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A Bifunctional Regulatory Element in Human Somatic Wee1 Mediates Cyclin A/Cdk2 Binding and Crm1-Dependent Nuclear Export
Authors:Changqing Li  Mark Andrake  Roland Dunbrack  Greg H. Enders
Affiliation:Department of Medicine, Epigenetics and Progenitor Cell Keystone Program, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennyslvania,1. Program in Molecular and Translational Medicine, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennyslvania2.
Abstract:Sophisticated models for the regulation of mitotic entry are lacking for human cells. Inactivating human cyclin A/Cdk2 complexes through diverse approaches delays mitotic entry and promotes inhibitory phosphorylation of Cdk1 on tyrosine 15, a modification performed by Wee1. We show here that cyclin A/Cdk2 complexes physically associate with Wee1 in U2OS cells. Mutation of four conserved RXL cyclin A/Cdk binding motifs (RXL1 to RXL4) in Wee1 diminished stable binding. RXL1 resides within a large regulatory region of Wee1 that is predicted to be intrinsically disordered (residues 1 to 292). Near RXL1 is T239, a site of inhibitory Cdk phosphorylation in Xenopus Wee1 proteins. We found that T239 is phosphorylated in human Wee1 and that this phosphorylation was reduced in an RXL1 mutant. RXL1 and T239 mutants each mediated greater Cdk phosphorylation and G2/M inhibition than the wild type, suggesting that cyclin A/Cdk complexes inhibit human Wee1 through these sites. The RXL1 mutant uniquely also displayed increased nuclear localization. RXL1 is embedded within sequences homologous to Crm1-dependent nuclear export signals (NESs). Coimmunoprecipitation showed that Crm1 associated with Wee1. Moreover, treatment with the Crm1 inhibitor leptomycin B or independent mutation of the potential NES (NESm) abolished Wee1 nuclear export. Export was also reduced by Cdk inhibition or cyclin A RNA interference, suggesting that cyclin A/Cdk complexes contribute to Wee1 export. Somewhat surprisingly, NESm did not display increased G2/M inhibition. Thus, nuclear export of Wee1 is not essential for mitotic entry though an important functional role remains likely. These studies identify a novel bifunctional regulatory element in Wee1 that mediates cyclin A/Cdk2 association and nuclear export.Despite broad progress in studies of cell cycle control in eukaryotes, advanced models are lacking for the regulation of mitotic entry in human cells. This regulation is pivotal in cell cycle control, and a better understanding of it may be crucial to improving cytotoxic cancer chemotherapy, the mainstay of cancer treatment. Models of mitotic entry in higher eukaryotes revolve around activation of the cyclin B/Cdk1 (cyclin-dependent kinase 1 or Cdc2) complex, which drives the major events of mitosis. A rise in the cyclin B level triggers mitotic entry in Xenopus egg extracts but not in mammalian cells (15, 47). Inhibitory phosphorylation of Cdk1 on the ATP-binding site residue tyrosine 15 (Y15) has been recognized as a key constraint throughout eukaryotes (29, 42). Wee1 and Myt kinases perform this phosphorylation in vertebrate cells, where Wee1 appears to be dominant (34). Kim and Ferrell and others have recently developed an elegant model for ultrasensitive, switch-like inactivation of Wee1 by cyclin B/Cdk1 in a positive feedback loop that contributes to mitotic entry in Xenopus egg extracts (27).Although cyclin A(A2)/Cdk2 is traditionally omitted from models of mitotic entry, accumulating evidence from several different approaches suggests that cyclin A/Cdk complexes play roles. Cyclin A levels rise during S phase and peak in G2 before falling abruptly in prometaphase of mitosis (60). Microinjection of cyclin A/Cdk2 complexes in human G2 phase cells was observed to drive mitotic entry (14). Conversely, microinjection of antibodies directed against cyclin A in S-phase cells inhibited mitotic entry without an apparent effect on bulk DNA synthesis (45). In complementary approaches that supported biochemical analyses, cyclin A RNA interference (RNAi) or induction of a dominant negative mutant of Cdk2 (Cdk2-dn), the major cyclin A binding partner, inhibited mitotic entry (13, 15, 21, 37). In these settings, cyclin B/Cdk1 complexes accumulated in inactive, Y15-phosphorylated forms (13, 21, 37). Cdc25 phosphatases, which can reverse this phosphorylation, show reduced activity in this context (37), but increased Cdc25 activity could not readily overcome the arrest (13). RNAi-mediated knockdown of Wee1 was found capable of overriding the arrest mediated by cyclin A RNAi, suggesting that Wee1 is a key rate-limiting factor (13). However, whether and by what mechanisms cyclin A complexes might regulate Wee1 and drive Cdk1 dephosphorylation and mitotic entry have remained unclear.Recently, genetic studies in mice have reinforced these observations while providing evidence for some cell type differences (24). Although Cdk2 is not essential, in its absence Cdk1 binds more cyclin A and E and provides redundant functions (4, 25, 44). Deletion of the cyclin A gene is lethal for embryos and adults (24). Gene deletion in fibroblasts in vitro did not completely abrogate their proliferation but caused S and G2/M delays. In this setting cyclin E was upregulated, and combined deletion of cyclin E yielded arrest in G1, S, and G2/M phases. Cyclin A gene deletion was alone sufficient to block proliferation of hematopoietic stem cells, suggesting that cyclin A is essential for their proliferation.Wee1 is regulated on multiple levels, including inhibitory phosphorylation in the amino-terminal regulatory domain (NRD), residues 1 to 292. This region is predicted to be intrinsically disordered (56), and few functional elements have been identified in it. The cyclin B/Cdk1 complex has been thought to be the principal or exclusive kinase responsible for NRD phosphorylation (18, 27, 28). Two sites in the Xenopus embryonic Wee1 NRD, Thr 104 and Thr 150 (referred to here by the homologous residue, T239, in human somatic Wee1), have been identified as Cdk phosphorylation sites that inhibit Wee1 activity (28). Recent studies of Xenopus somatic Wee1 suggest that T239 phosphorylation may antagonize the function of a surrounding motif, dubbed the Wee box (43). This small, conserved region appears to augment the activity of the carboxy-terminal kinase domain.We show here that cyclin A/Cdk2 complexes directly bind Wee1 as a substrate in human cells. In particular, a conserved cyclin A/Cdk binding RXL motif in the Wee1 NRD is required for efficient T239 phosphorylation. Further analysis revealed that RXL1 is located within a Crm1 binding site that mediates Wee1 export during S and G2 phases. Cyclin A/Cdk2 activity appears to foster Wee1 export, but this export is not essential for mitotic entry. These findings further define roles of cyclin A/Cdk complexes in regulating Wee1 and mitotic entry in human cells and dissect the mechanisms and consequences of Wee1 redistribution during the run-up to mitosis.
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