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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)
The cloning of the negative growth regulatory gene, p21Sdi1, has led to the convergence of the fields of cellular senescence, cell cycle regulation and tumor suppression. This gene was first cloned as an inhibitor of DNA synthesis that was overexpressed in terminally non-dividing senescent human fibroblasts (SD11) and later as a p53 transactivated gene (WAF1) and a Cdk-
interacting protein
(CIP1, p21) that inhibited cyclin-dependent kinase activity. To identify the active region(s) of p21Sdi1, cDNA constructs encoding various deleted forms of the protein were analyzed. Amino acids 22-71 were found to be the minimal region required for DNA synthesis inhibition. Amino acids 49-71 were involved in binding to
Cdk2
, and constructs deleted in this region expressed proteins that were unable to inhibit
Cdk2
kinase activity in vitro. The latter stretch of amino acids shared sequence similarity with amino acids 60-76 of the p27Kip1 protein, another Cdk inhibitor. Point mutations made in p21Sdi1 in this region confirmed that amino acids common to both proteins were involved in DNA synthesis inhibition. Additionally, a chimeric protein, in which amino acids 49-65 of p21Sdi1 were substituted with amino acids 60-76 of p27Kip1, had almost the same DNA synthesis inhibitory activity as the wild-type protein. The results indicate that the region of sequence similarity between p21Sdi1 and p27Kip1 encodes an inhibitory motif characteristic of this family of Cdk inhibitors.
...
PMID:Identification of the active region of the DNA synthesis inhibitory gene p21Sdi1/CIP1/WAF1. 785 44
RPA is a cellular, three-subunit, single-stranded (ss) DNA binding protein, which assists T-antigen in the assembly of the pre-priming complex in the SV40 replication system. By immunodepletion and complementation, we have identified RPA as an essential factor for cellular DNA replication in Xenopus extracts. RPA assembles post-mitotically on the decondensing chromosomes into numerous subnuclear pre-replication centres (preRCs) which serve, upon formation of the nuclear membrane, as RCs for the initiation of DNA synthesis. By a variety of experiments including the use of isolated components, we demonstrate that an inactive
cdc2
-cyclin B kinase complex is essential to allow post-mitotic assembly of the preRCs. In contrast, the active
cdk2
-cyclin A kinase does not impede or facilitate the assembly of preRCs. Digestion analysis using the single-strand-specific P1 nuclease as well as competition experiments with ssDNA, reveal that replication-associated unwinding of the DNA, assisted by RPA, requires the formation of the nuclear membrane. The p21 cdk-
interacting protein
Cip1 appears to inhibit DNA replication prior to the unwinding DNA step, but after assembly of preRC and nuclear reconstruction.
...
PMID:Study of the cell cycle-dependent assembly of the DNA pre-replication centres in Xenopus egg extracts. 807 11
The cell cycle is regulated by sequential activation, inactivation of cyclin dependent kinases (Cdk-s). Like all other Cdk-s, the catalytic subunit of Cdk5 is present in cycling cells. However, its highest concentration is found in differentiated neurons, and the only known protein that activates Cdk5 (i.e., p35) is expressed solely in the brain. Active Cdk5 is thought to be involved in the in vivo phosphorylation of the neurofilament proteins and tau which are hyperphosphorylated in neurodegenerative diseases. Recent reports suggest that Cdk5 may also contribute to cellular differentiation. Therefore, it would not be unusual to surmise that there exist specific proteins that regulate Cdk5 activity in cycling cells. In order to find if this was true, a cDNA library prepared from HeLa cells was screened using the yeast-two-hybrid system. The 60S ribosomal protein, L34, was identified as a Cdk5-
interacting protein
. Biochemical analyses reveal that L34 cannot activate Cdk5 but potently inhibits the p35-activated kinase. L34 also interacts with Cdk4 and, in parallel, inhibits the Cdk4/cyclin D1 activity. Interestingly, L34 does not interact with
Cdk2
in the two-hybrid assay nor does it inhibit the
Cdk2
/cyclin A enzyme. The fact that a ribosomal protein inhibits Cdk5 and Cdk4 may suggest that these two kinases have a cellular role in translational regulation.
...
PMID:Identification of ribosomal protein L34 as a novel Cdk5 inhibitor. 1004 62
Progress in the cell cycle is governed by the activity of cyclin dependent kinases (Cdks). Unlike other Cdks, the Cdk5 catalytic subunit is found mostly in differentiated neurons. Interestingly, the only known protein that activates Cdk5 (i.e. p35) is expressed solely in the brain. It has been suggested that, besides its requirement in neuronal differentiation, Cdk5 activity is induced during myogenesis. However, it is not clear how this activity is regulated in the pathway that leads proliferative cells to differentiation. In order to find if there exists any Cdk5-
interacting protein
, the yeast two-hybrid system was used to screen a HeLa cDNA library. We have determined that a C-terminal 172 amino acid domain of the DNA binding protein, dbpA, binds to Cdk5. Biochemical analyses reveal that this fragment (dbpA(Cdelta)) strongly inhibits p35-activated Cdk5 kinase. The protein also interacts with Cdk4 and inhibits the Cdk4/cyclin D1 enzyme. Surprisingly, dbpA(Cdelta) does not bind
Cdk2
in the two-hybrid assay nor does it inhibit
Cdk2
activated by cyclin A. It could be that dbpA's ability to inhibit Cdk5 and Cdk4 reflects an apparent cross-talk between distinct signal transduction pathways controlled by dbpA on the one hand and Cdk5 or Cdk4 on the other.
...
PMID:DNA binding protein dbpA binds Cdk5 and inhibits its activity. 1010 Aug 71
p21(Cip1/Waf1) inhibits cell-cycle progression by binding to G1 cyclin/
CDK
complexes and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) through its N- and C-terminal domains, respectively. Here, we report a novel p21(Cip1/Waf1)-
interacting protein
, Ciz1 (for Cip1 interacting zinc finger protein), which contains polyglutamine repeats and glutamine-rich region in the N-terminus as well as three zinc-finger motifs and one MH3 (matrin 3-homologous domain 3) in the C-terminal region. Ciz1 bound to the N-terminal, the CDK2-interacting part of p21(Cip1/Waf1), and the interaction was disrupted by the overexpression of CDK2. A region of about 150 amino acids containing the first zinc-finger motif in Ciz1 was the binding site for p21(Cip1/Waf1). When Ciz1 and p21(Cip1/Waf1) were individually overexpressed in U2-OS cells, they mostly localized in the nucleus. However, coexpression of Ciz1 induced cytoplasmic distribution of p21(Cip1/Waf1). These data indicate that Ciz1 is a unique nuclear protein that regulates the cellular localization of p21(Cip1/Waf1).
...
PMID:Cloning and characterization of a novel p21(Cip1/Waf1)-interacting zinc finger protein, ciz1. 1052 85
Accumulating evidence suggests that phosphatases play an important role in regulating a variety of signal transduction pathways that have a bearing on cancer. The kinase-associated phosphatase (KAP) is a human dual-specificity protein phosphatase that was identified as a Cdc2- or
Cdk2
-
interacting protein
by a yeast two-hybrid screening, yet the biological significance of these interactions remains elusive. We have identified the KAP gene as an overexpressed gene in breast and prostate cancer by using a phosphatase domain-specific differential-display PCR strategy. Here we report that breast and prostate malignancies are associated with high levels of KAP expression. The sublocalization of KAP is variable. In normal cells, KAP is primarily found in the perinuclear region, but in tumor cells, a significant portion of KAP is found in the cytoplasm. Blocking KAP expression by antisense KAP in a tetracycline-regulatable system results in a reduced population of S-phase cells and reduced
Cdk2
kinase activity. Furthermore, lowering KAP expression led to inhibition of the transformed phenotype, with reduced anchorage-independent growth and tumorigenic potential in athymic nude mice. These findings suggest that therapeutic intervention might be aimed at repression of KAP gene overexpression in human breast and prostate cancer.
...
PMID:Overexpression of kinase-associated phosphatase (KAP) in breast and prostate cancer and inhibition of the transformed phenotype by antisense KAP expression. 3251 51
Saccharomyces cerevisiae septin mutants have pleiotropic defects, which include the formation of abnormally elongated buds. This bud morphology results at least in part from a cell cycle delay imposed by the
Cdc28p
-inhibitory kinase Swe1p. Mutations in three other genes (GIN4, encoding a kinase related to the Schizosaccharomyces pombe mitotic inducer Nim1p; CLA4, encoding a p21-activated kinase; and NAP1, encoding a Clb2p-
interacting protein
) also produce perturbations of septin organization associated with an Swe1p-dependent cell cycle delay. The effects of gin4, cla4, and nap1 mutations are additive, indicating that these proteins promote normal septin organization through pathways that are at least partially independent. In contrast, mutations affecting the other two Nim1p-related kinases in S. cerevisiae, Hsl1p and Kcc4p, produce no detectable effect on septin organization. However, deletion of HSL1, but not of KCC4, did produce a cell cycle delay under some conditions; this delay appears to reflect a direct role of Hsl1p in the regulation of Swe1p. As shown previously, Swe1p plays a central role in the morphogenesis checkpoint that delays the cell cycle in response to defects in bud formation. Swe1p is localized to the nucleus and to the daughter side of the mother bud neck prior to its degradation in G(2)/M phase. Both the neck localization of Swe1p and its degradation require Hsl1p and its binding partner Hsl7p, both of which colocalize with Swe1p at the daughter side of the neck. This localization is lost in mutants with perturbed septin organization, suggesting that the release of Hsl1p and Hsl7p from the neck may reduce their ability to inactivate Swe1p and thus contribute to the G(2) delay observed in such mutants. In contrast, treatments that perturb actin organization have little effect on Hsl1p and Hsl7p localization, suggesting that such treatments must stabilize Swe1p by another mechanism. The apparent dependence of Swe1p degradation on localization of the Hsl1p-Hsl7p-Swe1p module to a site that exists only in budded cells may constitute a mechanism for deactivating the morphogenesis checkpoint when it is no longer needed (i.e., after a bud has formed).
...
PMID:Septin-dependent assembly of a cell cycle-regulatory module in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1080 47
Cyclin E/
Cdk2
acts at the G1/S-phase transition to promote the E2F transcriptional program and the initiation of DNA synthesis. To explore further how cyclin E/
Cdk2
controls S-phase events, we examined the subcellular localization of the cyclin E/
Cdk2
interacting protein
p220(NPAT) and its regulation by phosphorylation. p220 is localized to discrete nuclear foci. Diploid fibroblasts in Go and G1 contain two p220 foci, whereas S- and G2-phase cells contain primarily four p220 foci. Cells in metaphase and telophase have no detectable focus. p220 foci contain cyclin E and are coincident with Cajal bodies (CBs), subnuclear organelles that associate with histone gene clusters on chromosomes 1 and 6. Interestingly, p220 foci associate with chromosome 6 throughout the cell cycle and with chromosome 1 during S phase. Five cyclin E/
Cdk2
phosphorylation sites in p220 were identified. Phospho-specific antibodies against two of these sites react with p220 within CBs in a cell cycle-specific manner. The timing of p220 phosphorylation correlates with the appearance of cyclin E in CBs at the G1/S boundary, and this phosphorylation is maintained until prophase. Expression of p220 activates transcription of the histone H2B promoter. Importantly, mutation of
Cdk2
phosphorylation sites to alanine abrogates the ability of p220 to activate the histone H2B promoter. Collectively, these results strongly suggest that p220(NPAT) links cyclical cyclin E/
Cdk2
kinase activity to replication-dependent histone gene transcription.
...
PMID:Cell cycle-regulated phosphorylation of p220(NPAT) by cyclin E/Cdk2 in Cajal bodies promotes histone gene transcription. 1099 87
The
CDK
-
interacting protein
phosphatase KAP dephosphorylates phosphoThr-160 (pThr-160) of the CDK2 activation segment, the site of regulatory phosphorylation that is essential for kinase activity. Here we describe the crystal structure of KAP in association with pThr-160-CDK2, representing an example of a protein phosphatase in complex with its intact protein substrate. The major protein interface between the two molecules is formed by the C-terminal lobe of CDK2 and the C-terminal helix of KAP, regions remote from the kinase-activation segment and the KAP catalytic site. The kinase-activation segment interacts with the catalytic site of KAP almost entirely via the phosphate group of pThr-160. This interaction requires that the activation segment is unfolded and drawn away from the kinase molecule, inducing a conformation of CDK2 similar to the activated state observed in the CDK2/cyclin A complex.
...
PMID:Phosphoprotein-protein interactions revealed by the crystal structure of kinase-associated phosphatase in complex with phosphoCDK2. 1146 86
Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (cdk2) is a small serine/threonine kinase that regulates cell cycle progression.
Cdk2
activity is tightly controlled by several mechanisms, including phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events. Cables is a recently described novel cdk-
interacting protein
. In proliferating cells, Cables was predominantly localized in the nucleus by cell fractionation and immunostaining. Expression of Cables in HeLa cells inhibited cell growth and colony formation. Cables enhanced cdk2 tyrosine 15 phosphorylation by the Wee1 protein kinase, an inhibitory phosphorylation, which led to decreased cdk2 kinase activity. The gene encoding Cables is located on human chromosome 18q11-12, a site that is frequently lost in squamous, colon, and pancreas cancers. We found that Cables was strongly expressed in normal human epithelial cells including squamous and glandular mucosa. Breast and pancreatic cancers show strong Cables expression; however, loss of Cables expression was found in approximately 50-60% of primary colon and head and neck cancer specimens. Lack of Cables expression was associated with loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 18q11. The data provide evidence for a Cables-mediated interplay between cdk2 and Wee1 that leads to inhibition of cell growth. Conversely, loss of Cables may cause uncontrolled cell growth and enhance tumor formation.
...
PMID:Cables enhances cdk2 tyrosine 15 phosphorylation by Wee1, inhibits cell growth, and is lost in many human colon and squamous cancers. 1158 73
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