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Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for growth control and for genetic integrity

Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

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Page 1: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Cell Cycle

Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next

Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M

Regulation is essential for growth control and for genetic integrity

Page 2: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Cell Cycle - Overview

Page 3: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

The G2/M Transition Occurs when cell cycle events are “complete” Requires intact genome, replicated

chromosomes, accumulation of critical factors mediating exit from interphase - prophase and entry to M phase.

MPF (“metaphase-promoting factor,” a.k.a., “mitosis-promoting factor,” a.k.a. “maturation-promoting factor”) is universal regulator of this important transition

Page 4: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

End-point of G2/M = Metaphase

Page 5: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

How do we know that MPF is essential? Xenopus oocyte “meiotic maturation” - a model

system MPF in other cells M-phase regulation revealed by yeast mutants

Saccharomyces cerevisiae - CDC28 Schizosaccharomyces pombe - cdc2

“Intersecting cell cycles” - topic for journal critique, Tuesday 16 April

Page 6: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Xenopus - Meiotic Maturation

Page 7: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

MPF Activity Cycles

Page 8: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Further Evidence for Universal “MPF”

Page 9: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Budding Yeast Cell Division Cycle (cdc) Mutants

Page 10: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Fission Yeast cdc Mutants

Page 11: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Evidence for “Cyclin” Activity

Sea urchin (yet another model!): a specific protein cycles in quantity during cleavage divisions of the embryo

This was designated “cyclin” Subsequently, it was shown that this

protein co-purifies with MPF activity, but that it is not the sole component of MPF

MPF = cyclin B + p34 (CDC28/cdc2)

Page 12: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Phosphorylation and Dephosphorylation Regulate MPF Activity

Y15 - inhibitory phosphorylation by wee1/mik1 kinases Active site for ATP binding

T161 - phosphorylated by Cdk7/CycH (CAK) This residue occludes substrate-binding site

until it is phosphorylated Y15 - active dephosphorylation by Cdc25

protein phophatase

Page 13: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Kinases and Phosphatases

Page 14: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Missing Pieces: MPF/Cdk Substrates

Dramatic increase in phosphorylated proteins - MPM2 antigens

Autophosphorylation of cdc2 *Histone H1 phosphorylation assay (physiological

significance?) Histone H3 phosphorylation on ser10 may be more

significant Spatially and temporally correlated with chromosome

condensation Nuclear lamins - phosphorylation leads to solubilization

(breakdown of nuclear envelope)

Page 15: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

How do cells get out of metaphase?

Via anaphase by action of the anaphase promoting complex (APC)

Injection into Xenopus oocytes of RNA encoding non-degradable cyclin B leads to sustained high MPF and metaphase arrest

Ubiquitination of chromosome cohesins and cyclin targets them to the proteosome

Page 16: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Synthesis - Destruction Cycle

Page 17: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Other Cell Cycle Kinases MPF - Cdk1 = “maestro of M phase NIMA (“never in mitosis”) family of

kinases (Aspergillus nidulans) Polo family kinases (Drosophila

melanogaster) Aurora family kinases All implicated in control of centrosome

and spindle poles

Page 18: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Multiple Cdk-Cyclin Complexes Regulate Cell-Cycle Transitions

G1 inactivation of APCG1/SG2/M

Page 19: Cell Cycle Sequential series of events from one mitosis to the next Regulated at critical transition points: G1/S and G2/M Regulation is essential for

Models for Cdk Regulation