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1.
Activation of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) requires phosphorylation of a threonine residue within the T-loop by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK). Here we isolated an Arabidopsis cDNA (CAK4At) whose predicted product shows a high similarity to vertebrate CDK7/p40(MO15). Northern blot analysis showed that expressions of the four Arabidopsis CAKs (CAK1At-CAK4At) were not dependent on cell division. CAK2At- and CAK4At-immunoprecipitates of Arabidopsis crude extract phosphorylated CDK and the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II with different preferences. These results suggest the existence of differential mechanisms in Arabidopsis that control CDK and CTD phosphorylation by multiple CAKs.  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) play an essential role in cell cycle regulation during the embryonic and post-embryonic development of various organisms. Full activation of CDKs requires not only binding to cyclins but also phosphorylation of the T-loop domain. This phosphorylation is catalysed by CDK-activating kinases (CAKs). Plants have two distinct types of CAKs, namely CDKD and CDKF; in Arabidopsis, CDKF;1 exhibits the highest CDK kinase activity in vitro . We have previously shown that CDKF;1 also functions in the activation of CDKD;2 and CDKD;3 by T-loop phosphorylation. Here, we isolated the knockout mutants of CDKF;1 and showed that they had severe defects in cell division, cell elongation and endoreduplication. No defect was observed during embryogenesis, suggesting that CDKF;1 function is primarily required for post-embryonic development. In the cdkf;1 mutants, T-loop phosphorylation of CDKA;1, an orthologue of yeast Cdc2/Cdc28p, was comparable to that in wild-type plants, and its kinase activity did not decrease. In contrast, the protein level and kinase activity of CDKD;2 were significantly reduced in the mutants. Substitution of threonine-168 with a non-phosphorylatable alanine residue made CDKD;2 unstable in Arabidopsis tissues. These results indicate that CDKF;1 is dispensable for CDKA;1 activation but is essential for maintaining a steady-state level of CDKD;2, thereby suggesting the quantitative regulation of a vertebrate-type CAK in a plant-specific manner.  相似文献   

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For the full activation of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), not only cyclin binding but also phosphorylation of a threonine (Thr) residue within the T-loop is required. This phosphorylation is catalyzed by CDK-activating kinases (CAKs). In Arabidopsis three D-type CDK genes (CDKD;1-CDKD;3) encode vertebrate-type CAK orthologues, of which CDKD;2 exhibits high phosphorylation activity towards the carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of the largest subunit of RNA polymerase II. Here, we show that CDKD;2 forms a stable complex with cyclin H and is downregulated by the phosphorylation of the ATP-binding site by WEE1 kinase. A knockout mutant of CDKD;3, which has a higher CDK kinase activity, displayed no defect in plant development. Instead, another type of CAK - CDKF;1 - exhibited significant activity towards CDKA;1 in Arabidopsis root protoplasts, and the activity was dependent on the T-loop phosphorylation of CDKF;1. We propose that two distinct types of CAK, namely CDKF;1 and CDKD;2, play a major role in CDK and CTD phosphorylation, respectively, in Arabidopsis.  相似文献   

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The cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) that drive the eukaryotic cell cycle must be phosphorylated within the activation segment (T-loop) by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK) to achieve full activity. Although a requirement for CDK-activating phosphorylation is conserved throughout eukaryotic evolution, CAK itself has diverged between metazoans and budding yeast, and fission yeast has two CAKs, raising the possibility that additional mammalian enzymes remain to be identified. We report here the characterization of PNQALRE (also known as CCRK or p42), a member of the mammalian CDK family most similar to the cell-cycle effectors Cdk1 and Cdk2 and to the CAK, Cdk7. Although PNQALRE/CCRK was recently proposed to activate Cdk2, we show that the monomeric protein has no intrinsic CAK activity. Depletion of PNQALRE by >80% due to RNA interference (RNAi) impairs cell proliferation, but fails to arrest the cell cycle at a discrete point. Instead, both the fraction of cells with a sub-G1 DNA content and cleavage of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) increase. PNQALRE knockdown did not diminish Cdk2 T-loop phosphorylation in vivo or decrease CAK activity of a cell extract. In contrast, depletion of Cdk7 by RNAi causes a proportional decrease in the ability of an extract to activate recombinant Cdk2. Our data do not support the proposed function of PNQALRE/CCRK in activating CDKs, butinstead reinforce the notion of Cdk7 as the major, and to date the only, CAK in mammalian cells.  相似文献   

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Fission yeast Csk1 is a CAK-activating kinase (CAKAK).   总被引:12,自引:3,他引:9  
Cell cycle progression is dependent on the sequential activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). For full activity, CDKs require an activating phosphorylation of a conserved residue (corresponding to Thr160 in human CDK2) carried out by the CDK-activating kinase (CAK). Two distinct CAK kinases have been described: in budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the Cak1/Civ1 kinase is responsible for CAK activity. In several other species including human, Xenopus, Drosophila and fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, CAK has been identified as a complex homologous to CDK7-cyclin H (Mcs6-Mcs2 in fission yeast). Here we identify the fission yeast Csk1 kinase as an in vivo activating kinase of the Mcs6-Mcs2 CAK defining Csk1 as a CAK-activating kinase (CAKAK).  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) that control cell cycle progression are regulated in many ways, including activating phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue. This essential phosphorylation is carried out by the CDK-activating kinase (CAK). Here we examine the effects of replacing this threonine residue in human CDK2 by serine. We found that cyclin A bound equally well to wild-type CDK2 (CDK2(Thr-160)) or to the mutant CDK2 (CDK2(Ser-160)). In the absence of activating phosphorylation, CDK2(Ser-160)-cyclin A complexes were more active than wild-type CDK2(Thr-160)-cyclin A complexes. In contrast, following activating phosphorylation, CDK2(Ser-160)-cyclin A complexes were less active than phosphorylated CDK2(Thr-160)-cyclin A complexes, reflecting a much smaller effect of activating phosphorylation on CDK2(Ser-160). The kinetic parameters for phosphorylating histone H1 were similar for mutant and wild-type CDK2, ruling out a general defect in catalytic activity. Interestingly, the CDK2(Ser-160) mutant was selectively defective in phosphorylating a peptide derived from the C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II. CDK2(Ser-160) was efficiently phosphorylated by CAKs, both human p40(MO15)(CDK7)-cyclin H and budding yeast Cak1p. In fact, the k(cat) values for phosphorylation of CDK2(Ser-160) were significantly higher than for phosphorylation of CDK2(Thr-160), indicating that CDK2(Ser-160) is actually phosphorylated more efficiently than wild-type CDK2. In contrast, dephosphorylation proceeded more slowly with CDK2(Ser-160) than with wild-type CDK2, either in HeLa cell extract or by purified PP2Cbeta. Combined with the more efficient phosphorylation of CDK2(Ser-160) by CAK, we suggest that one reason for the conservation of threonine as the site of activating phosphorylation may be to favor unphosphorylated CDKs following the degradation of cyclins.  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) are the central components of eukaryotic cell cycle regulation. Phosphorylation of CDKs at a conserved threonine residue is required for their full activity and is mediated by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK). The CAK R2 from rice belongs to those CAKs that phosphorylate not only CDKs but also the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II. We showed that R2 is a nuclear protein with increased expression and increased CTD kinase activity in S-phase. Increasing R2 abundance through a transgenic approach accelerated S-phase progression and overall growth rate in suspension cells. In planta, the CTD kinase activity of R2 was induced by a growth-promoting signal. R2 regulation, therefore, may constitute a plant-specific adaptive mechanism that is used to adjust the rate of cell proliferation in response to a changing environment.  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinase 7 (CDK7) is the catalytic subunit of the metazoan CDK-activating kinase (CAK), which activates CDKs, such as CDC2 and CDK2, through phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue in the T loop. Full activation of CDK7 requires association with a positive regulatory subunit, cyclin H, and phosphorylation of a conserved threonine residue at position 170 in its own T loop. We show that threonine-170 of CDK7 is phosphorylated in vitro by its targets, CDC2 and CDK2, which also phosphorylate serine-164 in the CDK7 T loop, a site that perfectly matches their consensus phosphorylation site. In contrast, neither CDK4 nor CDK7 itself can phosphorylate the CDK7 T loop in vitro. The ability of CDC2 or CDK2 and CDK7 to phosphorylate each other but not themselves implies that each kinase can discriminate among closely related sequences and can recognize a substrate site that diverges from its usual preferred site. To understand the basis for this paradoxical substrate specificity, we constructed a chimeric CDK with the T loop of CDK7 grafted onto the body of CDK2. Surprisingly, the hybrid enzyme, CDK2-7, was efficiently activated in cyclin A-dependent fashion by CDK7 but not at all by CDK2. CDK2-7, moreover, phosphorylated wild-type CDK7 but not CDK2. Our results suggest that the primary amino acid sequence of the T loop plays only a minor role, if any, in determining the specificity of cyclin-dependent CAKs for their CDK substrates and that protein-protein interactions involving sequences outside the T loop can influence substrate specificity both positively and negatively.  相似文献   

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Effects of phosphorylation by CAK on cyclin binding by CDC2 and CDK2.   总被引:12,自引:5,他引:7       下载免费PDF全文
The cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) are activated by association with cyclins and by phosphorylation at a conserved threonine residue by the CDK-activating kinase (CAK). We have studied the binding of various human CDK and cyclin subunits in vitro, using purified proteins derived from baculovirus-infected insect cells. We find that most CDK-cyclin complexes known to exist in human cells (CDC2-cyclin B, CDK2-cyclin A, and CDK2-cyclin E) form with high affinity in the absence of phosphorylation or other cellular components. One complex (CDC2-cyclin A) forms with high affinity only after CAK-mediated phosphorylation of CDC2 at the activating threonine residue. CDC2 does not bind with high affinity to cyclin E in vitro, even after phosphorylation of the CDC2 subunit. Thus, phosphorylation is of varying importance in the formation of high-affinity CDK-cyclin complexes.  相似文献   

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Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) Tyr15 phosphorylation plays a major role in regulating G(2)/M CDKs, but the role of this phosphorylation in regulating G(1)/S CDKs is less clear. We have studied the regulation and function of Cdc2-Tyr15 phosphorylation in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe G(1)/S CDK Cig2/Cdc2. This complex is subject to high level Cdc2-Tyr15 phosphorylation inhibiting its kinase activity in hydroxyurea-treated cells blocked in S-phase. We show that this Tyr15 phosphorylation is required to maintain efficient mitotic checkpoint arrest, because Cig2 accumulates during the block and this accumulation can advance mitotic onset. This mitotic induction operates, at least in part, through activation of the normal G(2)/M CDK complex Cdc13/Cdc2. Thus, Tyr15 phosphorylation of G(1)/S CDK complexes is important in the checkpoint control blocking mitotic onset when DNA replication is inhibited.  相似文献   

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The cyclin-dependent kinase-activating kinase (CAK) catalyzes the phosphorylation of the cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs) on a threonine residue (Thr160 in human CDK2). The reaction is an obligatory step in the activation of the CDKs. In higher eukaryotes, the CAK complex has been characterized in two forms. The first consists of three subunits, namely CDK7, cyclin H, and an assembly factor called MAT1, while the second consists of phospho-CDK7 and cyclin H. Phosphorylation of CDK7 is essential for cyclin association and kinase activity in the absence of the assembly factor MAT1. The Xenopus laevis CDK7 phosphorylation sites are located on the activation segment of the kinase at residues Ser170 and at Thr176 (the latter residue corresponding to Thr160 in human CDK2). We report the expression and purification of X. laevis CDK7/cyclin H binary complex in insect cells through coinfection with the recombinant viruses, AcCDK7 and Accyclin H. Quantities suitable for crystallization trials have been obtained. The purified CDK7/cyclin H binary complex phosphorylated CDK2 and CDK2/cyclin A but did not phosphorylate histone H1 or peptide substrates based on the activation segments of CDK7 and CDK2. Analysis by mass spectrometry showed that coexpression of CDK7 with cyclin H in baculoviral-infected insect cells results in phosphorylation of residues Ser170 and Thr176 in CDK7. It is assumed that phosphorylation is promoted by kinase(s) in the insect cells that results in the correct, physiologically significant posttranslational modification. We discuss the occurrence of in vivo phosphorylation of proteins expressed in baculoviral-infected insect cells.  相似文献   

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Pho85 is a versatile cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) found in budding yeast that regulates a myriad of eukaryotic cellular functions in concert with 10 cyclins (called Pcls). Unlike cell cycle CDKs that require phosphorylation of a serine/threonine residue by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK) for full activation, Pho85 requires no phosphorylation despite the presence of an equivalent residue. The Pho85-Pcl10 complex is a key regulator of glycogen metabolism by phosphorylating the substrate Gsy2, the predominant, nutritionally regulated form of glycogen synthase. Here we report the crystal structures of Pho85-Pcl10 and its complex with the ATP analog, ATPγS. The structure solidified the mechanism for bypassing CDK phosphorylation to achieve full catalytic activity. An aspartate residue, invariant in all Pcls, acts as a surrogate for the phosphoryl adduct of the phosphorylated, fully activated CDK2, the prototypic cell cycle CDK, complexed with cyclin A. Unlike the canonical recognition motif, SPX(K/R), of phosphorylation sites of substrates of several cell cycle CDKs, the motif in the Gys2 substrate of Pho85-Pcl10 is SPXX. CDK5, an important signal transducer in neural development and the closest known functional homolog of Pho85, does not require phosphorylation either, and we found that in its crystal structure complexed with p25 cyclin a water/hydroxide molecule remarkably plays a similar role to the phosphoryl or aspartate group. Comparison between Pho85-Pcl10, phosphorylated CDK2-cyclin A, and CDK5-p25 complexes reveals the convergent structural characteristics necessary for full kinase activity and the variations in the substrate recognition mechanism.  相似文献   

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