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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)
Cellular senescence is a state of irreversible cell cycle arrest in which normal cells at the end of their lifespan fail to enter into DNA synthesis upon serum or growth factor stimulation. We examined whether proteins required for G1/S cell cycle progression were irreversibly down-regulated in senescent human fibroblasts. Both the 44- and 42-kDa forms of the
MAP
-kinase protein were expressed at similar levels in young and senescent cells. In contrast to young cells where both forms were phosphorylated on tyrosine in response to serum, the p42MAP-kinase was not tyrosine phosphorylated upon serum stimulation, whereas p44MAP-kinase was phosphorylated on tyrosine in serum-starved or serum-stimulated senescent cells. Examination of p53 protein in growing, quiescent, and senescent cells revealed no significant differences in levels between the different growth states. In contrast,
cdk2
and cyclin A mRNAs were completely down-regulated in stimulated senescent fibroblasts, while the G1 cyclins, C, D1, and E mRNAs, were still expressed in stimulated senescent cells although at reduced levels compared to young cells. The expression of early G1 markers, but not late G1 markers, indicates that senescent cells may be blocked at a point in late G1. We investigated whether transfection of cyclin A, alone or in combination with
cdc2
, was sufficient for extension of lifespan or escape from senescence. Clones expressing the transfected human cyclin A or
cdc2
genes senesced at a population doubling similar to controls, thereby showing that cyclin A or
cdc2
expression alone was insufficient for escape from senescence.
...
PMID:Investigation of the role of G1/S cell cycle mediators in cellular senescence. 826 40
The
cdc2
kinases are important cell cycle regulators in all eukaryotes.
MAP
kinases, a closely related family of protein kinases, are involved in cell cycle regulation in yeasts and vertebrates, but previously have not been documented in plants. We used PCR to amplify Brassica napus DNA sequences using primers corresponding to amino sequences that are common to all known protein kinases. One sequence was highly similar to KSS1, a MAP kinase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This sequence was used to isolate a full-length MAP kinase-like clone from a pea cDNA library. The pea clone, called D5, shared approximately 50% amino acid identity with
MAP
kinases from yeasts and vertebrates and about 41% identity with plant
cdc2
kinases. An expression protein encoded by D5 was recognized by an antiserum specific to human
MAP
kinases (ERKs). Messenger RNA corresponding to D5 was present at similar levels in all tissues examined, without regard to whether cell division or elongation were occurring in those tissues.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning and expression of a MAP kinase homologue from pea. 838 49
During meiotic maturation or after fertilization of invertebrate and vertebrate oocytes, many of the quiescent stored mRNAs are recruited into polysomes. In the clam, Spisula solidissima, such masked messages include the abundant mRNAs encoding cyclin A and the small subunit of ribonucleotide reductase. We have previously shown that mRNA-specific unmasking of these two messages can be achieved in vitro, in oocyte cell-free extracts, by the addition of antisense RNAs corresponding to a fairly short (130-140 nucleotides) segment in their cognate 3' untranslated regions. We postulated that the antisense RNAs prevented the binding of a masking repressor protein (Standart et al., 1990). Here we report UV-crosslinking and gel retardation studies which show that the masking portions of the translationally regulated mRNAs bind an oocyte protein of 82 kDa (p82), which is phosphorylated after fertilization. This modification was accompanied by altered RNP complex formation in gel retardation assays. These changes presumably reflect the activation of translation of the masked mRNAs. The role of p82 phosphorylation in maternal mRNA unmasking was assessed in a novel in vitro activation system developed from clam oocytes, based upon the natural rise in pH which accompanies fertilization. Concomitant with mRNA unmasking, several kinases, including
cdc2
and
MAP
kinases were activated in this system, as was p82 phosphorylation. Inhibitors of serine/threonine kinases, including 6-DMAP, staurosporine, and H7 inhibited p82 phosphorylation, whereas inhibitors of tyrosine kinases, protein kinase C, cAMP-dependent protein kinase, and p70s6k did not prevent this modification. A specific inhibitor of
cdc2 kinase
, p27Kip1, prevented p82 phosphorylation and translational activation, strongly suggesting that p82 modification is required for unmasking.
...
PMID:Unmasking mRNA in clam oocytes: role of phosphorylation of a 3' UTR masking element-binding protein at fertilization. 857 30
Mouse eggs arrested in metaphase II display high levels of
cdc2
/cyclin B1 and
MAP
protein kinase activities. Following fertilization there is a time-dependent decrease in the activity of each of these protein kinases. The decline in
cdc2
/cyclin B1 protein kinase correlates with the resumption of meiosis and the emission of the second polar body and precedes the decline in MAP kinase activity, which correlates temporally with the formation of the male and female pronuclear envelopes. These results suggest that high levels of MAP kinase activity are incompatible with the presence of a pronuclear envelope. To test this possibility, we expressed in mouse eggs a constitutively active form of MAP kinase kinase (MEK) whose only known target is p42/p44 MAP kinase. We show that following fertilization
cdc2
/cyclin B1 kinase activity declines and a second polar body is emitted. The endogenous MAP kinase remains active, however, and no pronuclear envelopes form. Thus, high levels of MAP kinase activity by itself in mouse eggs appear incompatible with the presence of a pronuclear envelope.
...
PMID:Regulation of nuclear envelope assembly/disassembly by MAP kinase. 862 39
abnormal spindle, a gene required for normal spindle structure and function in Drosophila melanogaster, lies immediately adjacent the gene tolloid at 96A/B. It encodes a 220-kD polypeptide with a predicted pI of 10.8. The recessive mutant allele asp1 directs the synthesis of a COOH terminally truncated or internally deleted peptide of approximately 124 kD. Wild-type Asp protein copurifies with microtubules and is not released by salt concentrations known to dissociate most other microtubule-associated proteins. The bacterially expressed NH2-terminal 512-amino acid peptide, which has a number of potential phosphorylation sites for p34(
cdc2
) and
MAP
kinases, strongly binds to microtubules. The central 579-amino acid segment of the molecule contains one short motif homologous to sequences in a number of actin bundling proteins and a second motif present at the calmodulin binding sites of several proteins. Immunofluorescence studies show that the wild-type Asp protein is localized to the polar regions of the spindle immediately surrounding the centrosome. These findings are discussed in relation to the known spindle abnormalities in asp mutants.
...
PMID:The Drosophila gene abnormal spindle encodes a novel microtubule-associated protein that associates with the polar regions of the mitotic spindle. 915 90
Cell cycle re-entry requires the growth factor-stimulation of at least two distinct classes of protein kinases: (i) the p42/p44
MAP
kinases activated by the Ras > Raf > MKK cascade and (ii) the G1 cyclin-dependent protein kinases (CDKs). Specific inactivation of either class of kinase arrests fibroblasts in G1. Growth factors promote nuclear translocation and persistent activation of p42/p44
MAP
kinases during the entire G0/G1 period. Here, we demonstrate that induction of cyclin D1, and therefore
cdk4
/6 activity associated with, is positively controlled by the p42/p44 MAP kinase cascade whereas the parallel cytokines/stress-activated p38MAP kinase cascade is antagonistic. Finally, using an antisense approach we demonstrate that p27Kip1 plays a key role in setting the growth factor-dependency of the G0 state.
...
PMID:A temporal and biochemical link between growth factor-activated MAP kinases, cyclin D1 induction and cell cycle entry. 955 82
The Tax proteins of the oncovirinae viruses are phosphorylated transcriptional activators that exhibit oncogenic potential. The role of phosphorylation in their functional activities remains unknown. As a model for the Human T-cell leukemia virus type I (HTLV-I), Bovine Leukemia Virus (BLV) permits the characterization of viral replication and leukemogenesis in vivo. Here, we show that the BLV Tax protein is phosphorylated on serine residues 106 and 293 both in insect and in mammalian cells. These sites can also be efficiently phosphorylated by the
cdc2
and
MAP
kinases in vitro. Mutation of these residues does not affect the capacity of the Tax protein to function as a transactivator. Indeed, the Tax proteins mutated at one or both serines increase LTR-directed viral transcription at levels similar to those obtained with wild-type Tax in cell culture. Moreover, inhibition of Tax phosphorylation by W7, a calmodulin antagonist, does not alter its transactivation activity. Thus, phosphorylation on serines 106 and 293 is not required for transactivation by Tax. However, simultaneous substitution of both serines into alanine residues destroys the capacity of Tax to cooperate with the Ha-ras oncogene to transform primary rat embryo fibroblasts and induce tumors in nude mice. When the serines were replaced with aspartic acid residues, the oncogenic potential of Tax was maintained indicating that the negative charge rather than the phosphate group itself was required for Tax oncogenicity. Finally, to assess the role of the serine residues in vivo, recombinant viruses which express the Tax mutants were constructed and injected into sheep. It appeared that the mutated proviruses replicate at levels similar to the wild-type virus in vivo. We conclude that Tax phosphorylation is dispensable for transactivation and viral replication in vivo but is required for its oncogenic potential in vitro.
...
PMID:Phosphorylation of bovine leukemia virus Tax protein is required for in vitro transformation but not for transactivation. 961 25
The aim of these investigations was to identify a number of molecular markers that correlate to growth stimulation by IGF-I. For this purpose, we have selected four cell lines that respond equally well to growth stimulation by serum, but differ in their proliferative response to IGF-I. Two cell lines (R503 and R600 cells) respond to IGF-I with both DNA synthesis and cell division, a third cell line (R508 cells) can enter S phase after IGF-I, but the cells do not divide, and a fourth one (R12 cells) totally fails to respond to IGF-I with growth. Using these cell lines, all of which had an intact mitogenic response program to serum, we show that: (1) an increase in GTP/GDP ratio is an early event that distinguishes cells capable of entering S phase after IGF-I from cells that do not; (2) all cells that are induced to synthesize DNA by IGF-I have increased phosphorylation of
MAP
kinases, regardless of their ability to divide; (3) the same cell lines display a similar increase in cyclin A and B expression at early times after stimulation; and (4) cyclin levels and cyclin B-associated
cdc2 kinase
activity remain elevated at later times only in cells that undergo cell division. These results establish certain parameters of IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis and clearly separate the occurrence of DNA synthesis from cell division in certain situations.
...
PMID:Molecular markers of IGF-I-mediated mitogenesis. 966 33
Mammalian Cdc25 phosphatase is responsible for the dephosphorylation of Cdc2 and other cyclin-dependent kinases at Thr14 and Tyr15, thus activating the kinase and allowing cell cycle progression. The catalytic domain of this dual-specificity phosphatase has recently been mapped to the 180 most C-terminal amino acids. Apart from a CX3R motif, which is present at the active site of all known tyrosine phosphatases, Cdc25 does not share any obvious sequence similarity with any of those enzymes. Until very recently, the Cdc25 family was the only subfamily of tyrosine phosphates for which no three-dimensional structural data were available. Using the generalized profile technique, a sensitive method for sequence database searches, we found an extended and highly significant sequence similarity between the Cdc25 catalytic domain and similarly sized regions in other proteins: the non-catalytic domain of two distinct families of
MAP
-kinase phosphates, the non-catalytic domain of several ubiquitin protein hydrolases, the N and C-terminal domain of rhodanese, and a large and heterogeneous groups of stress-response proteins from all phyla. The relationship of Cdc25 to the structurally well-characterized rhodanese spans the entire catalytic domain and served as template for a structural model for human Cdc25a, which is fundamentally different from previously suggested models for Cdc25 catalytic domain organization. The surface positioning of subfamily-specific conserved residues allows us to predict the sites of interaction with
Cdk2
, a physiological target of Cdc25a. Based on the results of this analysis, we also predict that the budding yeast arsenate resistance protein Acr2 and the ORF Ygr203w encode protein phosphatases with catalytic properties similar to that of the Cdc25 family. Recent determination of the crystal structure of the Cdc25a catalytic domain supports the validity of the model and demonstrates the power of the generalized sequence profile technique in homology-based modeling of the three-dimensional structure of a protein having a weak but significant sequence similarity with a structurally characterized protein.
...
PMID:A model of Cdc25 phosphatase catalytic domain and Cdk-interaction surface based on the presence of a rhodanese homology domain. 973 50
Phosphorylation, dimerization and binding to calmodulin have been reported to influence the microtubule assembly capacities of MAPs (microtubule-associated proteins). Here we report that the Drosophila 205K
MAP
is a phosphoprotein in vivo and can be phosphorylated by
cdc2
/p34 in vitro. Bacterially produced 205K
MAP
is competent of microtubule assembly and microtubule bundling and binds to immobilized calmodulin in a Ca2+-dependent way. EM rotary shadowing analyses suggest that 205K
MAP
consists of an amino-terminal flexible extended region and a carboxy-terminal globular domain. This carboxy-terminal region harbors the microtubule binding site and sequences required for dimerization, as confirmed by in vitro crosslinking experiments of truncated proteins.
...
PMID:Analysis of structure and microtubule assembly activity of the Drosophila 205K MAP. 986 14
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