scholarly journals Identification of Aurora-A as a Direct Target of E2F3 during G2/M Cell Cycle Progression

2008 ◽  
Vol 283 (45) ◽  
pp. 31012-31020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lili He ◽  
Hua Yang ◽  
Yihong Ma ◽  
W. Jack Pledger ◽  
W. Douglas Cress ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Vol 291 (43) ◽  
pp. 22842-22842
Author(s):  
Lili He ◽  
Hua Yang ◽  
Yihong Ma ◽  
W. Jack Pledger ◽  
W. Douglas Cress ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 1436-1450
Author(s):  
Leonardo Vinícius Monteiro de Assis ◽  
Maria Nathália Moraes ◽  
Davi Mendes ◽  
Matheus Molina Silva ◽  
Carlos Frederico Martins Menck ◽  
...  

Skin melanocytes harbor a complex photosensitive system comprised of opsins, which were shown, in recent years, to display light- and thermo-independent functions. Based on this premise, we investigated whether melanopsin, OPN4, displays such a role in normal melanocytes. In this study, we found that murine Opn4KO melanocytes displayed a faster proliferation rate compared to Opn4WT melanocytes. Cell cycle population analysis demonstrated that OPN4KO melanocytes exhibited a faster cell cycle progression with reduced G0–G1, and highly increased S and slightly increased G2/M cell populations compared to the Opn4WT counterparts. Expression of specific cell cycle-related genes in Opn4KO melanocytes exhibited alterations that corroborate a faster cell cycle progression. We also found significant modification in gene and protein expression levels of important regulators of melanocyte physiology. PER1 protein level was higher while BMAL1 and REV-ERBα decreased in Opn4KO melanocytes compared to Opn4WT cells. Interestingly, the gene expression of microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) was upregulated in Opn4KO melanocytes, which is in line with a higher proliferative capability. Taken altogether, we demonstrated that OPN4 regulates cell proliferation, cell cycle, and affects the expression of several important factors of the melanocyte physiology; thus, arguing for a putative tumor suppression role in melanocytes.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (13) ◽  
pp. 5725-5737 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazuhiro Katayama ◽  
Naoya Fujita ◽  
Takashi Tsuruo

ABSTRACT The serine/threonine kinase Akt is known to promote cell growth by regulating the cell cycle in G1 phase through activation of cyclin/Cdk kinases and inactivation of Cdk inhibitors. However, how the G2/M phase is regulated by Akt remains unclear. Here, we show that Akt counteracts the function of WEE1Hu. Inactivation of Akt by chemotherapeutic drugs or the phosphatidylinositide-3-OH kinase inhibitor LY294002 induced G2/M arrest together with the inhibitory phosphorylation of Cdc2. Because the increased Cdc2 phosphorylation was completely suppressed by wee1hu gene silencing, WEE1Hu was associated with G2/M arrest induced by Akt inactivation. Further analyses revealed that Akt directly bound to and phosphorylated WEE1Hu during the S to G2 phase. Serine-642 was identified as an Akt-dependent phosphorylation site. WEE1Hu kinase activity was not affected by serine-642 phosphorylation. We revealed that serine-642 phosphorylation promoted cytoplasmic localization of WEE1Hu. The nuclear-to-cytoplasmic translocation was mediated by phosphorylation-dependent WEE1Hu binding to 14-3-3θ but not 14-3-3β or -σ. These results indicate that Akt promotes G2/M cell cycle progression by inducing phosphorylation-dependent 14-3-3θ binding and cytoplasmic localization of WEE1Hu.


Oncogene ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (46) ◽  
pp. 6034-6043 ◽  
Author(s):  
E García-Aragoncillo ◽  
J Carrillo ◽  
E Lalli ◽  
N Agra ◽  
G Gómez-López ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1322-1322
Author(s):  
Wei Du ◽  
Yun Zhou ◽  
Suzette Pike ◽  
Qishen Pang

Abstract An elevated level of nucleophosmin (NPM) is often found in actively proliferative cells including human tumors. To identify the regulatory role for NPM phosphorylation in proliferation and cell cycle control, a series of mutants targeting the consensus cyclin-dependent kinase (CKD) phosphorylation sites was created to mimic or abrogate either single-site or multi-site phosphorylation. Cells expressing the phosphomimetic NPM mutants showed enhanced proliferation and G2/M cell-cycle transition; whereas nonphosphorylatable mutants induced G2/M cell-cycle arrest. Simultaneous inactivation of two CKD phosphorylation sites at Ser10 and Ser70 (S10A/S70A, NPM-AA) induced phosphorylation of Cdk1 at Tyr15 (Cdc2Tyr15) and increased cytoplasmic accumulation of Cdc25C. Strikingly, stress-induced Cdk1Tyr15 and Cdc25C sequestration were completely suppressed by expression of a double phosphomimetic NPM mutant (S10E/S70E, NPM-EE). Further analysis revealed that phosphorylation of NPM at both Ser10 and Ser70 sites were required for proper interaction between Cdk1 and Cdc25C in mitotic cells. Moreover, the NPM-EE mutant directly bound to Cdc25C and prevented phosphorylation of Cdc25C at Ser216 during mitosis. Finally, NPM-EE overrided stress-induced G2/M arrest, increased peripheral-blood blasts and splenomegaly in a NOD/SCID xenograft model, and promoted leukemia development in Fanconi mouse hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Thus, these findings reveal a novel function of NPM on regulation of cell-cycle progression, in which Cdk1-dependent phosphorylation of NPM controls cell-cycle progression at G2/M transition through modulation of Cdc25C activity.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. e69395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Khammanivong ◽  
Chengxing Wang ◽  
Brent S. Sorenson ◽  
Karen F. Ross ◽  
Mark C. Herzberg

Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 734-734
Author(s):  
Wendy Béguelin ◽  
Martin A Rivas ◽  
María Teresa Calvo Fernández ◽  
Ari Melnick

Abstract Many B cell lymphomas arise from germinal center (GC) B cells of the humoral immune system, which are unique in their ability to replicate at an accelerated rate, which requires attenuation of replication checkpoints. Upon activation, GC B cells upregulate EZH2, a Polycomb protein that mediates transcriptional repression by trimethylating histone 3 lysine 27 (H3K27me3). Conditional deletion of EZH2 results in failure to form GCs. EZH2 is often highly expressed or affected by somatic gain of function mutations in GC B cell-derived diffuse large B cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and is required to maintain lymphoma cell proliferation and survival. Our previous research identified CDKN1A (p21 Cip1) as a direct target of EZH2 in GC B cells and DLBCLs. EZH2 causes promoter H3K27 trimethylation and transcriptional repression of CDKN1A in GC B cells and DLBCL cells. Treatment of DLBCLs with a specific EZH2 inhibitor (GSK343) or EZH2 shRNA caused CDKN1A H3K27me3 demethylation and derepression. Based on these considerations we hypothesized that silencing of CDKN1Athrough H3K27me3 might explain the proliferative GC and DLBCL phenotype. To test this notion, we crossed GC-specific conditional Cg1Cre;Ezh2fl/fl mice with Cdkn1a-/- mice. We assessed GC formation after T cell-dependent immunization in double vs. single Cdkn1a or Ezh2 KO mice. Cdkn1a-/- mice manifested perfectly normal GC formation, whereas there was complete absence of GCs in Cg1Cre-Ezh2fl/fl mice. In contrast, Cg1Cre;Ezh2fl/fl;Cdkn1a-/- double KO mice exhibited normal GC formation as measured by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. While conditional deletion of Ezh2 in GCs abrogates immunoglobulin affinity maturation, the double KO mice manifested normal development of high affinity antibodies after specific antigen exposure (NP-KLH). Cell cycle analysis of double KO mice showed a similar proportion of GC B cells in S phase as WT or Cdkn1a-/- controls, as measured by BrdU incorporation, indicating that loss of p21 allows progression of cell cycle. These effects were linked to the methyltransferase function of EZH2 since Cdkn1a-/- also rescued the loss of GCs driven by administration of EZH2 inhibitor observed in WT mice. We observed a similar phenomenon in DLBCL cells since shRNA-mediated depletion of CDKN1A rescued the growth suppressive effect of EZH2 shRNA or specific EZH2 inhibitors. Therefore H3K27me3 and repression of CDKN1Aexplains to a large extent how EZH2 enables GC formation and maintains growth of DLBCL cells. To further understand the role of EZH2 as a driver of the cell cycle we explored its relation to the G1/2 checkpoint regulated by p21Cip1. We found that GC B cells from Cg1Cre;Ezh2fl/fl;Cdkn1a-/- double KO mice exhibited high levels of phospho Rb by IHC, similar to the levels found in WT or Cdkn1a-/- control mice. Hyperphosphorylation of Rb induces its inactivation, allowing the release of E2F transcription factors and cell cycle progression. EZH2 was previously shown to be a direct target of E2F1, E2F2 and, to a lesser extent E2F3. Among these we found that E2F1 mRNA and protein expression are especially highly expressed and upregulated in GC B cells vs. naïve B cells. By qChIP we show that E2F1 is bound to the EZH2 promoter in GC-derived DLBCL cell lines. Moreover, E2F1 gene expression is positively correlated with EZH2 (R=0.35, p<0.0001) and moderately inversely correlates with CDKN1A (R=-0.22, p<0.0001) in a cohort of 757 DLBCL patient samples. Therefore, we explored the function of E2F1 in GC formation. We found that E2f1-/- mice developed reduced number and size of GCs as compared to control mice (E2f1-/- vs. WT, p<0.01). To determine if this phenotype was due to a lack of induction of EZH2 by E2F1, we transduced bone marrow of E2f1-/- or WT donor mice with retrovirus encoding EZH2-GFP or GFP alone, transplanted them into lethally irradiated recipients and assessed the GC reaction after immunization. Notably, EZH2 expression successfully rescued E2f1-/- phenotype (E2f1-/-+GFP vs.E2f1-/-+EZH2, p<0.001), indicating that the pRb-E2F1 pathway drives the GC reaction by inducing EZH2. In summary we identified a positive feedback loop required for GC formation and DLBCL whereby EZH2 controls GC B cell proliferation by suppressing the critical cell cycle checkpoint gene CDKN1A, allowing cell cycle progression with a concomitant phosphorylation of Rb. This causes the release of E2F1, which positively regulates the expression of EZH2. Disclosures Melnick: Janssen: Research Funding.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (48) ◽  
pp. 30599-30609
Author(s):  
Antonio de la Torre ◽  
Sónia Castanheira ◽  
José Pérez-Martín

Plant pathogenic fungi often developed specialized infection structures to breach the outer surface of a host plant. These structures, called appressoria, lead the invasion of the plant by the fungal hyphae. Studies in different phytopathogenic fungi showed that appressorium formation seems to be subordinated to the cell cycle. This subordination ensures the loading in the invading hypha of the correct genetic information to proceed with plant infection. However, how the cell cycle transmits its condition to the genetic program controlling appressorium formation and promoting the plant’s invasion is unknown. Our results have uncovered how this process occurs for the appressorium ofUstilago maydis, the agent responsible for corn smut disease. Here, we described that the complex Clb2-cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)1, one of the master regulators of G2/M cell cycle progression inU. maydis, interacts and controls the subcellular localization of Biz1, a transcriptional factor required for the activation of the appressorium formation. Besides, Biz1 can arrest the cell cycle by down-regulation of the gene encoding a second b-cyclin Clb1 also required for the G2/M transition. These results revealed a negative feedback loop between appressorium formation and cell cycle progression inU. maydis, which serves as a “toggle switch” to control the fungal decision between infecting the plant or proliferating out of the plant.


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