cdc2 expressed and purified from bacteria or p34cdc2 immunoprecipitated from HeLa cells enriched in G1 by elutriation were substrates for in vitro phosphorylation by CKII. Phosphoamino acid analysis, N-chlorosuccinimide mapping, and two-dimensional tryptic mapping of p34cdc2 phosphorylated in vitro were performed to determine the phosphorylation site. A synthetic peptide spanning residues 33-50 of human p34cdc2, including the CKII site, was used to map the site. In addition, phosphorylation at Ser39 also occurs in vivo, since p34cdc2 is phosphorylated during G1 on serine, and its two-dimensional tryptic map shows two phosphopeptides that comigrate exactly with the synthetic peptides used as standard.  相似文献   

19.
Hexamethylene bisacetamide (HMBA)-induced murine erythroleukemia (MELC) differentiation is characterized by a prolongation of the initial G1 which follows passage through S phase in the presence of inducer. Commitment to terminal cell division is first detected in a portion of the cell population during this prolonged G1. HMBA-induced commitment is stochastic. This study has examined changes in two known cell cycle regulators, p34cdc2 and cyclin A, in cycle-synchronized MELC in the absence and presence of HMBA. Histone H1 kinase activity of p34cdc2, and the levels of CDC2Mm mRNA, 1.8-kilobase mRNA of cyclin A, and cyclin A protein changed during cell cycle progression in MELC, and all of them were suppressed during G1. The suppression of the H1 kinase activity and cyclin A expression continued through the prolonged G1 in MELC cultured with HMBA, whereas p34cdc2 protein level did not vary through the cell cycle in MELC cultured without or with inducer. Phosphorylation of p34cdc2 in uninduced MELC gradually increased as cells progressed from G1 to S. In induced MELC, an increase in phosphorylation of p34cdc2 occurred during the prolonged G1, and prior to the exit of the bulk of the cells from G1 to S. These results suggest that in HMBA-induced MELC, p34cdc2 phosphorylation per se is not a limiting factor in determining G1 to S progression. The persistent suppression of cyclin A expression and histone H1 kinase activity may play a role in HMBA-induced commitment to terminal differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
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