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Query: EC:3.1.3.16 (
calcineurin
)
17,112
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cdc14
protein phosphatase
and Dbf2 protein kinase have been implicated to act during late M phase, but their functions are not known. We report here that CDC14 is a low-copy suppressor of the dbf2-2 mutation at 37 degrees C. The kinase activity of Dbf2 accumulated at a high level, in vivo, during a
cdc14
arrest and was also much higher in
cdc14
mutant cells at the permissive temperature of growth, therefore in cycling mutant cells than in cycling wild-type cells. This correlated with the accumulation of the more slowly migrating form of Dbf2, previously shown to correspond to the hyperphosphorylated form of the protein. The finding that the dbf2-2 mutation could be rescued following overproduction of catalytically inactive forms of Cdc14 suggested that the control of Dbf2 activity by Cdc14 might be only indirect and independent of Cdc14 phosphatase activity. However, it was found that Cdc14 could form oligomers within the cell, thus leaving open the possibility that catalytically inactive Cdc14 might associate with wild-type Cdc14 and rescue dbf2-2 in a phosphatase-dependent manner. We confirmed that overexpression of CDC14 could rescue mutations in CDC15, which encodes another kinase also implicated to act in late M phase. Cells of a cdc15-2 dbf2-2 double mutant died at temperatures much lower than did either single mutant, whereas there was only a slight additive phenotype in the
cdc14
-1 dbf2-2 and
cdc14
-1 cdc15-2 double mutant cells. Finally, functional association between Cdc14 and Dbf2 (and also Cdc15) was confirmed by the finding that the
cdc14
, dbf2 and cdc15 mutations could be partially rescued by the addition of 1.2 M sorbitol to the culture medium. Our data are the first to demonstrate a functional link between Cdc14 and Dbf2 based on both biochemical and genetic information.
...
PMID:The Cdc14 phosphatase is functionally associated with the Dbf2 protein kinase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 961 78
The Cdc14 protein encodes a dual-specificity
protein phosphatase
which functions in late mitosis, and considerable genetic evidence suggests a role in DNA replication. We find that
cdc14
mutants arrested in late mitosis maintain persistent levels of mitotic kinase activity, suggesting that Cdc14 controls inactivation of this kinase. Overexpression of Sicl, a cyclin-dependent protein kinase inhibitor, is able to suppress telophase mutants such as dbf2, cdc5 and cdc15, but not
cdc14
. It does, however, force
cdc14
-arrested cells into the next cell cycle, in which an apparently normal S phase occurs as judged by FACS and pulsed-field gel electrophoretic analysis. Furthermore, in a promoter shut-off experiment, cells lacking Cdc14 appear to carry out a normal S phase. Thus Cdc14 functions mainly in late mitosis and it has no essential role in S phase.
...
PMID:DNA replication is completed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells that lack functional Cdc14, a dual-specificity protein phosphatase. 964 51
Thirty-two
protein phosphatase
(PPase) genes were identified in the genome nucleotide sequence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We constructed S. cerevisiae disruptants for each of the PPase genes and examined their growth under various conditions. The disruptants of six putative PPase genes, i.e. of YBR125c, YCR079w, YIL113w, YJR110w, YNR022c and YOR090c, were created for the first time in this study. The glc7, sit4 and
cdc14
disruptants were lethal in our strain background. The remaining 29 PPase gene disruptants were viable at 30 degrees C and 37 degrees C, but only one disruptant, yvh1, showed intrinsic cold-sensitive growth at 13 degrees C. Transcription of the YVH1 gene was induced at 13 degrees C, consistent with an idea that Yvh1p has a specific role for growth at a low temperature. The viable disruptants grew normally on nutrient medium containing sucrose, galactose, maltose or glycerol as carbon sources. The ppz1 disruptant was tolerant to NaCl and LiCl, while the cmp2 disruptant was sensitive to these salts, as reported previously, and none of the other viable PPase disruptants exhibited the salt sensitivity. When the viable disruptants were tested for sensitivity to drugs, i.e. benomyl, caffeine and hydroxyurea, ppz1 and ycr079w disruptants exhibited sensitivity to caffeine.
...
PMID:A series of protein phosphatase gene disruptants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1057 63
Exit from mitosis in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae cell cycle is regulated by a regulatory network that involves, among other proteins, the small GTPase Tem1, the
protein phosphatase
Cdc14, and the protein kinases Dbf2 and Cdc15. Using a fusion to jellyfish green fluorescent protein (GFP), here we report that Cdc15 costains with the microtubular-organizing apparatus and that this localization is precluded in a mutant lacking the outer plaque of the spindle pole body (SPB). The appearance of Cdc15 in the SPB is asymmetric and cell-cycle-regulated, preferentially marking the daughter cell SPB at anaphase and eventually disappearing at cytokinesis. Overproduction of GFP-tagged Cdc15 led to an accumulation of the fusion protein in both mother and daughter cells SPBs and, transiently, in small budded cells and shmoos. The Cdc15 localization pattern was maintained in dbf2,
cdc14
and anaphase-promoting complex (cdc16) mutants, suggesting that the function of these proteins is not related to the localization of Cdc15 to the SPB but rather, at least in the case of Cdc14, to its timely removal from this structure. Tem1-depleted cells kept alive by Cdc15-GFP overexpression still display a proper localization of Cdc15. The results presented here suggest that the transient cell-cycle-dependent localization of Cdc15 to the SPB plays a role in the regulation of the latest stages of the cell cycle.
...
PMID:The budding yeast Cdc15 localizes to the spindle pole body in a cell-cycle-dependent manner. 1066 94
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae CDC15, DBF2, TEM1 and CDC14 genes encode regulatory proteins that play a crucial role in the latest stages of the M phase of the cell cycle. By complementation of a S. cerevisiae cdc15-lyt1 mutant with a Candida albicans centromeric-based genomic library, we have isolated a homologue of the
protein phosphatase
-encoding gene CDC14. The sequence analysis of the C. albicans CDC14 gene reveals a putative open reading frame of 1626 base pairs interrupted by an intron located close to the 5' region. Analysis of C. albicans cDNA proved that the intron is processed in vivo. The CaCDC14 gene shares 49% of amino acid sequence identity with the S. cerevisiae CDC14 gene, 46% with Schizosaccharomyces pombe homologue, 35% with Caenorhabditis elegans and 37% and 38% with human CDC14A and CDC14B genes, respectively. As expected, the C. albicans CDC14 gene complemented a S. cerevisiae
cdc14
-1 mutant. We found that this gene was able to efficiently suppress not only a S.cerevisiae cdc15-lyt1 mutant but also a dbf2-2 mutant in a low number of copies and allowed growth, although very slightly, of a tem1 deletant. Overexpression of the human CDC14A and CDC14B genes complemented, although very poorly, S. cerevisiae cdc15-lyt1 and dbf2-2 mutants, suggesting a conserved function of these genes throughout phylogeny. The sequence of CaCDC14 was deposited in the EMBL database under Accession No. AJ243449.
...
PMID:A single-copy suppressor of the Saccharomyces cerevisae late-mitotic mutants cdc15 and dbf2 is encoded by the Candida albicans CDC14 gene. 1142 67
During meiosis, DNA replication is followed by two consecutive rounds of chromosome segregation. Cells lacking the
protein phosphatase
CDC14 or its regulators, SPO12 and SLK19, undergo only a single meiotic division, with some chromosomes segregating reductionally and others equationally. We find that this abnormal chromosome behavior is due to an uncoupling of meiotic events. Anaphase I spindle disassembly is delayed in
cdc14
-1, slk19Delta, or spo12Delta mutants, but the chromosome segregation cycle continues, so that both meiotic chromosome segregation phases take place on the persisting meiosis I spindle. Our results show that Cdc14, Slk19, and Spo12 are not only required for meiosis I spindle disassembly but also play a pivotal role in establishing two consecutive chromosome segregation phases, a key feature of the meiotic cell cycle.
...
PMID:The Cdc14 phosphatase and the FEAR network control meiotic spindle disassembly and chromosome segregation. 1273 6
In yeast, the
protein phosphatase
Cdc14 promotes chromosome segregation, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis by reversing M-phase phosphorylations catalyzed by Cdk1. A key feature of Cdc14 regulation is its sequestration within the nucleolus, which restricts its access to potential substrates for much of the cell cycle. Mammals also possess a nucleolar Cdc14 homolog, termed Cdc14B, but its roles during mitosis and cell division remain speculative. Here we analyze Cdc14B's subcellular dynamics during mitosis and rigorously test its functional contributions to cell division through homozygous disruption of the Cdc14B locus in human somatic cells. While Cdc14B is initially released from nucleoli at the start of mitosis, the phosphatase quickly redistributes onto segregating sister chromatids during anaphase. This relocalization is mainly driven by Cdk1 inactivation, as pharmacologic inhibition of Cdk1 in prometaphase cells redirects Cdc14B onto chromosomes. However, in sharp contrast to yeast
cdc14
mutants, human Cdc14B(Delta/Delta) cells were viable and lacked defects in spindle assembly, anaphase progression, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis, and continued to segregate ribosomal DNA repeats with near-normal proficiency. Our findings reveal substantial divergence in mitotic regulation between yeast and mammalian cells, as the latter possess efficient mechanisms for completing late M-phase events in the absence of a nucleolar Cdc14-related phosphatase.
...
PMID:The nucleolar phosphatase Cdc14B is dispensable for chromosome segregation and mitotic exit in human cells. 1841 58