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1.
Yue J  Ferrell JE 《Current biology : CB》2004,14(17):1581-1586
The ERK1/ERK2 MAP kinases (MAPKs) are transiently activated during mitosis, and MAPK activation has been implicated in the spindle assembly checkpoint and in establishing the timing of an unperturbed mitosis. The MAPK activator MEK1 is required for mitotic activation of p42 MAPK in Xenopus egg extracts; however, the identity of the kinase that activates MEK1 is unknown. Here we have partially purified a Cdc2-cyclin B-induced MEK-activating protein kinase from mitotic Xenopus egg extracts and identified it as the Mos protooncoprotein, a MAP kinase kinase kinase present at low levels in mitotic egg extracts, early embryos, and somatic cells. Immunodepletion of Mos from interphase egg extracts was found to abolish Delta90 cyclin B-Cdc2-stimulated p42 MAPK activation. In contrast, immunodepletion of Raf-1 and B-Raf, two other MEK-activating kinases present in Xenopus egg extracts, had little effect on cyclin-stimulated p42 MAPK activation. Immunodepletion of Mos also abolished the transient activation of p42 MAPK in cycling egg extracts. Taken together, these data demonstrate that Mos is responsible for the mitotic activation of the p42 MAPK pathway in Xenopus egg extracts.  相似文献   

2.
Previously, we have shown that the addition of a constitutively-active mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase protein (MAPKK = MEK) to cycling Xenopus egg extracts activates the p42MAPK pathway, leading to a G2 or M-phase cell cycle arrest. The stage of the arrest depends on the timing of p42MAPK activation. If p42MAPK is activated prior to M-phase, or after exit from M-phase, the extract is arrested in G2. If p42MAPK is activated during entry into M-phase, the extract is arrested in M-phase. In this study, we show that the addition of recombinant Mos protein (which directly phosphorylates and activates MEK) to cycling egg extracts has the same effect as those described for MEK. The addition of Mos to the extract at the start of incubation leads to a G2 arrest with large interphase nuclei with intact nuclear envelopes. If Mos is added at later times, however, the activation of p42MAPK leads to an M-phase arrest with condensed chromosomes and mitotic arrays of microtubules. Moreover, the extent of M-phase specific phosphorylations is shown by the sustained presence of phosphoproteins that are detected by the monoclonal antibody MPM-2. Unexpectedly, in certain M-phase arrested extracts, histone H1 kinase activity levels reach a peak on entry into M-phase but then fall abruptly to interphase levels. When these extracts are analyzed by immunoblotting, Cyclin B2 is destroyed in those samples containing low maturation promoting factor activity (MPF, cyclin B/Cdc2), yet chromosomes remain condensed with associated mitotic arrays of microtubules and M-phase-specific phosphorylations are sustained. These results suggest that although MPF is required for entry into M-phase, once established, M-phase can be maintained by the p42MAPK pathway after the proteolysis of mitotic cyclins.  相似文献   

3.
We have added constitutively active MAP kinase/ERK kinase (MEK), an activator of the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway, to cycling Xenopus egg extracts at various times during the cell cycle. p42MAPK activation during entry into M-phase arrested the cell cycle in metaphase, as has been shown previously. Unexpectedly, p42MAPK activation during interphase inhibited entry into M-phase. In these interphase-arrested extracts, H1 kinase activity remained low, Cdc2 was tyrosine phosphorylated, and nuclei continued to enlarge. The interphase arrest was overcome by recombinant cyclin B. In other experiments, p42MAPK activation by MEK or by Mos inhibited Cdc2 activation by cyclin B. PD098059, a specific inhibitor of MEK, blocked the effects of MEK(QP) and Mos. Mos-induced activation of p42MAPK did not inhibit DNA replication. These results indicate that, in addition to the established role of p42MAPK activation in M-phase arrest, the inappropriate activation of p42MAPK during interphase prevents normal entry into M-phase.  相似文献   

4.
Induction of G(2)/M phase transition in mitotic and meiotic cell cycles requires activation by phosphorylation of the protein phosphatase Cdc25. Although Cdc2/cyclin B and polo-like kinase (PLK) can phosphorylate and activate Cdc25 in vitro, phosphorylation by these two kinases is insufficient to account for Cdc25 activation during M phase induction. Here we demonstrate that p42 MAP kinase (MAPK), the Xenopus ortholog of ERK2, is a major Cdc25 phosphorylating kinase in extracts of M phase-arrested Xenopus eggs. In Xenopus oocytes, p42 MAPK interacts with hypophosphorylated Cdc25 before meiotic induction. During meiotic induction, p42 MAPK phosphorylates Cdc25 at T48, T138, and S205, increasing Cdc25's phosphatase activity. In a mammalian cell line, ERK1/2 interacts with Cdc25C in interphase and phosphorylates Cdc25C at T48 in mitosis. Inhibition of ERK activation partially inhibits T48 phosphorylation, Cdc25C activation, and mitotic induction. These findings demonstrate that ERK-MAP kinases are directly involved in activating Cdc25 during the G(2)/M transition.  相似文献   

5.
Fully grown G2-arrested Xenopus oocytes resume meiosis in vitro upon exposure to hormonal stimulation. Progesterone triggers oocyte meiosis resumption through a Ras-independent pathway that involves a p39Mos-dependent activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases. Insulin also triggers meiosis resumption through a tyrosine kinase receptor that activates a Ras-dependent pathway leading to the MAP kinases activation. Antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotides were used to prevent p39Mos accumulation and Erk-like Xp42(Mpk1) activation during insulin-induced Xenopus oocytes maturation. In contrast to previous works, prevention of p39Mos-induced activation of Xp42(Mpk1) in insulin-treated oocytes did not inhibit but delayed meiotic resumption, like in progesterone-stimulated oocytes. Activations of Xp42(Mpk1), the unique Erk of the oocyte, and of its downstream target p90Rsk, were impaired and phosphorylation of the MAPKK kinase Raf was partially inhibited. Similarly, oocytes treated with the MEK inhibitor U0126, stimulated by insulin exhibited delayed germinal vesicle breakdown, absence of Xp42(Mpk1) activation, and partial phosphorylation of Raf. To summarize, whereas p39Mos-induced activation of MEK/MAPK pathway is dispensable for insulin-induced germinal vesicle breakdown, Xp42(Mpk1) activation induced by insulin is dependent upon p39Mos synthesis. Raf complete phosphorylation appears to require the MEK/MAPK pathway activation both in progesterone and insulin-stimulated oocytes.  相似文献   

6.
Fully grown Xenopus oocytes can remain in their immature state essentially indefinitely, or, in response to the steroid hormone progesterone, can be induced to develop into fertilizable eggs. This process is termed oocyte maturation. Oocyte maturation is initiated by a novel plasma membrane steroid hormone receptor. Progesterone brings about inhibition of adenylate cyclase and activation of the Mos/MEK1/p42 MAP kinase cascade, which ultimately brings about the activation of the universal M phase trigger Cdc2/cyclin B. Oocyte maturation provides an interesting example of how signaling cascades entrain the cell cycle clock to environmental changes.  相似文献   

7.
Activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) in maturing mouse oocytes occurs after synthesis of Mos, a MAPKKK. To investigate whether Mos acts only through MEK1, we microinjected constitutively active forms of MEK1 (MEK1S218D/S222D referred herein as MEK*) and Raf (DeltaRaf) into mouse oocytes. In mos(-/-) oocytes, which do not activate MAPK during meiosis and do not arrest in metaphase II, MEK* and DeltaRaf did not rescue MAPK activation and metaphase II arrest, whereas Mos induced a complete rescue. MEK* and DeltaRaf induced cleavage arrest of two-cell blastomeres. They induced MAPK activation when protein phosphatases were inhibited by okadaic acid, suggesting that Mos may inhibit protein phosphatases. Finally, in mos(-/-) oocytes, MEK* induced the phosphorylation of Xp42(mapk)D324N, a mutant less sensitive to dephosphorylation, showing that a MAPK phosphatase activity is present in mouse oocytes. We demonstrate that active MAPKK or MAPKKK cannot substitute for Mos to activate MAPK in mouse oocytes. We also show that a phosphatase activity inactivates MAPK, and that Mos can overcome this inhibitory activity. Thus Mos activates MAPK through two opposite pathways: activation of MEK1 and inhibition of a phosphatase.  相似文献   

8.
9.
In unfertilized Xenopus eggs, the p42 mitogen activated protein kinase (p42MAPK) pathway isknown to maintain cell cycle arrest at metaphase of meiosis II. However, constitutive activation ofp42MAPK in post-meiotic, cycling Xenopus egg extracts can lead to either a G2 or M-phase arrestof the cell cycle, depending on the timing of p42MAPK activation. Here, we examined themolecular mechanism by which activation of the p42MAPK pathway during interphase leads to cellcycle arrest in G2. When either a recombinant wild type Cdc25C(WT) or a mutated form ofCdc25C, in which serine 287 was replaced by an alanine (S287A), was added to cycling eggextracts, S287A accelerated entry into M-phase. Furthermore, the addition of S287A overcame theG2 arrest caused by p42MAPK, driving the extract into M-phase. p90Rsk, a kinase that is the targetof p42MAPK, was phosphorylated and activated (pp90Rsk) in the G2-arrested egg extracts, and wasable to phosphorylate WT but not S287A in vitro. 14-3-3 proteins were associated with endogenousCdc25C in G2-arrested extracts. Cdc25C(WT) that had been phosphorylated by pp90Rsk bound 14-3-3?, whereas S287A could not. These data suggest that the link between the p42MAPK signalingpathway and Cdc25C involves the activation of pp90Rsk and its phosphorylation of Cdc25C at S287,causing the binding of 14-3-3 proteins. We propose that the binding of 14-3-3 proteins to pp90Rskphosphorylated-Cdc25C results in a G2 arrest in a manner similar to the cell cycle delays inducedby differentiation signals that occur later in embryonic development.  相似文献   

10.
Previous work has established that activation of Mos, Mek, and p42 mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase can trigger release from G2-phase arrest in Xenopus oocytes and oocyte extracts and can cause Xenopus embryos and extracts to arrest in mitosis. Herein we have found that activation of the MAP kinase cascade can also bring about an interphase arrest in cycling extracts. Activation of the cascade early in the cycle was found to bring about the interphase arrest, which was characterized by an intact nuclear envelope, partially condensed chromatin, and interphase levels of H1 kinase activity, whereas activation of the cascade just before mitosis brought about the mitotic arrest, with a dissolved nuclear envelope, condensed chromatin, and high levels of H1 kinase activity. Early MAP kinase activation did not interfere significantly with DNA replication, cyclin synthesis, or association of cyclins with Cdc2, but it did prevent hyperphosphorylation of Cdc25 and Wee1 and activation of Cdc2/cyclin complexes. Thus, the extracts were arrested in a G2-like state, unable to activate Cdc2/cyclin complexes. The MAP kinase-induced G2 arrest appeared not to be related to the DNA replication checkpoint and not to be mediated through inhibition of Cdk2/cyclin E; evidently a novel mechanism underlies this arrest. Finally, we found that by delaying the inactivation of MAP kinase during release of a cytostatic factor-arrested extract from its arrest state, we could delay the subsequent entry into mitosis. This finding suggests that it is the persistence of activated MAP kinase after fertilization that allows the occurrence of a G2-phase during the first mitotic cell cycle.  相似文献   

11.
In the Xenopus oocyte system mitogen treatment triggers the G(2)/M transition by transiently inhibiting the cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA); subsequently, other signal transduction pathways are activated, including the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and polo-like kinase pathways. To study the interactions between these pathways, we have utilized a cell-free oocyte extract that carries out the signaling events of oocyte maturation after addition of the heat-stable inhibitor of PKA, PKI. PKI stimulated the synthesis of Mos and activation of both the MAPK pathway and the Plx1/Cdc25C/cyclin B-Cdc2 pathway. Activation of the MAPK pathway alone by glutathione S-transferase (GST)-Mos did not lead to activation of Plx1 or cyclin B-Cdc2. Inhibition of the MAPK pathway in the extract by the MEK1 inhibitor U0126 delayed, but did not prevent, activation of the Plx1 pathway, and inhibition of Mos synthesis by cycloheximide had a similar effect, suggesting that MAPK activation is the only relevant function of Mos. Immunodepletion of Plx1 completely inhibited activation of Cdc25C and cyclin B-Cdc2 by PKI, indicating that Plx1 is necessary for Cdc25C activation. In extracts containing fully activated Plx1 and Cdc25C, inhibition of cyclin B-Cdc2 by p21(Cip1) had no significant effect on either the phosphorylation of Cdc25C or the activity of Plx1. These results demonstrate that maintenance of Plx1 and Cdc25C activity during mitosis does not require cyclin B-Cdc2 activity.  相似文献   

12.
In matured rat oocytes, spontaneous activation from the metaphase-II (MII) stage occurred after collection from the oviducts. It is well known that the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway and p34(cdc2) kinase play an important role in the arrest at MII in other species. However, there is no information about the difference in these factors among strains of rats. In the present study, in spontaneously activated oocytes from the Wistar rat, the Mos protein level and the activity of MAPK kinase (MEK)/MAPK were decreased at 120 min (13.8, 25.7, and 19.3, respectively, P<0.05), whereas Sprague-Dawley (SD) oocytes, which were not spontaneously activated, had a high level of Mos protein and MEK/MAPK activity (75.9, 76.2, and 87.9, respectively, P<0.05). Phosphorylation of MAPK in the SD oocytes was significantly suppressed by MEK inhibitor, U0126 at 60 min; this treatment decreased p34(cdc2) kinase activity via cyclin B1 degradation in a time-dependent manner. The treatment with proteasome inhibitor, MG132 or Ca2+-chelator, BAPTA-AM, overcame the spontaneous degradation of both Mos and cyclin B1 in a dose-dependent manner in Wistar oocytes. More than 90% of Wistar oocytes treated with BAPTA-AM were arrested at MII until 120 min. In conclusion, SD oocytes carrying Mos/MEK/MAPK, maintained a high activity of p34(cdc2) kinase by stabilizing cyclin B1, thus involved in their meiotic arrest. In contrast, Wistar oocytes had a relatively low cytostatic factor activity; rapid decrease of Mos/MEK/MAPK failed to stabilize both cyclin B1 and Mos, and these oocytes were likely to spontaneously activate.  相似文献   

13.
Extensive survey of meiotic metaphase II arrest during oocyte maturation in vertebrates revealed that the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway regulated by the c-mos proto-oncogene product, Mos, has an essential role in cytostatic activity, termed cytostatic factor (CSF). In contrast, little is known in invertebrates in which meiotic arrest occurs in most cases at metaphase I (MI arrest). A parthenogenetic insect, the sawfly Athalia rosae, in which artificial egg activation is practicable, has advantages to investigate the mechanisms of MI arrest. Both the MAPK/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase kinase (MEK) and MAPK were phosphorylated and maintained active in MI-arrested sawfly eggs, whereas they were dephosphorylated soon after egg activation. Treatment of MI-arrested eggs with U0126, an inhibitor of MEK, resulted in dephosphorylation of MAPK and MI arrest was resumed. The sawfly c-mos gene orthologue encoding a serine/threonine kinase was cloned and analyzed. It was expressed in nurse cells in the ovaries. To examine CSF activity of the sawfly Mos, synthesized glutathione S-transferase (GST)-fusion sawfly Mos protein was injected into MI-resumed eggs in which MEK and MAPK were dephosphorylated. Both MEK and MAPK were phosphorylated again upon injection. In these GST-fusion sawfly Mos-injected eggs subsequent mitotic (syncytial) divisions were blocked and embryonic development was ceased. These results demonstrated that the MEK-MAPK pathway was involved in maintaining CSF arrest in sawfly eggs and Mos functioned as its upstream regulatory molecule.  相似文献   

14.
C Y Huang  J E Ferrell  Jr 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(9):2169-2173
The progression of G2-arrested Xenopus laevis oocytes into meiotic M-phase is accompanied by the nearly simultaneous activation of p42 MAP kinase and Cdc2/cyclin B. This timing raises the possibility that the activation of one kinase might depend upon the other. Here we have examined whether Cdc2 activation requires p42 MAP kinase function. We have reconstituted Mos-induced Cdc2 activation in cell-free Xenopus oocyte extracts, and have found that Mos-induced Cdc2 activation requires active p42 MAP kinase, is inhibited by a MAP kinase phosphatase and is independent of protein synthesis. These findings indicate that p42 MAP kinase is an essential component of the M phase trigger in this system.  相似文献   

15.
Mos is a germ cell-specific serine/threonine protein kinase that activates mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) through MAPK kinase (MKK). In Xenopus oocytes, Mos synthesis is required for progesterone-induced activation of MAPK and maturation promoting factor. Injection of Mos or active MAPK causes mitotic arrest in early embryos, suggesting that Mos also acts via MKK and MAPK to induce the arrest of unfertilized eggs in metaphase of meiosis II. We have investigated whether Mos activity is regulated by phosphorylation. Previous studies have identified Ser-3 as the principal autophosphorylation site. We show that Mos interacts with the catalytic domain of MKK in a Saccharomyces cerevisiae two-hybrid test. Acidic substitutions of the sites phosphorylated by Mos in MKK reduce the interaction, implying that the complex may dissociate after phosphorylation of MKK by Mos. Furthermore, the Mos-MKK interaction requires Mos kinase activity, suggesting that Mos autophosphorylation may be involved in the interaction. Substitution of Ser-3 of Mos with Ala reduces the interaction with MKK and also reduces both the activation of MKK by Mos in vitro and cleavage arrest induced by Mos fusion protein in Xenopus embryos. By contrast, substitution of Ser-3 by Glu, an acidic amino acid that mimics phosphoserine, fosters the Mos interaction with MKK and permits activation of MKK in vitro and Mos-induced cleavage arrest. Moreover, the Glu-3 substitution increases the interaction of a kinase-inactive Mos mutant with MKK. Taken together, these results suggest that an important step in Mos activation involves the phosphorylation at Ser-3, which promotes Mos interaction with and activation of MKK.  相似文献   

16.
Resumption of meiosis from diplotene arrest during the first meiotic prophase in vertebrate oocytes is universally controlled by MPF, a heterodimer of Cdk1 and cyclin B. Activation of MPF depends on the withdrawal of Cdk1 inhibition by Wee1/Myt1 kinase on the one hand and the activation of Cdk1 by Cdc25 phosphatase on the other. It is relevant to know whether both these pathways are necessary to rescue diplotene arrest or if either one of them is sufficient. In MIH (17alpha, 20beta dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one) incubated perch (Anabas testudineus) oocytes we have examined these possibilities. Perch oocyte extract following MIH incubation showed a significant increase in Myt1 phosphorylation from 12 to 16 hr indicating its progressive deactivation. MIH induced Mos expression markedly increased at 16 hr effecting 95% GVBD. Cycloheximide inhibited MIH induced Mos expression and its phosphorylation, which in turn reduced Myt1 phosphorylation and GVBD. Myt1 phosphorylation was blocked in Mos immunodepleted oocytes. All these suggest the involvement of Mos in Myt1 phosphorylation. Oocytes incubated in MIH for 16 hr activated Cdc25, but such activation could not rescue the inhibition of GVBD due to Myt1 in Mos immunodepleted oocytes. Blocking Cdc25 with an antisense oligo significantly inhibited GVBD even though Myt1 remained deactivated during this period. Taken together, our findings indicate that MIH requires both pathways for perch oocyte maturation: the expression and activation of Mos, which is linked to Myt1 deactivation on the one hand, and the activation of Cdc25 on the other, as blocking either pathway compromised G2-M transition in perch oocytes.  相似文献   

17.
S Faure  S Vigneron  M Dorée    N Morin 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(18):5550-5561
We have identified new members (X-PAKs) of the Ste20/PAK family of protein kinases in Xenopus, and investigated their role in the process that maintains oocytes arrested in the cell cycle. Microinjection of a catalytically inactive mutant of X-PAK1 with a K/R substitution in the ATP binding site, also deleted of its Nter-half that contains the conserved domains responsible for binding of both Cdc42/Rac GTPases and SH3-containing proteins, greatly facilitates oocyte release from G2/prophase arrest by progesterone and insulin. Addition of the same X-PAK1 mutant to cell cycle extracts from unfertilized eggs induced apoptosis, as shown by activation of caspases and cytological changes in in vitro-assembled nuclei. This was suppressed by adding Bcl-2 or the DEVD peptide inhibitor of caspases, and rescued by competing the dominant-negative mutant with its constitutively active X-PAK1 counterpart. Such results indicate that X-PAK1 (or another member of the Xenopus Ste20/PAK family of protein kinases) is involved in arrest of oocytes at G2/prophase and prevention of apoptosis; thus death by apoptosis and release of healthy oocytes from cell cycle arrest may be linked. That cell cycle arrest protects oocytes from apoptosis is consistent with the finding that extracts from metaphase II-arrested oocytes are less sensitive to apoptotic signals than those from activated eggs.  相似文献   

18.
Progesterone stimulates G2-arrested Xenopus oocytes to synthesize Mos, a MAPK kinase kinase required for the coordinated activation of cdc2 and the G2/Meiosis I (MI) transition. Mos leads to activation of MAPK, Rsk, and the inhibition of the cdc2 inhibitor Myt1. Previous work identified CK2 beta as a Mos-interacting protein, and suggested that CK2 beta acts as a negative regulator by setting a threshold above which newly made Mos must accumulate to activate MAPK. However, it had not been demonstrated that CK2 beta directly inhibits Mos. We report here that Mos (52-115) is required for CK2 beta binding and can serve as a portable binding domain. To test whether CK2 beta acts at the level of Mos or on a downstream component, we took advantage of previous work that showed injection of Mos arrests rapidly dividing embryonic cells. We find that coinjection of CK2 beta and Mos into embryonic cells inhibits the ability of Mos to arrest cell division. In contrast, CK2 beta does not inhibit the mitotic arrest induced by injection of active Rsk. These results argue that CK2 beta directly binds and inhibits Mos rather than a downstream component, and support that CK2 beta functions as a molecular buffer that prevents premature MAPK activation and oocyte maturation.  相似文献   

19.
Constitutive activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) is a property common to many oncoproteins, including Mos, Ras, and Raf, and is essential for their transforming activities. We have shown that high levels of expression of the Mos/MAPK pathway in Swiss 3T3 fibroblast cause cells in S phase to undergo apoptosis, while cells in G1 irreversibly growth arrest. Interestingly, cells in G2 and M phases also arrest at a G1-like checkpoint after proceeding through mitosis. These cells fail to undergo cytokinesis and are binucleated. Thus, constitutive overexpression of Mos and MAPK cannot be tolerated, and fibroblasts transformed by Mos express only low levels of the mos oncogene product. Here, we show that p53 plays a key role in preventing oncogene-mediated activation of MAPK. In the absence of p53 (p53-/-), the growth arrest normally observed in wild-type p53 (p53+/+) mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs) is markedly reduced. The mos transformation efficiency in p53-/- MEFs is two to three orders of magnitude higher than that in p53+/+ cells, and p53-/- cells tolerate > 10-fold higher levels of both Mos and activated MAPK. Moreover, we show that, like Mos, both v-ras and v-raf oncogene products induce apoptosis in p53+/+ MEFs. These oncogenes also display a high transforming activity in p53-/- MEFs, as does a gain-of-function MAPK kinase mutant (MEK*). Thus, the p53-dependent checkpoint pathway is responsive to oncogene-mediated MAPK activation in inducing irreversible G1 growth arrest and apoptosis. Moreover, we show that the chromosome instability induced by the loss of p53 is greatly enhanced by the constitutive activation of the Mos/MAPK pathway.  相似文献   

20.
Cdc2-cyclin B triggers H3 kinase activation of Aurora-A in Xenopus oocytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Xenopus oocytes are arrested in meiotic prophase I and resume meiotic divisions in response to progesterone. Progesterone triggers activation of M-phase promoting factor (MPF) or Cdc2-cyclin B complex and neosynthesis of Mos kinase, responsible for MAPK activation. Both Cdc2 and MAPK activities are required for the success of meiotic maturation. However, the signaling pathway induced by progesterone and leading to MPF activation is poorly understood, and most of the targets of both Cdc2 and MAPK in the oocyte remain to be determined. Aurora-A is a Ser/Thr kinase involved in separation of centrosomes and in spindle assembly during mitosis. It has been proposed that in Xenopus oocytes Aurora-A could be an early component of the progesterone-transduction pathway, acting through the regulation of Mos synthesis upstream Cdc2 activation. We addressed here the question of Aurora-A regulation during meiotic maturation by using new in vitro and in vivo experimental approaches. We demonstrate that Cdc2 kinase activity is necessary and sufficient to trigger both Aurora-A phosphorylation and kinase activation in Xenopus oocyte. In contrast, these events are independent of the Mos/MAPK pathway. Aurora-A is phosphorylated in vivo at least on three residues that regulate differentially its kinase activity. Therefore, Aurora-A is under the control of Cdc2 in the Xenopus oocyte and could be involved in meiotic spindle establishment.  相似文献   

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