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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (
proteasome
)
28,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ubiquitin-
proteasome
-mediated destruction of rate-limiting proteins is required for timely progression through the main cell cycle transitions. The anaphase-promoting complex (APC), periodically activated by the Cdh1 subunit, represents one of the major cellular ubiquitin ligases which, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Drosophila spp., triggers exit from mitosis and during G(1) prevents unscheduled DNA replication. In this study we investigated the importance of periodic oscillation of the APC-Cdh1 activity for the cell cycle progression in human cells. We show that conditional interference with the APC-Cdh1 dissociation at the G(1)/S transition resulted in an inability to accumulate a surprisingly broad range of critical mitotic regulators including cyclin B1, cyclin A,
Plk1
, Pds1, mitosin (CENP-F), Aim1, and Cdc20. Unexpectedly, although constitutively assembled APC-Cdh1 also delayed G(1)/S transition and lowered the rate of DNA synthesis during S phase, some of the activities essential for DNA replication became markedly amplified, mainly due to a progressive increase of E2F-dependent cyclin E transcription and a rapid turnover of the p27(Kip1) cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor. Consequently, failure to inactivate APC-Cdh1 beyond the G(1)/S transition not only inhibited productive cell division but also supported slow but uninterrupted DNA replication, precluding S-phase exit and causing massive overreplication of the genome. Our data suggest that timely oscillation of the APC-Cdh1 ubiquitin ligase activity represents an essential step in coordinating DNA replication with cell division and that failure of mechanisms regulating association of APC with the Cdh1 activating subunit can undermine genomic stability in mammalian cells.
...
PMID:Nonperiodic activity of the human anaphase-promoting complex-Cdh1 ubiquitin ligase results in continuous DNA synthesis uncoupled from mitosis. 1100 57
The
polo-like kinase
(
Plk
) has been shown to be associated with the anaphase-promoting complex at the transition from metaphase to anaphase and to regulate ubiquitination, the process that targets proteins for degradation by proteasomes. In this study, we have identified proteasomal proteins interacting with
Plk
by mass spectrometry and found that
Plk
and 20S
proteasome
subunits could be reversibly immunoprecipitated from both human CA46 cells and HEK 293 cells transfected with HA-
Plk
. Furthermore, both coprecipitated
Plk
and baculovirus-expressed
Plk
were able to phosphorylate
proteasome
subunits, and metabolic labeling studies indicate that
Plk
is partially responsible for the phosphorylation of 20S
proteasome
subunits C9 and C8 in vivo. In addition, phosphorylation of proteasomes by
Plk
enhanced proteolytic activity toward an artificial substrate Suc-L-L-V-Y-AMC in vitro and in vivo. Finally, we were also able to detect
Plk
associated with 26S proteasomes under certain conditions. Together our results suggest that
Plk
is an important mitotic regulator of
proteasome
activity.
...
PMID:Polo-like kinase interacts with proteasomes and regulates their activity. 1120 43
A unique property of the photodynamic signal transduction inhibitor hypericin is functionality in the dark. We show in tumor cells that hypericin targets the heat shock protein (Hsp) 90 chaperone but not Hsp70 (Hsc70) to enhanced ubiquitinylation. As a consequence Hsp90 chaperone functionality is abrogated and the client proteins, mutant p53, Cdk4, Raf-1, and
Plk
, are displaced from complexes with Hsp90, destabilized, and degraded via a
proteasome
-independent pathway. Decline in Raf-1 prevents downstream activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 kinases, the Ras/Raf pathway is inhibited, and tumor cell proliferation is arrested. The cells exhibit multiple aberrations including retardation at G(2)-M, increased cell volume, and multinucleation, all of which are hallmarks of mitotic cell death. The studies demonstrate that ubiquitinylation of Hsp90 inactivates the chaperone, destabilizes the plethora of client proteins, and creates deficiencies in multiple unrelated cellular functions. This combination constitutes a mechanism by which hypericin generates mitotic cell death in cancer cells.
...
PMID:Enhanced ubiquitinylation of heat shock protein 90 as a potential mechanism for mitotic cell death in cancer cells induced with hypericin. 1467 81
Sister chromatid separation in anaphase depends on the removal of cohesin complexes from chromosomes. In vertebrates, the bulk of cohesin is already removed from chromosome arms during prophase and prometaphase, whereas cohesin remains at centromeres until metaphase, when cohesin is cleaved by the protease separase. In unperturbed mitoses, arm cohesion nevertheless persists throughout metaphase and is principally sufficient to maintain sister chromatid cohesion. How arm cohesion is maintained until metaphase is unknown. Here we show that small amounts of cohesin can be detected in the interchromatid region of metaphase chromosome arms. If prometaphase is prolonged by treatment of cells with microtubule poisons, these cohesin complexes dissociate from chromosome arms, and arm cohesion is dissolved. If cohesin dissociation in prometaphase-arrested cells is prevented by depletion of
Plk1
or inhibition of Aurora B, arm cohesion is maintained. These observations imply that, in unperturbed mitoses, small amounts of cohesin maintain arm cohesion until metaphase. When cells lacking
Plk1
and Aurora B activity enter anaphase, chromatids lose cohesin. This loss is prevented by
proteasome
inhibitors, implying that it depends on separase activation. Separase may therefore be able to cleave cohesin at centromeres and on chromosome arms.
...
PMID:Regulation of sister chromatid cohesion between chromosome arms. 1524 16
Degradation of proteins mediated by ubiquitin-
proteasome
pathway (UPP) plays important roles in the regulation of eukaryotic cell cycle. In this study, the functional roles and regulatory mechanisms of UPP in mouse oocyte meiotic maturation, fertilization, and early embryonic cleavage were studied by drug-treatment, Western blot, antibody microinjection, and confocal microscopy. The meiotic resumption of both cumulus-enclosed oocytes and denuded oocytes was stimulated by two potent, reversible, and cell-permeable
proteasome
inhibitors, ALLN and MG-132. The metaphase I spindle assembly was prevented, and the distribution of ubiquitin, cyclin B1, and
polo-like kinase 1
(
Plk1
) was also distorted. When UPP was inhibited, mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)/p90rsk phosphorylation was not affected, but the cyclin B1 degradation that occurs during normal metaphase-anaphase transition was not observed. During oocyte activation, the emission of second polar body (PB2) and the pronuclear formation were inhibited by ALLN or MG-132. In oocytes microinjected with ubiquitin antibodies, PB2 emission and pronuclear formation were also inhibited after in vitro fertilization. The expression of cyclin B1 and the phosphorylation of MAPK/p90rsk could still be detected in ALLN or MG-132-treated oocytes even at 8 h after parthenogenetic activation or insemination, which may account for the inhibition of PB2 emission and pronuclear formation. We also for the first time investigated the subcellular localization of ubiquitin protein at different stages of oocyte and early embryo development. Ubiquitin protein was accumulated in the germinal vesicle (GV), the region between the separating homologous chromosomes, the midbody, the pronuclei, and the region between the separating sister chromatids. In conclusion, our results suggest that the UPP plays important roles in oocyte meiosis resumption, spindle assembly, polar body emission, and pronuclear formation, probably by regulating cyclin B1 degradation and MAPK/p90rsk phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway modulates mouse oocyte meiotic maturation and fertilization via regulation of MAPK cascade and cyclin B1 degradation. 1532 87
Polo like kinases (Plks) are key regulators of the cell cycle, but little is known about their functions in postmitotic cells such as neurons. Recent findings indicate that Plk2 and Plk3 are dynamically regulated in neurons by synaptic activity at the mRNA and protein levels. In COS cells, Plk2 and Plk3 interact with spine-associated Rap guanosine triphosphatase-activating protein (SPAR), a regulator of actin dynamics and dendritic spine morphology, leading to its degradation through the ubiquitin-
proteasome
system. Induction of Plk2 in hippocampal neurons eliminates SPAR protein, depletes a core postsynaptic scaffolding molecule (PSD-95), and causes loss of mature dendritic spines and synapses. These findings implicate neuronal Plks as mediators of activity-dependent change in molecular composition and morphology of synapses. Induction of Plks might provide a homeostatic mechanism for global dampening of synaptic strength following heightened neuronal activity ('synaptic scaling'). Synapse-specific actions of induced Plks are also possible, particularly in light of the discovery of phosphoserine/threonine peptide motifs as binding targets of the polo box domain, which could allow for 'priming' phosphorylation by upstream kinases that could 'tag'
Plk
substrates only in specific synapses.
...
PMID:Polo-like kinases in the nervous system. 1564 Aug 45
At the onset of M phase, the activity of somatic Wee1 (Wee1A), the inhibitory kinase for cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK), is down-regulated primarily through
proteasome
-dependent degradation after ubiquitination by the E3 ubiquitin ligase SCF(beta-TrCP). The F-box protein beta-TrCP (beta-transducin repeat-containing protein), the substrate recognition component of the ubiquitin ligase, binds to its substrates through a conserved binding motif (phosphodegron) containing two phosphoserines, DpSGXXpS. Although Wee1A lacks this motif, phosphorylation of serines 53 and 123 (S53 and S123) of Wee1A by
polo-like kinase 1
(
Plk1
) and CDK, respectively, are required for binding to beta-TrCP. The sequence surrounding phosphorylated S53 (DpSAFQE) is similar to the conserved beta-TrCP-binding motif; however, the role of S123 phosphorylation (EEGFGSSpSPVK) in beta-TrCP binding was not elucidated. In the present study, we show that phosphorylation of S123 (pS123) by CDK promoted the binding of Wee1A to beta-TrCP through three independent mechanisms. The pS123 not only directly interacted with basic residues in the WD40 repeat domain of beta-TrCP but also primed phosphorylation by two independent protein kinases,
Plk1
and CK2 (formerly casein kinase 2), to create two phosphodegrons on Wee1A. In the case of
Plk1
, S123 phosphorylation created a polo box domain-binding motif (SpSP) on Wee1A to accelerate phosphorylation of S53 by
Plk1
. CK2 could phosphorylate S121, but only if S123 was phosphorylated first, thereby generating the second beta-TrCP-binding site (EEGFGpS121). Using a specific inhibitor of CK2, we showed that the phosphorylation-dependent degradation of Wee1A is important for the proper onset of mitosis.
...
PMID:Cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) phosphorylation destabilizes somatic Wee1 via multiple pathways. 1608 15
To understand the role of glutathione (GSH) in the protection of cells from arsenite toxicity, we studied the mechanism of apoptotic cell death in cells genetically unable to synthesize GSH (GCS-2 cells). Arsenite stimulated an increase in protein ubiquitination in GCS-2 cells while the wild-type cells were unaffected. Arsenite treatment increased lipid peroxidation and induced ubiquitination of molecular chaperone Hsp90 and impaired its ability to bind cochaperone p50(Cdc-37) and client proteins
Plk
-1 and Cdk-4 in GCS-2 cells. Treatment with arsenite also partially inhibited
proteasome
activity in GCS-2 cells. In these cells stably transfected with GFP(u) (a reporter consisting of a short degron fused to the COOH-terminus of GFP), intracellular fluorescence increased, suggesting the accumulation of GFP aggregates. GCS-2 cells underwent apoptosis accompanied by release of cytochrome c into the cytoplasm. Taken together, these data suggest that a possible mechanism of arsenite-induced apoptosis is the accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and impairment of the protein degradative pathway. Further, protection from arsenite-induced ubiquitination is mediated by GSH and to a lesser extent by available reducing equivalents in the cells.
...
PMID:Glutathione protects cells against arsenite-induced toxicity. 1718 25
Chfr, a mitotic stress checkpoint, plays an important role in cell cycle progression, tumor suppression and the processes that require the E3 ubiquitin ligase activity mediated by the RING finger domain. Chfr stimulates the formation of polyubiquitin chains by ub-conjugating enzymes, and induces the
proteasome
-dependent degradation of a number of cellular proteins including
Plk1
and Aurora A. In this study, we identified USP7 (also known as HAUSP), which is a member of a family of proteins that cleave polyubiquitin chains and/or ubiquitin precursors, as an interacting protein with Chfr by immunoaffinity purification and mass spectrometry, and their interaction greatly increases the stability of Chfr. In fact, USP7 can remove ubiquitin moiety from the autoubiquitinated Chfr both in vivo and in vitro, which results in the accumulation of Chfr in the cell. Thus, our finding suggests that USP7-mediated deubiquitination of Chfr leads to its accumulation, which might be a key regulatory step for Chfr activation and that USP7 may play an important role in the regulation of Chfr-mediated cellular processes including cell cycle progression and tumor suppression.
...
PMID:Deubiquitination of Chfr, a checkpoint protein, by USP7/HAUSP regulates its stability and activity. 1744 68
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) DNA, by mimicking a stalled replication fork, provokes a DNA damage response that can arrest cells in the G2/M phase of the cell-cycle. This response depends strictly on DNA damage signaling kinases ATR and Chk1. Here, we used AAV to study long-term effects of DNA damage signaling in cells with altered p53 status. In HCT116 cells, in response to damage signaling, p53 represses transcription of the genes encoding mitotic regulators Cdc25C, cyclin B1, and
Plk1
to establish a firm G2 arrest. Isogenic cells lacking p53 maintain these three proteins at constant levels yet can still arrest initially in G2 because Chk1 signaling inhibits their enzymatic activities. Unexpectedly, the levels of Chk1 fall abruptly in a
proteasome
-dependent manner after two days of arrest in G2. In p53-deficient cells, this Chk1 instability is coupled to recovery of the phosphatase activity of Cdc25C and in the kinase activities of
Plk1
and Cdk1/cyclin B1. Consequently, the p53-deficient cells enter lethal mitosis. Thus, the Chk1-mediated arrest is transient: it initially causes cells to accumulate in G2 until p53-dependent transcriptional repression of mitotic proteins takes over. p53-deficient cells cannot maintain the DNA damage signaling-induced G2 arrest after Chk1 has disappeared, and continue into catastrophic mitosis. Restoring Chk1 prevents the cells from entering such mitosis. These results reveal a mechanism based on Chk1 stability that regulates mitotic entry after DNA damage and elucidate the controversial phenomenon of p53-promoted cell survival in the face of damage signaling.
...
PMID:Chk1 instability is coupled to mitotic cell death of p53-deficient cells in response to virus-induced DNA damage signaling. 1766 93
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