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Query: EC:2.7.11.22 (
cdc2
)
8,319
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Studies on the molecular mechanisms underlying neuronal differentiation are frequently performed using cell lines established from neuroblastomas. In this study we have used mouse N1E-115 neuroblastoma cells that undergo neuronal differentiation in response to DMSO. During differentiation, cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) activities decline and phosphorylation of the
retinoblastoma
gene product (pRb) is lost, leading to the appearance of a pRb-containing E2F DNA-binding complex. The loss of
cdk2
activity is due to a decrease in
cdk2
abundance whereas loss of
cdk4
activity is caused by strong association with the cdk inhibitor (CKI) p27KIP1 and concurrent loss of
cdk4
phosphorylation. Moreover, neuronal differentiation can be induced by overexpression of p27KIP1 or pRb, suggesting that inhibition of cdk activity leading to loss of pRb phosphorylation, is the major determinant for neuronal differentiation.
...
PMID:Inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase activity triggers neuronal differentiation of mouse neuroblastoma cells. 755 79
A mathematical model of cyclin E,
cdk2
and
retinoblastoma
protein control of the G1 phase of the human cell cycle is proposed. The model includes
retinoblastoma
(Rb) protein phosphorylation by a cyclin E/
cdk2
complex and its subsequent dephosphorylation at the end of the cell cycle. The numerical solutions to this model demonstrates the cyclic behavior of the cyclin E/
cdk2
complex, with and without Rb function, cell cycle. This model suggests an inhibition of cyclin E/
cdk2
complex formation (or its activation) by hypophosphorylated
retinoblastoma
protein. The experimental results of cell cycle arrest upon injection of transforming growth factor-beta, alpha-interferon or D-erythro-sphingosine during G1 phase are reproduced. Cell cycle behavior predicted by this model for increasing the concentration of hypophosphorylated
retinoblastoma
protein during the G1 phase is discussed. Additional results are obtained by numerical simulation.
...
PMID:A model of the G1 phase of the cell cycle incorporating cyclin E/cdk2 complex and retinoblastoma protein. 756 81
Human diploid fibroblasts have a finite proliferative lifespan in culture, at the end of which they are arrested with G1 phase DNA contents. Upon serum stimulation, senescent cells are deficient in carrying out a subset of early signal transduction events such as activation of protein kinase C and induction of c-fos. Later in G1, they uniformly fail to express late G1 genes whose products are required for DNA synthesis, implying that they are unable to pass the R point. Failure to pass the R point may occur because senescent cells are unable to phosphorylate the
retinoblastoma
protein, owing to the accumulation of inactive complexes of cyclin E/
Cdk2
and possibly cyclin D/Cdk4. Senescent cells contain high amounts of p21, a potent cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor whose levels are also elevated in cells arrested in G1 following DNA damage, suggesting that both arrests might share a common mechanism. Cell aging is accompanied by a progressive shortening of chromosomal telomeres, which could be perceived by the cells as a form of DNA damage that gives rise to the signals that inactive the cell cycle machinery.
...
PMID:Origins of G1 arrest in senescent human fibroblasts. 757 95
In this study the expression of p16INK4,
retinoblastoma
protein (pRb), and
cdk4
proteins have been examined in 18 malignant glioma cell lines and in 45 malignant glial tumors. Loss of p16INK4 expression associated with p16INK4 gene homozygous deletion was evident in 12 cell lines and in 10 primary tumors. Lack of p16INK4 expression was also evident in five tumors for which there was no evidence of p16INK4 gene homozygous deletion. Two of the cell lines and six of the primary tumors in which p16INK4 was present were determined to overexpress
cdk4
in association with CDK4 gene amplification. Absence of pRb was determined in two of the cell lines and in ten of the tumors. In total, 16 of 18 cell lines and 25 of 45 tumors showed either a lack of p16INK4 or pRb or amplification-associated overexpression of
cdk4
. Two additional tumors showed an absence of pRb and p16INK4, and one tumor showed a lack of pRb combined with amplification-associated overexpression of
cdk4
. These results suggest a common growth-regulatory mechanism that is disrupted in gliomas by either suppressing the expression of p16INK4 or pRb or by increasing the expression of
cdk4
.
...
PMID:Lack of p16INK4 or retinoblastoma protein (pRb), or amplification-associated overexpression of cdk4 is observed in distinct subsets of malignant glial tumors and cell lines. 758 16
Activation of conditional alleles of Myc can induce proliferation in quiescent cells. We now report that induction of Myc in density-arrested fibroblasts triggers rapid hyperphosphorylation of the
retinoblastoma
protein and activation of both cyclin D1- and cyclin E-associated kinase activities in the absence of significant changes in the amounts of cyclin-cdk complexes. Kinase activation by Myc is blocked by inhibitors of transcription and requires intact DNA binding and heterodimerization domains of Myc. Activation of cyclin E-
cdk2
kinase in serum-starved cells occurs in two steps. The first is induced by Myc and involves the release of a 120 kDa cyclin E-
cdk2
complex from a 250 kDa inactive complex that is present in starved cells. This is necessary, but not sufficient, to generate full kinase activity, as cdc25 phosphatase activity is limiting in the absence of external growth factors. In vivo cdc25 activity can be supplied by the addition of growth factors. In vitro recombinant cdc25a strongly activates the 120 kDa, but only poorly activates the 250 kDa cyclin E-
cdk2
complex. Our data show that two distinct signals, one of which is supplied by Myc, are necessary for consecutive steps during growth factor-induced formation of active cyclin E-
cdk2
complexes in G(o)-arrested rodent fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Identification of a Myc-dependent step during the formation of active G1 cyclin-cdk complexes. 758 11
Human cervical cancers frequently contain
retinoblastoma
protein (Rb) that is inactivated by binding with human papilloma virus (HPV) E7 protein or through mutation. The CDKN2 gene encodes p16INK4 which inhibits
cdk4
-cyclin D phosphorylation of Rb, preventing the G1-S transition. To determine whether abnormalities of CDKN2 occur in cervical-cancer cells, II cervical cell lines, including 8 HPV-positive cell lines, 2 HPV-negative cell lines containing mutant Rb, and one tumorigenic cell line derived from normal cervical cells following transfection with HPV-16 and v-H-ras (CX16-2HR), were analyzed. No cell line had a homozygous deletion of exon 1 or 2 of CDKN2, and only one cell line, CX16-2HR, had an altered DNA sequence, which represents a common polymorphism at codon 148. To exclude the possibility of other subtle inactivating mutations, immunoblot analysis of protein lysates was performed using a polyclonal anti-p16INK4 rabbit anti-serum. Abundant levels of normal-sized p16INK4 were observed in all cell samples. Thus, no alterations of CDKN2 were detected in these cervical cell lines. These results confirm that mutational inactivation of p16INK4 is a rare event in tumor samples with compromised Rb activity.
...
PMID:CDKN2 in HPV-positive and HPV-negative cervical-carcinoma cell lines. 759 Dec 9
Three major cyclin-dependent kinases, p34cdc2, p33cdk2, and p34cdk4 were examined in normal human T cells stimulated to enter the cell cycle in vitro. None of the three genes was expressed in resting T cells. Transcripts form the
cdk4
and
cdk2
genes were detectable as early as 3 and 8 hr after stimulation, respectively, whereas
cdc2
gene transcripts were not detectable until about 24 hr, shortly before S phase entry. Immunoblot analysis showed that resting T cells contained little p34cdk4, no p34cdc2, and a low level of p33cdk2 protein. Increased amounts of p34cdk4, p33cdk2, and p34cdc2 proteins were seen at about 7, 10, and 30 hr after stimulation, respectively. Immunoprecipitates of each of the kinases were assessed for histone H1 kinase activity. Activity due to p33cdk2 first became detectable in mid-G1 phase and increased dramatically after entry into S phase. Active p34cdc2 kinase was not detected until about 40 hr after stimulation, about 10 hr after the first appearance of the protein. Immunoprecipitates of p34cdk4 possessed almost no H1 histone kinase activity; however, activity was detected as early as 10 hr after cell activation when a protein (p60Rb) derived from the
retinoblastoma
susceptibility gene product was used as substrate. Cells were synchronized about the G1/S and G2/M borders by aphidicolin and nocodazole. Cells arrested prior to S-phase contained high levels of active p33cdk2 and essentially no active p34cdc2, despite the fact that large amounts of both proteins were present. Cells arrested by nocodazole had high levels of active p34cdc2 and greatly reduced levels of p33cdk2 kinase activity. The results suggest that the major role for the p34cdc2 kinase is at mitosis, whereas that for p33cdk2 is in late G1 and/or S phase. The p34cdk4 protein, present in aphidicolin-blocked cells, was nearly absent from cells arrested at the G2/M border; however, kinase activity was low in cells blocked at both points, suggesting that the major role for p34cdk4 may be in G1 phase.
...
PMID:Differential regulation of the synthesis and activity of the major cyclin-dependent kinases, p34cdc2, p33cdk2, and p34cdk4, during cell cycle entry and progression in normal human T lymphocytes. 759 19
D-type cyclins couple extracellular signals to the biochemical machinery that governs progression through G1 phase of the mammalian cell division cycle. Induced by growth factor stimulation, D-type cyclins assemble with cyclin-dependent kinases CDK4 and CDK6 to form holoenzymes that facilitate exit from G1 by phosphorylating key substrates, including the
retinoblastoma
protein. Activation of the holoenzymes is antagonized by polypeptide inhibitors of
CDK
activity, which are induced by antiproliferative signals. Once cells pass a late G1 restriction point, cyclin-D-dependent kinases are unnecessary for completion of the cell cycle, implying that their primary role is to sense the cell's readiness to replicate DNA and to enforce the commitment to enter S phase.
...
PMID:D-type cyclins. 761 Apr 82
The c-Myc protein is a transcription factor with an N-terminal transcriptional regulatory domain and C-terminal oligomerization and DNA-binding motifs. Previous studies have demonstrated that p107, a protein related to the
retinoblastoma
protein, binds to the c-Myc transcriptional activation domain and suppresses its activity. We sought to characterize the transforming activity and transcriptional properties of lymphoma-derived mutant MYC alleles. Alleles encoding c-Myc proteins with missense mutations in the transcriptional regulatory domain were more potent than wild-type c-Myc in transforming rodent fibroblasts. Although the mutant c-Myc proteins retained their binding to p107 in in vitro and in vivo assays, p107 failed to suppress their transcriptional activation activities. Many of the lymphoma-derived MYC alleles contain missense mutations that result in substitution for the threonine at codon 58 or affect sequences flanking this amino acid. We observed that in vivo phosphorylation of Thr-58 was absent in a lymphoma cell line with a mutant MYC allele containing a missense mutation flanking codon 58. Our in vitro studies suggest that phosphorylation of Thr-58 in wild-type c-Myc was dependent on cyclin A and required prior phosphorylation of Ser-62 by a p107-cyclin A-
CDK
complex. In contrast, Thr-58 remained unphosphorylated in two representative mutant c-Myc transactivation domains in vitro. Our studies suggest that missense mutations in MYC may be selected for during lymphomagenesis, because the mutant MYC proteins have altered functional interactions with p107 protein complexes and fail to be phosphorylated at Thr-58.
...
PMID:A link between increased transforming activity of lymphoma-derived MYC mutant alleles, their defective regulation by p107, and altered phosphorylation of the c-Myc transactivation domain. 762 99
The cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (cdk4) inhibitor (p16INK4/MTS1/CDKN2) gene has been recently identified as a putative tumor suppressor gene because of the high frequency of homozygous deletion observed in numerous human tumor cell lines, including leukemias. However, results obtained from uncultured tumor samples have led to discussion of the relevance of these findings. Using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Southern blot analysis, we have investigated p16INK4A gene at both RNA and genomic levels in various types of leukemias: acute myeloid leukemia (AML) (n = 23); acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) (n = 22) and B cell chronic lymphoproliferative disorders (CLPD) (n = 33). p16INK4A mRNA expression was not found in only 1/20 AML and 2/23 CLPD samples. Conversely, p16INK4A mRNA was not detected in 5/17 ALL cases, and intensity of PCR products were barely detectable in seven additional cases, possibly related to the contamination by normal cells in some cases. By Southern blotting, a homozygous deletion of p16INK4A gene was found in 6/17 ALL cases (35%) among which 4/6 were negative or weakly positive by RT-PCR assay. None of the five AML and 20 CLL samples studied had p16INK4A deletion. Sequence analysis of p16INK4A exon 2 did not show point mutation in two of these cases lacking mRNA expression. Our data provide further evidence that among hematological malignancies, ALL are the most likely to be associated with p16INK4A inactivation, mainly by homozygous gene deletion. Since most hematological malignancies-except ALL-are infrequently associated with p16INK4A and
retinoblastoma
(Rb) gene alteration it seems worthwhile to explore cdk4 and
cdk6
expression to determine whether or not the disruption of the p16INK4A/Rb/cdk4/
cdk6
regulatory loop might play a role in their pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Alterations of cyclin-dependent kinase 4 inhibitor (p16INK4A/MTS1) gene structure and expression in acute lymphoblastic leukemias. 763 Jan 99
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