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1.
R T Pu  S A Osmani 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(5):995-1003
NIMA is a cell cycle regulated protein kinase required, in addition to p34cdc2/cyclin B, for initiation of mitosis in Aspergillus nidulans. Like cyclin B, NIMA accumulates when cells are arrested in G2 and is degraded as cells traverse mitosis. However, it is stable in cells arrested in mitosis. NIMA, and related kinases, have an N-terminal kinase domain and a C-terminal extension. Deletion of the C-terminus does not completely inactivate NIMA kinase activity but does prevent functional complementation of a temperature sensitive mutation of nimA, showing it to be essential for function. Partial C-terminal deletion of NIMA generates a highly toxic kinase although the kinase domain alone is not toxic. Transient induction experiments demonstrate that the partially truncated NIMA is far more stable than the full length NIMA protein which likely accounts for its toxicity. Unlike full length NIMA, the truncated NIMA is not degraded during mitosis and this affects normal mitotic progression. Cells arrested in mitosis with non-degradable NIMA are able to destroy cyclin B, demonstrating that the arrest is not due to stabilization of p34cdc2/cyclin B activity. The data establish that NIMA degradation during mitosis is required for correct mitotic progression in A. nidulans.  相似文献   

2.
A variety of different cyclin proteins have been identified in higher eukaryotes. In the case of cyclin B, functional analyses have clearly demonstrated an important role in the control of entry into mitosis. The function of cyclin A is more complex. It appears to function in the control of both S- and M-phase. The results of our genetic analyses in Drosophila demonstrate that cyclin A has a mitotic function and that it acts synergistically with cyclin B during the G2-M transition. In double mutant embryos that express neither cyclin A nor cyclin B zygotically, cell cycle progression is blocked just before the exhaustion of the maternally contributed cyclin A and B stores. BrdU-labeling experiments indicate that cell cycle progression is blocked in G2 before entry into the fifteenth round of mitosis. Expression of either cyclin A or B from heat-inducible transgenes is sufficient to overcome this cell cycle block. This block is also not observed in single mutant embryos deficient for either cyclin A or B. In cyclin B deficient embryos, cell cycle progression continues after the apparent exhaustion of the maternal contribution, suggesting that cyclin B might not be essential for mitosis. However, mitotic spindles are clearly abnormal and progression through mitosis is delayed in these cyclin B deficient embryos.  相似文献   

3.
Groisman I  Jung MY  Sarkissian M  Cao Q  Richter JD 《Cell》2002,109(4):473-483
The synthesis and destruction of cyclin B drives mitosis in eukaryotic cells. Cell cycle progression is also regulated at the level of cyclin B translation. In cycling extracts from Xenopus embryos, progression into M phase requires the polyadenylation-induced translation of cyclin B1 mRNA. Polyadenylation is mediated by the phosphorylation of CPEB by Aurora, a kinase whose activity oscillates with the cell cycle. Exit from M phase seems to require deadenylation and subsequent translational silencing of cyclin B1 mRNA by Maskin, a CPEB and eIF4E binding factor, whose expression is cell cycle regulated. These observations suggest that regulated cyclin B1 mRNA translation is essential for the embryonic cell cycle. Mammalian cells also display a cell cycle-dependent cytoplasmic polyadenylation, suggesting that translational control by polyadenylation might be a general feature of mitosis in animal cells.  相似文献   

4.
Human cyclin A is required for mitosis until mid prophase.   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
We have used microinjection and time-lapse video microscopy to study the role of cyclin A in mitosis. We have injected purified, active cyclin A/cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) into synchronized cells at specific points in the cell cycle and assayed its effect on cell division. We find that cyclin A/CDK2 will drive G2 phase cells into mitosis within 30 min of microinjection, up to 4 h before control cells enter mitosis. Often this premature mitosis is abnormal; the chromosomes do not completely condense and daughter cells fuse. Remarkably, microinjecting cyclin A/CDK2 into S phase cells has no effect on progress through the following G2 phase or mitosis. In complementary experiments we have microinjected the amino terminus of p21(Cip1/Waf1/Sdi1) (p21N) into cells to inhibit cyclin A/CDK2 activity. We find that p21N will prevent S phase or G2 phase cells from entering mitosis, and will cause early prophase cells to return to interphase. These results suggest that cyclin A/CDK2 is a rate-limiting component required for entry into mitosis, and for progress through mitosis until late prophase. They also suggest that cyclin A/CDK2 may be the target of the recently described prophase checkpoint.  相似文献   

5.
We have previously shown that the tobacco cyclin B1;1 protein accumulates during the G2 phase of the cell cycle and is subsequently destroyed during mitosis. Here, we investigated the sub-cellular localisation of two different B1-types and one A3-type cyclin during the cell cycle by using confocal imaging and differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. The cyclins were visualised as GFP-tagged fusion proteins in living tobacco cells. Both B1-type cyclins were found in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus during G2 but when cells entered into prophase, both cyclins became associated with condensing chromatin and remained on chromosomes until metaphase. As cells exited metaphase, the B1-type cyclins became degraded, as shown by time-lapse images. A stable variant of cyclin B1;1-GFP fusion protein, in which the destruction box had been mutated, maintained its association with the nuclear material at later phases of mitosis such as anaphase and telophase. Furthermore, we demonstrated that cyclin B1;1 protein is stabilised in metaphase-arrested cells after microtubule destabilising drug treatments. In contrast to the B1-type cyclins, the cyclin A3;1 was found exclusively in the nucleus in interphase cells and disappeared earlier than the cyclin B1 proteins during mitosis.  相似文献   

6.
To maintain cellular homeostasis against the demands of the extracellular environment, a precise regulation of kinases and phosphatases is essential. In cell cycle regulation mechanisms, activation of the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK1) and cyclin B complex (CDK1:cyclin B) causes a remarkable change in protein phosphorylation. Activation of CDK1:cyclin B is regulated by two auto-amplification loops-CDK1:cyclin B activates Cdc25, its own activating phosphatase, and inhibits Wee1, its own inhibiting kinase. Recent biological evidence has revealed that the inhibition of its counteracting phosphatase activity also occurs, and it is parallel to CDK1:cyclin B activation during mitosis. Phosphatase regulation of mitotic kinases and their substrates is essential to ensure that the progression of the cell cycle is ordered. Outlining how the mutual control of kinases and phosphatases governs the localization and timing of cell division will give us a new understanding about cell cycle regulation. [BMB Reports 2013; 46(6): 289-294]  相似文献   

7.
The eukaryotic cell cycle is driven by a set of cyclin-dependent kinases associated with their regulatory partners, the cyclins, which confer activity, substrate specificities and proper localization of the kinase activity. We describe the cell cycle of Karenia brevis and provide evidence for the presence of a cyclin B homologue in this dinoflagellate using two antibodies with different specificities. This cyclin B homologue has an unusual behavior, since its expression is permanent and it has a cytoplasmic location throughout the cell cycle. There is no evidence for translocation to the nucleus during mitosis. However, it appears also to be specifically bound to the nucleolus throughout the cell cycle. The permanent expression and the cytoplasmic localization during mitosis of this cyclin B homologue is similar to p56, a cyclin B homologue previously described in a different species of dinoflagellate, Crypthecodinium cohnii. Here we discuss this unusual behavior of the cyclin B homologue in dinoflagellates, its relationship to the unusual characteristics of dinomitosis, and its potential implications regarding the evolution of cell cycle regulation among eukaryotes.  相似文献   

8.
PCAF and GCN5 acetylate cyclin A at specific lysine residues targeting it for degradation at mitosis. We report here that histone deacetylase 3 (HDAC3) directly interacts with and deacetylates cyclin A. HDAC3 interacts with a domain included in the first 171 aa of cyclin A, a region involved in the regulation of its stability. In cells, overexpression of HDAC3 reduced cyclin A acetylation whereas the knocking down of HDAC3 increased its acetylation. Moreover, reduction of HDAC3 levels induced a decrease of cyclin A that can be reversed by proteasome inhibitors. These results indicate that HDAC3 is able to regulate cyclin A degradation during mitosis via proteasome. Interestingly, HDAC3 is abruptly degraded at mitosis also via proteasome thus facilitating cyclin A acetylation by PCAF/GCN5, which will target cyclin A for degradation. Because cyclin A is crucial for S phase progression and mitosis entry, the knock down of HDAC3 affects cell cycle progression specifically at both, S phase and G2/M transition. In summary we propose here that HDAC3 regulates cyclin A stability by counteracting the action of the acetylases PCAF/GCN5.  相似文献   

9.
Dog thyroid epithelial cells in primary culture constitute a model of positive control of DNA synthesis initiation and GO-S prereplicative phase progression by cyclic AMP as a second messenger for TSH. In its early steps, this mitogenic control is quite distinct from cyclic AMP-independent mitogenic cascades elicited by growth factors. We demonstrate here that TSH (cyclic AMP) and EGF + serum (cyclic AMP-independent) stimulations cooperate and finally converge on proteins that control the cell cycle machinery. This convergence included a common induction of the expression of cyclin A and p34cdc2, and to a lesser extent of p33/38cdk2, which was already expressed in quiescent thyroid cells, and common changes of cdc2 and CDK2 phosphorylations as evidenced by electrophoretic mobility shifts. Kinetic differences in these processes after stimulation by TSH or EGF + serum or by these factors in combination correlated with differences in cell cycle kinetics. Moreover, an immunofluorescence analysis of these proteins using the double labeling of PCNA as a marker of each cell cycle phase shows: (1) a previously undescribed nuclear translocation of CDK2 before S phase initiation; (2) a sudden increase of cdc2 nuclear immunoreactivity at G2/mitosis transition. These data support the roles of CDK2 and cdc2 at G1/S and G2/mitosis transitions, respectively. (3) We were unable to demonstrate in individual cells a strict association between the nuclear appearance of cyclin A and G1/S transition, and an association of cyclin A and CDK2 with PCNA-stained DNA replication sites. On the other hand, the lengthening of G2 phase in the TSH/cyclic AMP-dependent thyroid cell cycle was associated with a stabilization of Tyr15 inhibitory phosphorylation of cdc2 and an especially high nuclear concentration of cyclin A and CDK2. We hypothesize that high nuclear accumulation of cyclin A and CDK2 during G2 phase could be causative in the cyclic AMP-dependent delay of mitosis onset. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Tissue homeostasis requires precise control of cell proliferation and arrest in response to environmental cues. In situation such as wound healing, injured cells are stimulated to divide, but as soon as confluence is reached proliferation must be blocked. Such reversible cell cycle exit occurs in G1, requires pRb family members, and is driven by p27Kip1-dependent Cdk inactivation. This implies that, while dividing, cells should simultaneously prepare the exit once mitosis is accomplished. For a long time, the decision to cycle or not was presumed to occur in G1, prior to the restriction point, beyond which the cells were bound to divide even in the absence of mitogens, before finally arresting after mitosis. However, more recent reports suggested that the commitment to cycle in response to serum occurs already in G2 phase and requires the Ras-dependent induction of cyclin D1, which promotes following G1/S transition. To test whether this hypothesis applies to arrest induced by contact inhibition, we used an in vitro wounding model where quiescent human dermal fibroblasts, stimulated to proliferate by mechanical injury, synchronously exit cell cycle after mitosis due to renewed confluence. We show that this exit is preceded by p27-dependent inhibition of cyclin A-Cdk1/2, cyclin D1 downregulation and reduced pre-mitotic pRb pocket protein phosphorylation. Over-expression of cyclin D1 but not p27 depletion reversed this phenotype and compromised confluence-driven cell cycle exit. Thus, a balance between cyclin D1 and p27 may provide sensitive responses to variations in proliferative cues operating throughout the cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
In previous studies we demonstrated that resveratrol acts in an antiapoptotic manner on the paclitaxel-treated human neuroblastoma (HN) SH-SY5Y cell line inhibiting the apoptotic pathways induced by the antineoplastic drug. In the present study we evaluated the antiapoptotic effect of resveratrol, studying its activity on cell cycle progression. We determined the mitotic index of cultures exposed to resveratrol and paclitaxel alone or in combination, the cell cycle distribution by flow cytometric analysis (FACS), and the modulation of some relevant cell cycle regulatory proteins. Resveratrol is able to induce S-phase cell arrest and this interference with the cell cycle is associated with an increase of cyclin E and cyclin A, a downregulation of cyclin D1, and no alteration in cyclin B1 and cdk 1 activation. The resveratrol-induced S-phase block prevents SH-SY5Y from entering into mitosis, the phase of the cell cycle in which paclitaxel exerts its activity, explaining the antiapoptotic effect of resveratrol.  相似文献   

12.
Cyclin A is required at two points in the human cell cycle.   总被引:115,自引:21,他引:115       下载免费PDF全文
  相似文献   

13.
A Abrieu  D Fisher  M N Simon  M Dorée    A Picard 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(21):6407-6413
Down-regulation of MAP kinase (MAPK) is a universal consequence of fertilization in the animal kingdom, although its role is not known. Here we show that MAPK inactivation is essential for embryos, both vertebrate and invertebrate, to enter first mitosis. Suppressing down-regulation of MAPK at fertilization, for example by constitutively activating the upstream MAPK cascade, specifically suppresses cyclin B-cdc2 kinase activation and its consequence, entry into first mitosis. It thus appears that MAPK functions in meiotic maturation by preventing unfertilized eggs from proceeding into parthenogenetic development. The most general effect of artificially maintaining MAPK activity after fertilization is prevention of the G2 to M-phase transition in the first mitotic cell cycle, even though inappropriate reactivation of MAPK after fertilization may lead to metaphase arrest in vertebrates. Advancing the time of MAPK inactivation in fertilized eggs does not, however, speed up their entry into first mitosis. Thus, sustained activity of MAPK during part of the first mitotic cell cycle is not responsible for late entry of fertilized eggs into first mitosis.  相似文献   

14.
Initiation of mitosis in Aspergillus nidulans requires activation of two protein kinases, p34cdc2/cyclin B and NIMA. Forced expression of NIMA, even when p34cdc2 was inactivated, promoted chromatin condensation. NIMA may therefore directly cause mitotic chromosome condensation. However, the mitosis-promoting function of NIMA is normally under control of p34cdc2/cyclin B as the active G2 form of NIMA is hyperphosphorylated and further activated by p34cdc2/cyclin B when cells initiate mitosis. To see the p34cdc2/cyclin B dependent activation of NIMA, okadaic acid had to be added to isolation buffers to prevent dephosphorylation of NIMA during isolation. Hyperphosphorylated NIMA contained the MPM-2 epitope and, in vitro, phosphorylation of NIMA by p34cdc2/cyclin B generated the MPM-2 epitope, suggesting that NIMA is phosphorylated directly by p34cdc2/cyclin B during mitotic initiation. These two kinases, which are both essential for mitotic initiation, are therefore independently activated as protein kinases during G2. Then, to initiate mitosis, we suggest that each activates the other's mitosis-promoting functions. This ensures that cells coordinately activate p34cdc2/cyclin B and NIMA to initiate mitosis only upon completion of all interphase events. Finally, we show that NIMA is regulated through the cell cycle like cyclin B, as it accumulates during G2 and is degraded only when cells traverse mitosis.  相似文献   

15.
The roles of Drosophila cyclins A and B in mitotic control   总被引:51,自引:0,他引:51  
C F Lehner  P H O'Farrell 《Cell》1990,61(3):535-547
We have cloned, sequenced, and characterized the expression of a Drosophila cyclin B gene. The independent evolutionary conservation of A- and B-type cyclins implies that they have distinct roles. Indeed, in mutant embryos deficient in cyclin A, cells that accumulate only cyclin B do not enter mitosis. Thus, in vivo, cyclin B is not sufficient for mitosis. Furthermore, we find that the two cyclins are coexpressed in all proliferating cells throughout development. Though lacking a formal demonstration that cyclin B is essential as it is in other organisms, we propose that each of these proteins fulfills a distinct and essential role in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

16.
Cyclin A is essential for regulating key transitions in the eukaryotic cell cycle including initiation of DNA replication and mitosis. This paper describes the characterization of a truncated cyclin A isoform (cyclin A(t)) in vitro in cultured mammalian cells and in mouse tissues. The presence of cyclin A(t) in specific cell types correlates with the ability of cell extracts to cleave in vitro translated cyclin A. In CHO-K1 cells, cyclin A processing to cyclin A(t) occurs at the N terminus; it does not involve the 26 S proteasome, nor could it be induced by conditional overexpression of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(Kip1). However, high cell densities lead to increased cyclin A(t) levels. Unlike full-length cyclin A, cyclin A(t) localizes to the cytoplasm, where it binds Cdk2. The data suggest that cyclin A processing occurs in vivo to yield an N-terminally truncated isoform by an unknown mechanism that is regulated by cell density. Differential subcellular localization may provide the first insights into the physiological role of cyclin A(t).  相似文献   

17.
A role for cyclin D3 in the endomitotic cell cycle.   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15       下载免费PDF全文
Platelets, essential for thrombosis and hemostasis, develop from polyploid megakaryocytes which undergo endomitosis. During this cell cycle, cells experience abrogated mitosis and reenter a phase of DNA synthesis, thus leading to endomitosis. In the search for regulators of the endomitotic cell cycle, we have identified cyclin D3 as an important regulatory factor. Of the D-type cyclins, cyclin D3 is present at high levels in megakaryocytes undergoing endomitosis and is markedly upregulated following exposure to the proliferation-, maturation-, and ploidy-promoting factor, Mpl ligand. Transgenic mice in which cyclin D3 is overexpressed in the platelet lineage display a striking increase in endomitosis, similar to changes seen following Mpl ligand administration to normal mice. Electron microscopy analysis revealed that unlike such treated mice, however, D3 transgenic mice show a poor development of demarcation membranes, from which platelets are believed to fragment, and no increase in platelets. Thus, while our model supports a key role for cyclin D3 in the endomitotic cell cycle, it also points to the unique role of Mpl ligand in priming megakaryocytes towards platelet fragmentation. The role of cyclin D3 in promoting endomitosis in other lineages programmed to abrogate mitosis will need further exploration.  相似文献   

18.
Cyclins bind and activate cyclin-dependent kinases that regulate cell cycle progression in eukaryotes. Cell cycle control in Trypanosoma brucei was analyzed in the present study. Genes encoding four PHO80 cyclin homologues and three B-type cyclin homologues but no G1 cyclin homologues were identified in this organism. Through knocking down expression of the seven cyclin genes with the RNA interference technique in the procyclic form of T. brucei, we demonstrated that one PHO80 homologue (CycE1/CYC2) and a B-type cyclin homologue (CycB2) are the essential cyclins regulating G1/S and G2/M transitions, respectively. This lack of overlapping cyclin function differs significantly from that observed in the other eukaryotes. Also, PHO80 cyclin is known for its involvement only in phosphate signaling in yeast with no known function in cell cycle control. Both observations thus suggest the presence of simple and novel cell cycle regulators in trypanosomes. T. brucei cells deficient in CycE1/CYC2 displayed a long slender morphology, whereas those lacking CycB2 assumed a fat stumpy form. These cells apparently still can undergo cytokinesis generating small numbers of anucleated daughter cells, each containing a single kinetoplast known as a zoid. Two different types of zoids were identified, the slender zoid derived from reduced CycE1/CYC2 expression and the stumpy zoid from CycB2 deficiency. This observation indicates an uncoupling between the kinetoplast and the nuclear cycle, resulting in cell division driven by kinetoplast segregation with neither a priori S phase nor mitosis in the trypanosome.  相似文献   

19.
Cdk2 was once believed to play an essential role in cell cycle progression, but cdk2-/- mice have minimal phenotypic abnormalities. In this study, we examined the role of cdk2 in hepatocyte proliferation, centrosome duplication, and survival. Cdk2-/- hepatocytes underwent mitosis and had normal centrosome content after mitogen stimulation. Unlike wild-type cells, cdk2-/- liver cells failed to undergo centrosome overduplication in response to ectopic cyclin D1 expression. After mitogen stimulation in culture or partial hepatectomy in vivo, cdk2-/- hepatocytes demonstrated diminished proliferation. Cyclin D1 is a key mediator of cell cycle progression in hepatocytes, and transient expression of this protein is sufficient to promote robust proliferation of these cells in vivo. In cdk2-/- mice and animals treated with the cdk2 inhibitor seliciclib, cyclin D1 failed to induce hepatocyte cell cycle progression. Surprisingly, cdk2 ablation or inhibition led to massive hepatocyte and animal death following cyclin D1 transfection. In a transgenic model of chronic hepatic cyclin D1 expression, seliciclib induced hepatocyte injury and animal death, suggesting that cdk2 is required for survival of cyclin D1-expressing cells even in the absence of substantial proliferation. In conclusion, our studies demonstrate that cdk2 plays a role in liver regeneration. Furthermore, it is essential for centrosome overduplication, proliferation, and survival of hepatocytes that aberrantly express cyclin D1 in vivo. These studies suggest that cdk2 may warrant further investigation as a target for therapy of liver tumors with constitutive cyclin D1 expression.  相似文献   

20.
Cyclin B activates cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) at mitosis, but conflicting views have emerged on the dynamics of its synthesis during embryonic cycles, ranging from continuous translation to rapid synthesis during mitosis. Here we show that a CDK1-mediated negative-feedback loop attenuates cyclin production before mitosis. Cyclin B plateaus before peak CDK1 activation, and proteasome inhibition caused minimal accumulation during mitosis. Inhibiting CDK1 permitted continual cyclin B synthesis, whereas adding nondegradable cyclin stalled it. Cycloheximide treatment before mitosis affected neither cyclin levels nor mitotic entry, corroborating this repression. Attenuated cyclin production collaborates with its destruction, since excess cyclin B1 mRNA accelerated cyclin synthesis and caused incomplete proteolysis and mitotic arrest. This repression involved neither adenylation nor the 3' untranslated region, but it corresponded with a shift in cyclin B1 mRNA from polysome to nonpolysome fractions. A pulse-driven CDK1-anaphase-promoting complex (APC) model corroborated these results, revealing reduced cyclin levels during an oscillation and permitting more effective removal. This design also increased the robustness of the oscillator, with lessened sensitivity to changes in cyclin synthesis rate. Taken together, the results of this study underscore that attenuating cyclin synthesis late in interphase improves both the efficiency and robustness of the CDK1-APC oscillator.  相似文献   

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