Pines, J.
(2024). 2024: The quest continues. Open biol,
Vol.14
(1),
p. 240010.
Cirillo, L.
Young, R.
Veerapathiran, S.
Roberti, A.
Martin, M.
Abubacar, A.
Perosa, C.
Coates, C.
Muhammad, R.
Roumeliotis, T.I.
Choudhary, J.S.
Alfieri, C.
Pines, J.
(2024). Spatial control of the APC/C ensures the rapid degradation of cyclin B1. Embo j,
Vol.43
(19),
pp. 4324-4355.
show abstract
full text
The proper control of mitosis depends on the ubiquitin-mediated degradation of the right mitotic regulator at the right time. This is effected by the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase that is regulated by the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC). The SAC prevents the APC/C from recognising Cyclin B1, the essential anaphase and cytokinesis inhibitor, until all chromosomes are attached to the spindle. Once chromosomes are attached, Cyclin B1 is rapidly degraded to enable chromosome segregation and cytokinesis. We have a good understanding of how the SAC inhibits the APC/C, but relatively little is known about how the APC/C recognises Cyclin B1 as soon as the SAC is turned off. Here, by combining live-cell imaging, in vitro reconstitution biochemistry, and structural analysis by cryo-electron microscopy, we provide evidence that the rapid recognition of Cyclin B1 in metaphase requires spatial regulation of the APC/C. Using fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy, we find that Cyclin B1 and the APC/C primarily interact at the mitotic apparatus. We show that this is because Cyclin B1, like the APC/C, binds to nucleosomes, and identify an 'arginine-anchor' in the N-terminus as necessary and sufficient for binding to the nucleosome. Mutating the arginine anchor on Cyclin B1 reduces its interaction with the APC/C and delays its degradation: cells with the mutant, non-nucleosome-binding Cyclin B1 become aneuploid, demonstrating the physiological relevance of our findings. Together, our data demonstrate that mitotic chromosomes promote the efficient interaction between Cyclin B1 and the APC/C to ensure the timely degradation of Cyclin B1 and genomic stability..
Barbiero, M.
Cirillo, L.
Veerapathiran, S.
Coates, C.
Ruffilli, C.
Pines, J.
(2022). Cell cycle-dependent binding between Cyclin B1 and Cdk1 revealed by time-resolved fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Open biol,
Vol.12
(6),
p. 220057.
show abstract
full text
Measuring the dynamics with which the regulatory complexes assemble and disassemble is a crucial barrier to our understanding of how the cell cycle is controlled that until now has been difficult to address. This considerable gap in our understanding is due to the difficulty of reconciling biochemical assays with single cell-based techniques, but recent advances in microscopy and gene editing techniques now enable the measurement of the kinetics of protein-protein interaction in living cells. Here, we apply fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy to study the dynamics of the cell cycle machinery, beginning with Cyclin B1 and its binding to its partner kinase Cdk1 that together form the major mitotic kinase. Although Cyclin B1 and Cdk1 are known to bind with high affinity, our results reveal that in living cells there is a pool of Cyclin B1 that is not bound to Cdk1. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the affinity of Cyclin B1 for Cdk1 increases during the cell cycle, indicating that the assembly of the complex is a regulated step. Our work lays the groundwork for studying the kinetics of protein complex assembly and disassembly during the cell cycle in living cells..
Jackman, M.
Marcozzi, C.
Barbiero, M.
Pardo, M.
Yu, L.
Tyson, A.L.
Choudhary, J.S.
Pines, J.
(2020). Cyclin B1-Cdk1 facilitates MAD1 release from the nuclear pore to ensure a robust spindle checkpoint. J cell biol,
Vol.219
(6).
show abstract
full text
How the cell rapidly and completely reorganizes its architecture when it divides is a problem that has fascinated researchers for almost 150 yr. We now know that the core regulatory machinery is highly conserved in eukaryotes, but how these multiple protein kinases, protein phosphatases, and ubiquitin ligases are coordinated in space and time to remodel the cell in a matter of minutes remains a major question. Cyclin B1-Cdk is the primary kinase that drives mitotic remodeling; here we show that it is targeted to the nuclear pore complex (NPC) by binding an acidic face of the kinetochore checkpoint protein, MAD1, where it coordinates NPC disassembly with kinetochore assembly. Localized cyclin B1-Cdk1 is needed for the proper release of MAD1 from the embrace of TPR at the nuclear pore so that it can be recruited to kinetochores before nuclear envelope breakdown to maintain genomic stability..
Strauss, B.
Harrison, A.
Coelho, P.A.
Yata, K.
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
Pines, J.
(2018). Cyclin B1 is essential for mitosis in mouse embryos, and its nuclear export sets the time for mitosis. J cell biol,
Vol.217
(1),
pp. 179-193.
show abstract
full text
There is remarkable redundancy between the Cyclin-Cdk complexes that comprise the cell cycle machinery. None of the mammalian A-, D-, or E-type cyclins are required in development until implantation, and only Cdk1 is essential for early cell divisions. Cyclin B1 is essential for development, but whether it is required for cell division is contentious. Here, we used a novel imaging approach to analyze Cyclin B1-null embryos from fertilization onward. We show that Cyclin B1-/- embryos arrest in G2 phase after just two divisions. This is the earliest arrest of any Cyclin known and places Cyclin B1 with cdk1 as the essential regulators of the cell cycle. We reintroduced mutant proteins into this genetically null background to determine why Cyclin B1 is constantly exported from the nucleus. We found that Cyclin B1 must be exported from the nucleus for the cell to prevent premature entry to mitosis, and retaining Cyclin B1-Cdk1 at the plasma membrane precludes entry to mitosis..
Yost, S.
de Wolf, B.
Hanks, S.
Zachariou, A.
Marcozzi, C.
Clarke, M.
de Voer, R.
Etemad, B.
Uijttewaal, E.
Ramsay, E.
Wylie, H.
Elliott, A.
Picton, S.
Smith, A.
Smithson, S.
Seal, S.
Ruark, E.
Houge, G.
Pines, J.
Kops, G.J.
Rahman, N.
(2017). Biallelic TRIP13 mutations predispose to Wilms tumor and chromosome missegregation. Nat genet,
Vol.49
(7),
pp. 1148-1151.
show abstract
full text
Through exome sequencing, we identified six individuals with biallelic loss-of-function mutations in TRIP13. All six developed Wilms tumor. Constitutional mosaic aneuploidies, microcephaly, developmental delay and seizures, which are features of mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA) syndrome, were more variably present. Through functional studies, we show that TRIP13-mutant patient cells have no detectable TRIP13 and have substantial impairment of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), leading to a high rate of chromosome missegregation. Accurate segregation, as well as SAC proficiency, is rescued by restoring TRIP13 function. Individuals with biallelic TRIP13 or BUB1B mutations have a high risk of embryonal tumors, and here we show that their cells display severe SAC impairment. MVA due to biallelic CEP57 mutations, or of unknown cause, is not associated with embryonal tumors and cells from these individuals show minimal SAC deficiency. These data provide insights into the complex relationships between aneuploidy and carcinogenesis..
Ajduk, A.
Strauss, B.
Pines, J.
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
(2017). Delayed APC/C activation extends the first mitosis of mouse embryos. Sci rep,
Vol.7
(1),
p. 9682.
show abstract
full text
The correct temporal regulation of mitosis underpins genomic stability because it ensures the alignment of chromosomes on the mitotic spindle that is required for their proper segregation to the two daughter cells. Crucially, sister chromatid separation must be delayed until all the chromosomes have attached to the spindle; this is achieved by the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) that inhibits the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase. In many species the first embryonic M-phase is significantly prolonged compared to the subsequent divisions, but the reason behind this has remained unclear. Here, we show that the first M-phase in the mouse embryo is significantly extended due to a delay in APC/C activation. Unlike in somatic cells, where the APC/C first targets cyclin A2 for degradation at nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD), we find that in zygotes cyclin A2 remains stable for a significant period of time after NEBD. Our findings that the SAC prevents cyclin A2 degradation, whereas over-expressed Plk1 stimulates it, support our conclusion that the delay in cyclin A2 degradation is caused by low APC/C activity. As a consequence of delayed APC/C activation cyclin B1 stability in the first mitosis is also prolonged, leading to the unusual length of the first M-phase..
Di Fiore, B.
Wurzenberger, C.
Davey, N.E.
Pines, J.
(2016). The Mitotic Checkpoint Complex Requires an Evolutionary Conserved Cassette to Bind and Inhibit Active APC/C. Mol cell,
Vol.64
(6),
pp. 1144-1153.
show abstract
full text
The Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) ensures genomic stability by preventing sister chromatid separation until all chromosomes are attached to the spindle. It catalyzes the production of the Mitotic Checkpoint Complex (MCC), which inhibits Cdc20 to inactivate the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C). Here we show that two Cdc20-binding motifs in BubR1 of the recently identified ABBA motif class are crucial for the MCC to recognize active APC/C-Cdc20. Mutating these motifs eliminates MCC binding to the APC/C, thereby abolishing the SAC and preventing cells from arresting in response to microtubule poisons. These ABBA motifs flank a KEN box to form a cassette that is highly conserved through evolution, both in the arrangement and spacing of the ABBA-KEN-ABBA motifs, and association with the amino-terminal KEN box required to form the MCC. We propose that the ABBA-KEN-ABBA cassette holds the MCC onto the APC/C by binding the two Cdc20 molecules in the MCC-APC/C complex..
Grallert, A.
Boke, E.
Hagting, A.
Hodgson, B.
Connolly, Y.
Griffiths, J.R.
Smith, D.L.
Pines, J.
Hagan, I.M.
(2015). A PP1-PP2A phosphatase relay controls mitotic progression. Nature,
Vol.517
(7532),
pp. 94-98.
show abstract
full text
The widespread reorganization of cellular architecture in mitosis is achieved through extensive protein phosphorylation, driven by the coordinated activation of a mitotic kinase network and repression of counteracting phosphatases. Phosphatase activity must subsequently be restored to promote mitotic exit. Although Cdc14 phosphatase drives this reversal in budding yeast, protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) activities have each been independently linked to mitotic exit control in other eukaryotes. Here we describe a mitotic phosphatase relay in which PP1 reactivation is required for the reactivation of both PP2A-B55 and PP2A-B56 to coordinate mitotic progression and exit in fission yeast. The staged recruitment of PP1 (the Dis2 isoform) to the regulatory subunits of the PP2A-B55 and PP2A-B56 (B55 also known as Pab1; B56 also known as Par1) holoenzymes sequentially activates each phosphatase. The pathway is blocked in early mitosis because the Cdk1-cyclin B kinase (Cdk1 also known as Cdc2) inhibits PP1 activity, but declining cyclin B levels later in mitosis permit PP1 to auto-reactivate. PP1 first reactivates PP2A-B55; this enables PP2A-B55 in turn to promote the reactivation of PP2A-B56 by dephosphorylating a PP1-docking site in PP2A-B56, thereby promoting the recruitment of PP1. PP1 recruitment to human, mitotic PP2A-B56 holoenzymes and the sequences of these conserved PP1-docking motifs suggest that PP1 regulates PP2A-B55 and PP2A-B56 activities in a variety of signalling contexts throughout eukaryotes..
Wieser, S.
Pines, J.
(2015). The biochemistry of mitosis. Cold spring harb perspect biol,
Vol.7
(3),
p. a015776.
show abstract
In this article, we will discuss the biochemistry of mitosis in eukaryotic cells. We will focus on conserved principles that, importantly, are adapted to the biology of the organism. It is vital to bear in mind that the structural requirements for division in a rapidly dividing syncytial Drosophila embryo, for example, are markedly different from those in a unicellular yeast cell. Nevertheless, division in both systems is driven by conserved modules of antagonistic protein kinases and phosphatases, underpinned by ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, which create molecular switches to drive each stage of division forward. These conserved control modules combine with the self-organizing properties of the subcellular architecture to meet the specific needs of the cell. Our discussion will draw on discoveries in several model systems that have been important in the long history of research on mitosis, and we will try to point out those principles that appear to apply to all cells, compared with those in which the biochemistry has been specifically adapted in a particular organism..
Di Fiore, B.
Davey, N.E.
Hagting, A.
Izawa, D.
Mansfeld, J.
Gibson, T.J.
Pines, J.
(2015). The ABBA motif binds APC/C activators and is shared by APC/C substrates and regulators. Dev cell,
Vol.32
(3),
pp. 358-372.
show abstract
The anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) is the ubiquitin ligase that regulates mitosis by targeting specific proteins for degradation at specific times under the control of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). How the APC/C recognizes its different substrates is a key problem in the control of cell division. Here, we have identified the ABBA motif in cyclin A, BUBR1, BUB1, and Acm1, and we show that it binds to the APC/C coactivator CDC20. The ABBA motif in cyclin A is required for its proper degradation in prometaphase through competing with BUBR1 for the same site on CDC20. Moreover, the ABBA motifs in BUBR1 and BUB1 are necessary for the SAC to work at full strength and to recruit CDC20 to kinetochores. Thus, we have identified a conserved motif integral to the proper control of mitosis that connects APC/C substrate recognition with the SAC..
Izawa, D.
Pines, J.
(2015). The mitotic checkpoint complex binds a second CDC20 to inhibit active APC/C. Nature,
Vol.517
(7536),
pp. 631-634.
show abstract
full text
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) maintains genomic stability by delaying chromosome segregation until the last chromosome has attached to the mitotic spindle. The SAC prevents the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase from recognizing cyclin B and securin by catalysing the incorporation of the APC/C co-activator, CDC20, into a complex called the mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC). The SAC works through unattached kinetochores generating a diffusible 'wait anaphase' signal that inhibits the APC/C in the cytoplasm, but the nature of this signal remains a key unsolved problem. Moreover, the SAC and the APC/C are highly responsive to each other: the APC/C quickly targets cyclin B and securin once all the chromosomes attach in metaphase, but is rapidly inhibited should kinetochore attachment be perturbed. How this is achieved is also unknown. Here, we show that the MCC can inhibit a second CDC20 that has already bound and activated the APC/C. We show how the MCC inhibits active APC/C and that this is essential for the SAC. Moreover, this mechanism can prevent anaphase in the absence of kinetochore signalling. Thus, we propose that the diffusible 'wait anaphase' signal could be the MCC itself, and explain how reactivating the SAC can rapidly inhibit active APC/C..
Matsusaka, T.
Enquist-Newman, M.
Morgan, D.O.
Pines, J.
(2014). Co-activator independent differences in how the metaphase and anaphase APC/C recognise the same substrate. Biol open,
Vol.3
(10),
pp. 904-912.
show abstract
full text
The Anaphase Promoting Complex or Cyclosome (APC/C) is critical to the control of mitosis. The APC/C is an ubiquitin ligase that targets specific mitotic regulators for proteolysis at distinct times in mitosis, but how this is achieved is not well understood. We have addressed this question by determining whether the same substrate, cyclin B1, is recognised in the same way by the APC/C at different times in mitosis. Unexpectedly, we find that distinct but overlapping motifs in cyclin B1 are recognised by the APC/C in metaphase compared with anaphase, and this does not depend on the exchange of Cdc20 for Cdh1. Thus, changes in APC/C substrate specificity in mitosis can potentially be conferred by altering interaction sites in addition to exchanging Cdc20 for Cdh1..
Atkin, J.
Halova, L.
Ferguson, J.
Hitchin, J.R.
Lichawska-Cieslar, A.
Jordan, A.M.
Pines, J.
Wellbrock, C.
Petersen, J.
(2014). Torin1-mediated TOR kinase inhibition reduces Wee1 levels and advances mitotic commitment in fission yeast and HeLa cells. J cell sci,
Vol.127
(Pt 6),
pp. 1346-1356.
show abstract
The target of rapamycin (TOR) kinase regulates cell growth and division. Rapamycin only inhibits a subset of TOR activities. Here we show that in contrast to the mild impact of rapamycin on cell division, blocking the catalytic site of TOR with the Torin1 inhibitor completely arrests growth without cell death in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. A mutation of the Tor2 glycine residue (G2040D) that lies adjacent to the key Torin-interacting tryptophan provides Torin1 resistance, confirming the specificity of Torin1 for TOR. Using this mutation, we show that Torin1 advanced mitotic onset before inducing growth arrest. In contrast to TOR inhibition with rapamycin, regulation by either Wee1 or Cdc25 was sufficient for this Torin1-induced advanced mitosis. Torin1 promoted a Polo and Cdr2 kinase-controlled drop in Wee1 levels. Experiments in human cell lines recapitulated these yeast observations: mammalian TOR (mTOR) was inhibited by Torin1, Wee1 levels declined and mitotic commitment was advanced in HeLa cells. Thus, the regulation of the mitotic inhibitor Wee1 by TOR signalling is a conserved mechanism that helps to couple cell cycle and growth controls..
Collin, P.
Nashchekina, O.
Walker, R.
Pines, J.
(2013). The spindle assembly checkpoint works like a rheostat rather than a toggle switch. Nat cell biol,
Vol.15
(11),
pp. 1378-1385.
show abstract
full text
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) is essential in mammalian mitosis to ensure the equal segregation of sister chromatids. The SAC generates a mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC) to prevent the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) from targeting key mitotic regulators for destruction until all of the chromosomes have attached to the mitotic apparatus. A single unattached kinetochore can delay anaphase for several hours, but how it is able to block the APC/C throughout the cell is not understood. Present concepts of the SAC posit that either it exhibits an all-or-nothing response or there is a minimum threshold sufficient to block the APC/C (ref. 7). Here, we have used gene targeting to measure SAC activity, and find that it does not have an all-or-nothing response. Instead, the strength of the SAC depends on the amount of MAD2 recruited to kinetochores and on the amount of MCC formed. Furthermore, we show that different drugs activate the SAC to different extents, which may be relevant to their efficacy in chemotherapy..
Sedgwick, G.G.
Hayward, D.G.
Di Fiore, B.
Pardo, M.
Yu, L.
Pines, J.
Nilsson, J.
(2013). Mechanisms controlling the temporal degradation of Nek2A and Kif18A by the APC/C-Cdc20 complex. Embo j,
Vol.32
(2),
pp. 303-314.
show abstract
full text
The Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C) in complex with its co-activator Cdc20 is responsible for targeting proteins for ubiquitin-mediated degradation during mitosis. The activity of APC/C-Cdc20 is inhibited during prometaphase by the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) yet certain substrates escape this inhibition. Nek2A degradation during prometaphase depends on direct binding of Nek2A to the APC/C via a C-terminal MR dipeptide but whether this motif alone is sufficient is not clear. Here, we identify Kif18A as a novel APC/C-Cdc20 substrate and show that Kif18A degradation depends on a C-terminal LR motif. However in contrast to Nek2A, Kif18A is not degraded until anaphase showing that additional mechanisms contribute to Nek2A degradation. We find that dimerization via the leucine zipper, in combination with the MR motif, is required for stable Nek2A binding to and ubiquitination by the APC/C. Nek2A and the mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC) have an overlap in APC/C subunit requirements for binding and we propose that Nek2A binds with high affinity to apo-APC/C and is degraded by the pool of Cdc20 that avoids inhibition by the SAC..
Florindo, C.
Perdigão, J.
Fesquet, D.
Schiebel, E.
Pines, J.
Tavares, A.A.
(2012). Human Mob1 proteins are required for cytokinesis by controlling microtubule stability. J cell sci,
Vol.125
(Pt 13),
pp. 3085-3090.
show abstract
The completion of cytokinesis requires abscission of the midbody, a microtubule-rich cytoplasmic bridge that connects the daughter cells before their final separation. Although it has been established that both the midbody structure and membrane fusion are essential for abscission, the biochemical machinery and the cellular processes of abscission remain ill-defined. Here we report that human Mob1A and Mob1B proteins are involved in the regulation of abscission of the intercellular bridge. The Mob family is a group of highly conserved proteins in eukaryotes, described as binding partners as well as co-activators of protein kinases of the Ndr family, and as members of the Hippo pathway. We show that depletion of Mob1A and Mob1B by RNAi causes abscission failure as a consequence of hyper-stabilization of microtubules in the midbody region. Interestingly, depleting Mob1 also increases cell motility after cytokinesis, and induces prolonged centriole separation in G1 phase. In contrast, centrosomes fail to split when either Mob1A or Mob1B is overexpressed. Our findings indicate that human Mob1 proteins are involved in the regulation of microtubule stability at the midbody. We conclude that Mob1A and Mob1B are needed for cell abscission and centriole re-joining after telophase and cytokinesis..
Izawa, D.
Pines, J.
(2012). Mad2 and the APC/C compete for the same site on Cdc20 to ensure proper chromosome segregation. J cell biol,
Vol.199
(1),
pp. 27-37.
show abstract
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) is essential to ensure proper chromosome segregation and thereby maintain genomic stability. The SAC monitors chromosome attachment, and any unattached chromosomes generate a "wait anaphase" signal that blocks chromosome segregation. The target of the SAC is Cdc20, which activates the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) that triggers anaphase and mitotic exit by ubiquitylating securin and cyclin B1. The inhibitory complex formed by the SAC has recently been shown to inhibit Cdc20 by acting as a pseudosubstrate inhibitor, but in this paper, we show that Mad2 also inhibits Cdc20 by binding directly to a site required to bind the APC/C. Mad2 and the APC/C competed for Cdc20 in vitro, and a Cdc20 mutant that does not bind stably to Mad2 abrogated the SAC in vivo. Thus, we provide insights into how Cdc20 binds the APC/C and uncover a second mechanism by which the SAC inhibits the APC/C..
Pines, J.
(2012). A red light in mitosis. Nat rev mol cell biol,
Vol.13
(8),
p. 482.
Pines, J.
(2011). Cubism and the cell cycle: the many faces of the APC/C. Nat rev mol cell biol,
Vol.12
(7),
pp. 427-438.
show abstract
One does not often look to analytic cubism for insights into the control of the cell cycle, but Pablo Picasso beautifully encapsulated the fundamentals when he said that "every act of creation is, first of all, an act of destruction". The rapid destruction of specific cell cycle regulators at just the right moment in the cell cycle ensures that daughter cells receive an equal and identical set of chromosomes from their mother and that DNA replication always follows mitosis. Remarkably, one protein complex is responsible for this surgical precision, the APC/C (anaphase-promoting complex, also known as the cyclosome). The APC/C is tightly regulated by its co-activators and by the spindle assembly checkpoint..
Izawa, D.
Pines, J.
(2011). How APC/C-Cdc20 changes its substrate specificity in mitosis. Nat cell biol,
Vol.13
(3),
pp. 223-233.
show abstract
full text
Progress through mitosis requires that the right protein be degraded at the right time. One ubiquitin ligase, the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) targets most of the crucial mitotic regulators by changing its substrate specificity throughout mitosis. The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) acts on the APC/C co-activator, Cdc20 (cell division cycle 20), to block the degradation of metaphase substrates (for example, cyclin B1 and securin), but not others (for example, cyclin A). How this is achieved is unclear. Here we show that Cdc20 binds to different sites on the APC/C depending on the SAC. Cdc20 requires APC3 and APC8 to bind and activate the APC/C when the SAC is satisfied, but requires only APC8 to bind the APC/C when the SAC is active. Moreover, APC10 is crucial for the destruction of cyclin B1 and securin, but not cyclin A. We conclude that the SAC causes Cdc20 to bind to different sites on the APC/C and this alters APC/C substrate specificity..
Pagliuca, F.W.
Collins, M.O.
Lichawska, A.
Zegerman, P.
Choudhary, J.S.
Pines, J.
(2011). Quantitative proteomics reveals the basis for the biochemical specificity of the cell-cycle machinery. Mol cell,
Vol.43
(3),
pp. 406-417.
show abstract
Cyclin-dependent kinases comprise the conserved machinery that drives progress through the cell cycle, but how they do this in mammalian cells is still unclear. To identify the mechanisms by which cyclin-cdks control the cell cycle, we performed a time-resolved analysis of the in vivo interactors of cyclins E1, A2, and B1 by quantitative mass spectrometry. This global analysis of context-dependent protein interactions reveals the temporal dynamics of cyclin function in which networks of cyclin-cdk interactions vary according to the type of cyclin and cell-cycle stage. Our results explain the temporal specificity of the cell-cycle machinery, thereby providing a biochemical mechanism for the genetic requirement for multiple cyclins in vivo and reveal how the actions of specific cyclins are coordinated to control the cell cycle. Furthermore, we identify key substrates (Wee1 and c15orf42/Sld3) that reveal how cyclin A is able to promote both DNA replication and mitosis..
Mansfeld, J.
Collin, P.
Collins, M.O.
Choudhary, J.S.
Pines, J.
(2011). APC15 drives the turnover of MCC-CDC20 to make the spindle assembly checkpoint responsive to kinetochore attachment. Nat cell biol,
Vol.13
(10),
pp. 1234-1243.
show abstract
full text
Faithful chromosome segregation during mitosis depends on the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), which monitors kinetochore attachment to the mitotic spindle. Unattached kinetochores generate mitotic checkpoint proteins complexes (MCCs) that bind and inhibit the anaphase-promoting complex, or cyclosome (APC/C). How the SAC proficiently inhibits the APC/C but still allows its rapid activation when the last kinetochore attaches to the spindle is important for the understanding of how cells maintain genomic stability. We show that the APC/C subunit APC15 is required for the turnover of the APC/C co-activator CDC20 and release of MCCs during SAC signalling but not for APC/C activity per se. In the absence of APC15, MCCs and ubiquitylated CDC20 remain 'locked' onto the APC/C, which prevents the ubiquitylation and degradation of cyclin B1 when the SAC is satisfied. We conclude that APC15 mediates the constant turnover of CDC20 and MCCs on the APC/C to allow the SAC to respond to the attachment state of kinetochores..
Pines, J.
Hagan, I.
(2011). The Renaissance or the cuckoo clock. Philos trans r soc lond b biol sci,
Vol.366
(1584),
pp. 3625-3634.
show abstract
'…in Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace-and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock'. Orson Welles as Harry Lime: The Third Man. Orson Welles might have been a little unfair on the Swiss, after all cuckoo clocks were developed in the Schwartzwald, but, more importantly, Swiss democracy gives remarkably stable government with considerable decision-making at the local level. The alternative is the battling city-states of Renaissance Italy: culturally rich but chaotic at a higher level of organization. As our understanding of the cell cycle improves, it appears that the cell is organized more along the lines of Switzerland than Renaissance Italy, and one major challenge is to determine how local decisions are made and coordinated to produce the robust cell cycle mechanisms that we observe in the cell as a whole..
Khodjakov, A.
Pines, J.
(2010). Centromere tension: a divisive issue. Nat cell biol,
Vol.12
(10),
pp. 919-923.
show abstract
full text
It has been proposed that the spindle assembly checkpoint detects both unattached kinetochores and lack of tension between sister kinetochores when sister chromatids are not attached to opposite spindle poles. However, here we argue that there is only one signal — whether kinetochores are attached to microtubules or not — and this has implications for our understanding of both chromosome segregation and the control of genomic stability..
Gavet, O.
Pines, J.
(2010). Activation of cyclin B1-Cdk1 synchronizes events in the nucleus and the cytoplasm at mitosis. J cell biol,
Vol.189
(2),
pp. 247-259.
show abstract
The cyclin B-Cdk1 kinase triggers mitosis in most eukaryotes. In animal cells, cyclin B shuttles between the nucleus and cytoplasm in interphase before rapidly accumulating in the nucleus at prophase, which promotes disassembly of the nuclear lamina and nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD). What triggers the nuclear accumulation of cyclin B1 is presently unclear, although the prevailing view is that the Plk1 kinase inhibits its nuclear export. In this study, we use a biosensor specific for cyclin B1-Cdk1 activity to show that activating cyclin B1-Cdk1 immediately triggers its rapid accumulation in the nucleus through a 40-fold increase in nuclear import that remains dependent on Cdk1 activity until NEBD. Nevertheless, a substantial proportion of cyclin B1-Cdk1 remains in the cytoplasm. The increase in nuclear import is driven by changes in the nuclear import machinery that require neither Plk1 nor inhibition of nuclear export. Thus, the intrinsic link between cyclin B1-Cdk1 activation and its rapid nuclear import inherently coordinates the reorganization of the nucleus and the cytoplasm at mitotic entry..
Gavet, O.
Pines, J.
(2010). Progressive activation of CyclinB1-Cdk1 coordinates entry to mitosis. Dev cell,
Vol.18
(4),
pp. 533-543.
show abstract
The CyclinB1-Cdk1 kinase is the catalytic activity at the heart of mitosis-promoting factor (MPF), yet fundamental questions concerning its role in mitosis remained unresolved. It is not known when and how rapidly CyclinB1-Cdk1 is activated in mammalian cells, nor how its activation coordinates the substantial changes in the cell at mitosis. Here, we have developed a FRET biosensor specific for CyclinB1-Cdk1 that enables us to assay its activity with very high temporal precision in living human cells. We show that CyclinB1-Cdk1 is inactive in G2 phase and activated at a set time before nuclear envelope breakdown, thereby initiating the events of prophase. CyclinB1-Cdk1 levels rise to their maximum extent over the course of approximately 30 min, and we demonstrate that different levels of CyclinB1-Cdk1 kinase activity trigger different mitotic events, thus revealing how the remarkable reorganization of the cell is coordinated at mitotic entry..
Di Fiore, B.
Pines, J.
(2010). How cyclin A destruction escapes the spindle assembly checkpoint. J cell biol,
Vol.190
(4),
pp. 501-509.
show abstract
The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) is the ubiquitin ligase essential to mitosis, which ensures that specific proteins are degraded at specific times to control the order of mitotic events. The APC/C coactivator, Cdc20, is targeted by the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) to restrict APC/C activity until metaphase, yet early substrates, such as cyclin A, are degraded in the presence of the active checkpoint. Cdc20 and the cyclin-dependent kinase cofactor, Cks, are required for cyclin A destruction, but how they enable checkpoint-resistant destruction has not been elucidated. In this study, we answer this problem: we show that the N terminus of cyclin A binds directly to Cdc20 and with sufficient affinity that it can outcompete the SAC proteins. Subsequently, the Cks protein is necessary and sufficient to promote cyclin A degradation in the presence of an active checkpoint by binding cyclin A-Cdc20 to the APC/C..
Elder, A.D.
Domin, A.
Schierle, G.S.
Lindon, C.
Pines, J.
Esposito, A.
Kaminski, C.F.
(2009). A quantitative protocol for dynamic measurements of protein interactions by Forster resonance energy transfer-sensitized fluorescence emission. Journal of the royal society interface,
Vol.6,
pp. S59-S81.
Garnett, M.J.
Mansfeld, J.
Godwin, C.
Matsusaka, T.
Wu, J.
Russell, P.
Pines, J.
Venkitaraman, A.R.
(2009). UBE2S elongates ubiquitin chains on APC/C substrates to promote mitotic exit. Nat cell biol,
Vol.11
(11),
pp. 1363-1369.
show abstract
full text
The anaphase-promoting complex (APC/C), a ubiquitin ligase, is the target of the spindle-assembly checkpoint (SAC), and it ubiquitylates protein substrates whose degradation regulates progress through mitosis. The identity of the ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes that work with the APC/C is unclear. In an RNA interference (RNAi) screen for factors that modify release from drug-induced SAC activation, we identified the E2 enzyme UBE2S as an APC/C auxiliary factor that promotes mitotic exit. UBE2S is dispensable in a normal mitosis, but its depletion prolongs drug-induced mitotic arrest and suppresses mitotic slippage. In vitro, UBE2S elongates ubiquitin chains initiated by the E2 enzymes UBCH10 and UBCH5, enhancing the degradation of APC/C substrates by the proteasome. Indeed, following release from SAC-induced mitotic arrest, UBE2S-depleted cells neither degrade crucial APC/C substrates, nor silence this checkpoint, whereas bypassing the SAC through BUBR1 depletion or Aurora-B inhibition negates the requirement for UBE2S. Thus, UBE2S functions with the APC/C in a two-step mechanism to control substrate ubiquitylation that is essential for mitotic exit after prolonged SAC activation, providing a new model for APC/C function in human cells..
Yekezare, M.
Pines, J.
(2009). Escaping the firing squad: acetylation of BubR1 protects it from degradation in checkpoint cells. Embo j,
Vol.28
(14),
pp. 1991-1993.
full text
Pines, J.
(2009). The APC/C: a smörgåsbord for proteolysis. Mol cell,
Vol.34
(2),
pp. 135-136.
show abstract
In a recent issue of Molecular Cell, Matyskiela and Morgan (2009) identify the sites on the APC/C that are required for activation and substrate binding, providing insights into how the APC/C works, with implications for the spindle assembly checkpoint that regulates it..
Ahel, I.
Ahel, D.
Matsusaka, T.
Clark, A.J.
Pines, J.
Boulton, S.J.
West, S.C.
(2008). Poly(ADP-ribose)-binding zinc finger motifs in DNA repair/checkpoint proteins. Nature,
Vol.451
(7174),
pp. 81-85.
show abstract
Post-translational modification (PTM) of proteins plays an important part in mediating protein interactions and/or the recruitment of specific protein targets. PTM can be mediated by the addition of functional groups (for example, acetylation or phosphorylation), peptides (for example, ubiquitylation or sumoylation), or nucleotides (for example, poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation). Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation often involves the addition of long chains of ADP-ribose units, linked by glycosidic ribose-ribose bonds, and is critical for a wide range of processes, including DNA repair, regulation of chromosome structure, transcriptional regulation, mitosis and apoptosis. Here we identify a novel poly(ADP-ribose)-binding zinc finger (PBZ) motif in a number of eukaryotic proteins involved in the DNA damage response and checkpoint regulation. The PBZ motif is also required for post-translational poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation. We demonstrate interaction of poly(ADP-ribose) with this motif in two representative human proteins, APLF (aprataxin PNK-like factor) and CHFR (checkpoint protein with FHA and RING domains), and show that the actions of CHFR in the antephase checkpoint are abrogated by mutations in PBZ or by inhibition of poly(ADP-ribose) synthesis..
Di Fiore, B.
Pines, J.
(2008). Defining the role of Emi1 in the DNA replication-segregation cycle. Chromosoma,
Vol.117
(4),
pp. 333-338.
show abstract
Ordered progression through the cell cycle is essential to maintain genomic stability, and fundamental to this is ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis. In particular, the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase destabilises specific regulators at defined times in the cycle to ensure that each round of DNA replication is followed by cell division. Thus, the proper regulation of the APC/C is crucial in each cell cycle. There are several APC/C regulators that restrict its activity to specific cell cycle phases, and amongst these the early mitotic inhibitor 1 (Emi1) protein has recently come to prominence. Emi1 has been proposed to control APC/C in early mitosis; however, recent evidence questions this role. In this review we discuss new evidence that indicates that Emi1 is essential to restrict APC/C activity in interphase and, by doing so, ensure the proper coordination between DNA replication and mitosis..
Wolthuis, R.
Clay-Farrace, L.
van Zon, W.
Yekezare, M.
Koop, L.
Ogink, J.
Medema, R.
Pines, J.
(2008). Cdc20 and Cks direct the spindle checkpoint-independent destruction of cyclin A. Mol cell,
Vol.30
(3),
pp. 290-302.
show abstract
Successful mitosis requires the right protein be degraded at the right time. Central to this is the spindle checkpoint that prevents the destruction of securin and cyclin B1 when there are improperly attached chromosomes. The principal target of the checkpoint is Cdc20, which activates the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C). A Drosophila Cdc20/fizzy mutant arrests in mitosis with high levels of cyclins A and B, but paradoxically the spindle checkpoint does not stabilize cyclin A. Here, we investigated this paradox and found that Cdc20 is rate limiting for cyclin A destruction. Indeed, Cdc20 binds efficiently to cyclin A before and in mitosis, and this complex has little associated Mad2. Furthermore, the cyclin A complex must bind to a Cks protein to be degraded independently of the checkpoint. Thus, we identify a crucial role for the Cks proteins in mitosis and one mechanism by which the APC/C can target substrates independently of the spindle checkpoint..
Floyd, S.
Pines, J.
Lindon, C.
(2008). APC/C Cdh1 targets aurora kinase to control reorganization of the mitotic spindle at anaphase. Curr biol,
Vol.18
(21),
pp. 1649-1658.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: Control of mitotic cell cycles by the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase depends on its coactivators Cdc20 and Cdh1. APC/C(Cdc20) is active during mitosis and promotes anaphase onset by targeting mitotic cyclins and securin. APC/C(Cdh1) becomes active during mitotic exit and has essential targets in G1 phase. It is not known whether targeting of substrates by APC/C(Cdh1) plays any role in the final stages of mitosis. Here, we have investigated the role of APC/C(Cdh1) at this time in the cell cycle by using siRNA-mediated depletion of Cdh1 in human cells. RESULTS: In contrast to the current view that Cdh1 takes over from Cdc20 at anaphase, we show that reduced Cdh1 levels have no effect on destruction of many APC/C substrates during mitotic exit but strongly and specifically stabilize Aurora kinases. We find that APC/C(Cdh1) is required for assembly of a robust spindle midzone at anaphase and for normal timings of spindle elongation and cytokinesis. The effect of Cdh1 siRNA on anaphase spindle dynamics requires Aurora A, and its effect can be mimicked by nondegradable Aurora kinase. CONCLUSIONS: Targeting of Aurora kinases at anaphase by APC/C(Cdh1) participates in the control of mitotic exit and cytokinesis..
Nilsson, J.
Yekezare, M.
Minshull, J.
Pines, J.
(2008). The APC/C maintains the spindle assembly checkpoint by targeting Cdc20 for destruction. Nat cell biol,
Vol.10
(12),
pp. 1411-1420.
show abstract
full text
The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) is required to block sister chromatid separation until all chromosomes are properly attached to the mitotic apparatus. The SAC prevents cells from entering anaphase by inhibiting the ubiquitylation of cyclin B1 and securin by the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase. The target of the SAC is the essential APC/C activator Cdc20. It is unclear how the SAC inactivates Cdc20 but most current models suggest that Cdc20 forms a stable complex with the Mad2 checkpoint protein. Here we show that most Cdc20 is not in a complex with Mad2; instead Mad2 is required for Cdc20 to form a complex with another checkpoint protein, BubR1. We further show that during the SAC, the APC/C ubiquitylates Cdc20 to target it for degradation. Thus, ubiquitylation of human Cdc20 is not required to release it from the checkpoint complex, but to degrade it to maintain mitotic arrest..
Walker, A.
Acquaviva, C.
Matsusaka, T.
Koop, L.
Pines, J.
(2008). UbcH10 has a rate-limiting role in G1 phase but might not act in the spindle checkpoint or as part of an autonomous oscillator. J cell sci,
Vol.121
(Pt 14),
pp. 2319-2326.
show abstract
Ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis mediated by the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase lies at the heart of the cell cycle. The APC/C targets mitotic cyclins for destruction in mitosis and G1 phase and is then inactivated at S phase, thereby generating the alternating states of high and low cyclin-Cdk activity required for the alternation of mitosis and DNA replication. Two key questions are how the APC/C is held in check by the spindle-assembly checkpoint to delay cells in mitosis in the presence of improperly attached chromosomes, and how the APC/C is inactivated once cells exit mitosis. The ubiquitin-conjugating protein UbcH10 has been proposed to be crucial in the answers to both questions. However, here we show that the behaviour of UbcH10 is inconsistent with both a crucial role in the spindle checkpoint and in inactivating the APC/C as part of an autonomous oscillator. Instead, we find that the rate-limiting role of UbcH10 is only at the end of G1 phase, just before DNA replication begins..
Basto, R.
Pines, J.
(2007). The centrosome opens the way to mitosis. Dev cell,
Vol.12
(4),
pp. 475-477.
show abstract
During mitosis, the interaction between chromosomes and microtubules requires nuclear envelope disassembly in prophase. Two articles in this issue of Developmental Cell show that centrosomes have a role in promoting nuclear envelope breakdown (Hachet et al., 2007; Portier et al., 2007). Surprisingly, the role of the centrosome in this process is independent of its role as a microtubule nucleation organelle. Instead, the centrosome seems to act as a spatial regulator for the activation of the Aurora A kinase..
Di Fiore, B.
Pines, J.
(2007). Emi1 is needed to couple DNA replication with mitosis but does not regulate activation of the mitotic APC/C. J cell biol,
Vol.177
(3),
pp. 425-437.
show abstract
Ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis is critical for the alternation between DNA replication and mitosis and for the key regulatory events in mitosis. The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) is a conserved ubiquitin ligase that has a fundamental role in regulating mitosis and the cell cycle in all eukaryotes. In vertebrate cells, early mitotic inhibitor 1 (Emi1) has been proposed as an important APC/C inhibitor whose destruction may trigger activation of the APC/C at mitosis. However, in this study, we show that the degradation of Emi1 is not required to activate the APC/C in mitosis. Instead, we uncover a key role for Emi1 in inhibiting the APC/C in interphase to stabilize the mitotic cyclins and geminin to promote mitosis and prevent rereplication. Thus, Emi1 plays a crucial role in the cell cycle to couple DNA replication with mitosis, and our results also question the current view that the APC/C has to be inactivated to allow DNA replication..
Pines, J.
(2006). New approaches to research on mitosis. Methods,
Vol.38
(1),
pp. 1-1.
Pines, J.
(2006). Mitosis: a matter of getting rid of the right protein at the right time. Trends cell biol,
Vol.16
(1),
pp. 55-63.
show abstract
There are two major problems for the cell to solve in mitosis: how to ensure that each daughter cell receives an equal and identical complement of the genome, and how to prevent cell separation before chromosome segregation. Both these problems are solved by controlling when two specific proteins are destroyed: securin, an inhibitor of chromosome segregation, and cyclin B, which inhibits cell separation (cytokinesis). It has recently become clear that several other proteins are degraded at specific points in mitosis. This review (which is part of the Chromosome Segregation and Aneuploidy series) focuses on how specific proteins are selected for proteolysis at defined points in mitosis and how this contributes to the proper coordination of chromosome segregation and cytokinesis..
Dasso, M.
Ohno, M.
Pines, J.
Stewart, M.
(2006). Meeting report: International Symposium on 'Ran and the Cell Cycle', October 2-5, 2005, Awaji Yumebutai, Japan. Traffic,
Vol.7
(4),
pp. 474-478.
Acquaviva, C.
Pines, J.
(2006). The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome: APC/C. J cell sci,
Vol.119
(Pt 12),
pp. 2401-2404.
Pines, J.
Lindon, C.
(2005). Proteolysis: anytime, any place, anywhere?. Nat cell biol,
Vol.7
(8),
pp. 731-735.
show abstract
Proteolysis via the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is a rapid and effective method of degrading a specific protein at a specific time, and in many cases a protein is degraded only in response to a particular cellular signal or event. However, an added dimension to the control of protein degradation is possible because the ubiquitin system can be spatially regulated. Controlling where a protein is degraded can enhance the specificity and timing of proteolysis, generate asymmetry and maintain sub-compartments even in the mitotic cell. Here, we discuss this aspect of the UPS..
Acquaviva, C.
Herzog, F.
Kraft, C.
Pines, J.
(2004). The anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome is recruited to centromeres by the spindle assembly checkpoint. Nat cell biol,
Vol.6
(9),
pp. 892-898.
show abstract
The anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) is crucial to the control of cell division (for a review, see ref. 1). It is a multi-subunit ubiquitin ligase that, at defined points during mitosis, targets specific proteins for proteasomal degradation. The APC/C is itself regulated by the spindle or kinetochore checkpoint, which has an important role in maintaining genomic stability by preventing sister chromatid separation until all chromosomes are correctly aligned on the mitotic spindle. The spindle checkpoint regulates the APC/C by inactivating Cdc20, an important co-activator of the APC/C. There is also evidence to indicate that the spindle checkpoint components and Cdc20 are spatially regulated by the mitotic apparatus, in particular they are recruited to improperly attached kinetochores. Here, we show that the APC/C itself co-localizes with components of the spindle checkpoint to improperly attached kinetochores. Indeed, we provide evidence that the spindle checkpoint machinery is required to recruit the APC/C to kinetochores. Our data indicate that the APC/C could be regulated directly by the spindle checkpoint..
Matsusaka, T.
Pines, J.
(2004). Chfr acts with the p38 stress kinases to block entry to mitosis in mammalian cells. J cell biol,
Vol.166
(4),
pp. 507-516.
show abstract
Entry into mitosis in vertebrate cells is guarded by a checkpoint that can be activated by a variety of insults, including chromosomal damage and disrupting microtubules. This checkpoint acts at the end of interphase to delay cells from entering mitosis, causing cells in prophase to decondense their chromosomes and return to G2 phase. Here, we show that in response to microtubule poisons this "antephase" checkpoint is primarily mediated by the p38 stress kinases and requires the Chfr protein that is absent or inactive in several transformed cell lines and lung tumors. Furthermore, in contrast to previous reports, we find that the checkpoint requires ubiquitylation but not proteasome activity, which is in agreement with the recent demonstration that Chfr conjugates ubiquitin through lysine 63 and not lysine 48..
Lindon, C.
Pines, J.
(2004). Ordered proteolysis in anaphase inactivates Plk1 to contribute to proper mitotic exit in human cells. J cell biol,
Vol.164
(2),
pp. 233-241.
show abstract
We have found that key mitotic regulators show distinct patterns of degradation during exit from mitosis in human cells. Using a live-cell assay for proteolysis, we show that two of these regulators, polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1) and Aurora A, are degraded at different times after the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) switches from binding Cdc20 to Cdh1. Therefore, events in addition to the switch from Cdc20 to Cdh1 control the proteolysis of APC/C(Cdh1) substrates in vivo. We have identified a putative destruction box in Plk1 that is required for degradation of Plk1 in anaphase, and have examined the effect of nondegradable Plk1 on mitotic exit. Our results show that Plk1 proteolysis contributes to the inactivation of Plk1 in anaphase, and that this is required for the proper control of mitotic exit and cytokinesis. Our experiments reveal a role for APC/C-mediated proteolysis in exit from mitosis in human cells..
Jackman, M.
Lindon, C.
Nigg, E.A.
Pines, J.
(2003). Active cyclin B1-Cdk1 first appears on centrosomes in prophase. Nat cell biol,
Vol.5
(2),
pp. 143-148.
show abstract
Cyclin B1-Cdk1 is the key initiator of mitosis, but when and where activation occurs has not been precisely determined in mammalian cells. Activation may occur in the nucleus or cytoplasm, as just before nuclear envelope breakdown, Polo-like kinase1 (Plk1) is proposed to phosphorylate cyclin B1 in its nuclear export sequence (NES), to trigger rapid nuclear import. We raised phospho-specific antibodies against cyclin B1 that primarily recognise the active form of the complex. We show that cyclin B1 is initially phosphorylated on centrosomes in prophase and that Plk1 phosphorylates cyclin B1, but not in the NES. Furthermore, phosphorylation by Plk1 does not cause cyclin B1 to move into the nucleus. We conclude that cyclin B1-Cdk1 is first activated in the cytoplasm and that centrosomes may function as sites of integration for the proteins that trigger mitosis..
Clay-Farrace, L.
Pelizon, C.
Santamaria, D.
Pines, J.
Laskey, R.A.
(2003). Human replication protein Cdc6 prevents mitosis through a checkpoint mechanism that implicates Chk1. Embo j,
Vol.22
(3),
pp. 704-712.
show abstract
In yeasts, the replication protein Cdc6/Cdc18 is required for the initiation of DNA replication and also for coupling S phase with the following mitosis. In metazoans a role for Cdc6 has only been shown in S phase entry. Here we provide evidence that human Cdc6 (HuCdc6) also regulates the onset of mitosis, as overexpression of HuCdc6 in G(2) phase cells prevents entry into mitosis. This block is abolished when HuCdc6 is expressed together with a constitutively active Cyclin B/CDK1 complex or with Cdc25B or Cdc25C. An inhibitor of Chk1 kinase activity, UCN-01, overcomes the HuCdc6 mediated G(2) arrest indicating that HuCdc6 blocks cells in G(2) phase via a checkpoint pathway involving Chk1. When HuCdc6 is overexpressed in G(2), we detected phosphorylation of Chk1. Thus, HuCdc6 can trigger a checkpoint response, which could ensure that all DNA is replicated before mitotic entry. We also present evidence that the ability of HuCdc6 to block mitosis may be regulated by its phosphorylation..
Kornbluth, S.
Pines, J.
(2003). Cell division, growth and death Cell growth: live and let die. Curr opin cell biol,
Vol.15
(6),
pp. 645-647.
Kraft, C.
Herzog, F.
Gieffers, C.
Mechtler, K.
Hagting, A.
Pines, J.
Peters, J.-.
(2003). Mitotic regulation of the human anaphase-promoting complex by phosphorylation. Embo j,
Vol.22
(24),
pp. 6598-6609.
show abstract
full text
The anaphase-promoting complex (APC) or cyclosome is a ubiquitin ligase that initiates anaphase and mitotic exit. APC activation is thought to depend on APC phosphorylation and Cdc20 binding. We have identified 43 phospho-sites on APC of which at least 34 are mitosis specific. Of these, 32 sites are clustered in parts of Apc1 and the tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) subunits Cdc27, Cdc16, Cdc23 and Apc7. In vitro, at least 15 of the mitotic phospho-sites can be generated by cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1), and 3 by Polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1). APC phosphorylation by Cdk1, but not by Plk1, is sufficient for increased Cdc20 binding and APC activation. Immunofluorescence microscopy using phospho-antibodies indicates that APC phosphorylation is initiated in prophase during nuclear uptake of cyclin B1. In prometaphase phospho-APC accumulates on centrosomes where cyclin B ubiquitination is initiated, appears throughout the cytosol and disappears during mitotic exit. Plk1 depletion neither prevents APC phosphorylation nor cyclin A destruction in vivo. These observations imply that APC activation is initiated by Cdk1 already in the nuclei of late prophase cells..
Nguyen, T.B.
Manova, K.
Capodieci, P.
Lindon, C.
Bottega, S.
Wang, X.-.
Refik-Rogers, J.
Pines, J.
Wolgemuth, D.J.
Koff, A.
(2002). Characterization and expression of mammalian cyclin b3, a prepachytene meiotic cyclin. J biol chem,
Vol.277
(44),
pp. 41960-41969.
show abstract
We report the identification and expression pattern of a full-length human cDNA and a partial mouse cDNA encoding cyclin B3. Cyclin B3 (CCNB3) is conserved from Caenorhabditis elegans to Homo sapiens and has an undefined meiotic function in female, but not male Drosophila melanogaster. We show that H. sapiens cyclin B3 interacts with cdk2, is localized to the nucleus, and is degraded during anaphase entry after the degradation of cyclin B1. Degradation is dependent on sequences conserved in a destruction box motif. Overexpression of nondegradable cyclin B3 blocks the mitotic cell cycle in late anaphase, and at higher doses it can interfere with progression through G(1) and entry into S phase. H. sapiens cyclin B3 mRNA and protein are detected readily in developing germ cells in the human testis and not in any other tissue. The mouse cDNA has allowed us to further localize cyclin B3 mRNA to leptotene and zygotene spermatocytes. The expression pattern of mammalian cyclin B3 suggests that it may be important for events occurring in early meiotic prophase I..
Pines, J.
(2002). Cell cycle trials in Salamanca: workshop on G2/M progression and associated checkpoints. Embo rep,
Vol.3
(1),
pp. 17-21.
full text
Jackman, M.
Kubota, Y.
den Elzen, N.
Hagting, A.
Pines, J.
(2002). Cyclin A- and cyclin E-Cdk complexes shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Mol biol cell,
Vol.13
(3),
pp. 1030-1045.
show abstract
full text
Cyclins A and E and their partner cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) are key regulators of DNA synthesis and of mitosis. Immunofluorescence studies have shown that both cyclins are nuclear and that a proportion of cyclin A is localized to sites of DNA replication. However, recently, both cyclin A and cyclin E have been implicated as regulators of centrosome replication, and it is unclear when and where these cyclin-Cdks can interact with cytoplasmic substrates. We have used live cell imaging to study the behavior of cyclin/Cdk complexes. We found that cyclin A and cyclin E are able to regulate both nuclear and cytoplasmic events because they both shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. However, we found that there are marked differences in their shuttling behavior, which raises the possibility that cyclin/Cdk function could be regulated at the level of nuclear import and export. In the course of these experiments, we have also found that, contrary to published results, mutations in the hydrophobic patch of cyclin A do affect Cdk binding and nuclear import. This has implications for the role of the hydrophobic patch as a substrate selection motif..
Hagting, A.
Den Elzen, N.
Vodermaier, H.C.
Waizenegger, I.C.
Peters, J.-.
Pines, J.
(2002). Human securin proteolysis is controlled by the spindle checkpoint and reveals when the APC/C switches from activation by Cdc20 to Cdh1. J cell biol,
Vol.157
(7),
pp. 1125-1137.
show abstract
Progress through mitosis is controlled by the sequential destruction of key regulators including the mitotic cyclins and securin, an inhibitor of anaphase whose destruction is required for sister chromatid separation. Here we have used live cell imaging to determine the exact time when human securin is degraded in mitosis. We show that the timing of securin destruction is set by the spindle checkpoint; securin destruction begins at metaphase once the checkpoint is satisfied. Furthermore, reimposing the checkpoint rapidly inactivates securin destruction. Thus, securin and cyclin B1 destruction have very similar properties. Moreover, we find that both cyclin B1 and securin have to be degraded before sister chromatids can separate. A mutant form of securin that lacks its destruction box (D-box) is still degraded in mitosis, but now this is in anaphase. This destruction requires a KEN box in the NH2 terminus of securin and may indicate the time in mitosis when ubiquitination switches from APCCdc20 to APCCdh1. Lastly, a D-box mutant of securin that cannot be degraded in metaphase inhibits sister chromatid separation, generating a cut phenotype where one cell can inherit both copies of the genome. Thus, defects in securin destruction alter chromosome segregation and may be relevant to the development of aneuploidy in cancer..
Okuno, Y.
McNairn, A.J.
den Elzen, N.
Pines, J.
Gilbert, D.M.
(2001). Stability, chromatin association and functional activity of mammalian pre-replication complex proteins during the cell cycle. Embo j,
Vol.20
(15),
pp. 4263-4277.
show abstract
We have examined the behavior of pre-replication complex (pre-RC) proteins in relation to key cell cycle transitions in Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells. ORC1, ORC4 and Cdc6 were stable (T1/2 >2 h) and associated with a chromatin-containing fraction throughout the cell cycle. Green fluorescent protein-tagged ORC1 associated with chromatin throughout mitosis in living cells and co-localized with ORC4 in metaphase spreads. Association of Mcm proteins with chromatin took place during telophase, approximately 30 min after the destruction of geminin and cyclins A and B, and was coincident with the licensing of chromatin to replicate in geminin-supplemented Xenopus egg extracts. Neither Mcm recruitment nor licensing required protein synthesis throughout mitosis. Moreover, licensing could be uncoupled from origin specification in geminin-supplemented extracts; site-specific initiation within the dihydrofolate reductase locus required nuclei from cells that had passed through the origin decision point (ODP). These results demonstrate that mammalian pre-RC assembly takes place during telophase, mediated by post-translational modifications of pre-existing proteins, and is not sufficient to select specific origin sites. A subsequent, as yet undefined, step selects which pre-RCs will function as replication origins..
Pines, J.
Rieder, C.L.
(2001). Re-staging mitosis: a contemporary view of mitotic progression. Nat cell biol,
Vol.3
(1),
pp. E3-E6.
show abstract
The process of cell division, or mitosis, has fascinated biologists since its discovery in the late 1870s. Progress through mitosis is traditionally divided into stages that were defined over 100 years ago from analyses of fixed material from higher plants and animals. However, this terminology often leads to ambiguity, especially when comparing different systems. We therefore suggest that mitosis can be re-staged to reflect more accurately the molecular pathways that underlie key transitions..
den Elzen, N.
Pines, J.
(2001). Cyclin A is destroyed in prometaphase and can delay chromosome alignment and anaphase. J cell biol,
Vol.153
(1),
pp. 121-136.
show abstract
Mitosis is controlled by the specific and timely degradation of key regulatory proteins, notably the mitotic cyclins that bind and activate the cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). In animal cells, cyclin A is always degraded before cyclin B, but the exact timing and the mechanism underlying this are not known. Here we use live cell imaging to show that cyclin A begins to be degraded just after nuclear envelope breakdown. This degradation requires the 26S proteasome, but is not affected by the spindle checkpoint. Neither deletion of its destruction box nor disrupting Cdk binding prevents cyclin A proteolysis, but Cdk binding is necessary for degradation at the correct time. We also show that increasing the levels of cyclin A delays chromosome alignment and sister chromatid segregation. This delay depends on the proteolysis of cyclin A and is not caused by a lag in the bipolar attachment of chromosomes to the mitotic spindle, nor is it mediated via the spindle checkpoint. Thus, proteolysis that is not under the control of the spindle checkpoint is required for chromosome alignment and anaphase..
Pines, J.
Jackman, M.
Simpson, K.
(2001). Assays for CDK activity and DNA replication in the cell cycle. Curr protoc cell biol,
Vol.Chapter 8,
pp. Unit-8.2.
show abstract
This unit describes two assays for different stages of the cell cycle in tissue culture cells. One is a biochemical measurement that assays the protein kinase activity of different cyclin-dependent kinase complexes that are present in late G1 phase, S phase, G2 phase, or mitosis. The other assay uses immunofluorescence to detect DNA replication by the incorporation of nucleotide analogs into DNA. These assays are useful in analyzing the stage and degree of synchrony of the cell cycle and changes in the basic cell cycle machinery..
Draviam, V.M.
Orrechia, S.
Lowe, M.
Pardi, R.
Pines, J.
(2001). The localization of human cyclins B1 and B2 determines CDK1 substrate specificity and neither enzyme requires MEK to disassemble the Golgi apparatus. J cell biol,
Vol.152
(5),
pp. 945-958.
show abstract
In this paper, we show that substrate specificity is primarily conferred on human mitotic cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) by their subcellular localization. The difference in localization of the B-type cyclin-CDKs underlies the ability of cyclin B1-CDK1 to cause chromosome condensation, reorganization of the microtubules, and disassembly of the nuclear lamina and of the Golgi apparatus, while it restricts cyclin B2-CDK1 to disassembly of the Golgi apparatus. We identify the region of cyclin B2 responsible for its localization and show that this will direct cyclin B1 to the Golgi apparatus and confer upon it the more limited properties of cyclin B2. Equally, directing cyclin B2 to the cytoplasm with the NH(2) terminus of cyclin B1 confers the broader properties of cyclin B1. Furthermore, we show that the disassembly of the Golgi apparatus initiated by either mitotic cyclin-CDK complex does not require mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) activity..
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
Pines, J.
(2001). Use of Green Fluorescent Protein in mouse embryos. Methods,
Vol.24
(1),
pp. 55-60.
show abstract
Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) has rapidly been established as a versatile and powerful cell marker in many organisms. Initial problems in using it in mammalian cells were solved by introducing mutations to increase its solubility at higher temperatures, such that GFP has now been used as a reporter in both gene expression and cell lineage studies, and to localize proteins within mammalian cells. GFP has two unique advantages: (i) the protein becomes fluorescent in an autocatalytic reaction, so that it can be introduced into any cell type simply as a cDNA or mRNA, or as protein; (ii) it is "bright" enough to be visualized in living cells under conditions that do not cause photodamage to the cells. In this article we outline the ways in which we have used GFP mRNA and cDNA in our studies of mouse cell lineages, and to characterize the behavior of proteins within the embryos..
Ko, T.K.
Kelly, E.
Pines, J.
(2001). CrkRS: a novel conserved Cdc2-related protein kinase that colocalises with SC35 speckles. Journal of cell science,
Vol.114
(14),
pp. 2591-2603.
Ko, T.K.
Kelly, E.
Pines, J.
(2001). CrkRS: a novel conserved Cdc2-related protein kinase that colocalises with SC35 speckles. J cell sci,
Vol.114
(Pt 14),
pp. 2591-2603.
show abstract
We have isolated and characterised a novel human protein kinase, Cdc2-related kinase with an arginine/serine-rich (RS) domain (CrkRS), that is most closely related to the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) family. CrkRS is a 1490 amino acid protein, the largest CDK-related kinase so far isolated. The protein kinase domain of CrkRS is 89% identical to the 46 kDa CHED protein kinase, but outside the kinase domains the two proteins are completely unrelated. CrkRS has extensive proline-rich regions that match the consensus for SH3 and WW domain binding sites, and an RS domain that is predominantly found in splicing factors. CrkRS is ubiquitously expressed in tissues, and maps to a single genetic locus. There are closely related protein kinases in both the Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans genomes. Consistent with the presence of an RS domain, anti-CrkRS antibodies stain nuclei in a speckled pattern, overlapping with spliceosome components and the hyperphosphorylated form of RNA polymerase II. Like RNA polymerase II, CrkRS is a constitutive MPM-2 antigen throughout the cell cycle. Anti-CrkRS immunoprecipitates phosphorylate the C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II in vitro. Thus CrkRS may be a novel, conserved link between the transcription and splicing machinery..
Miska, E.A.
Langley, E.
Wolf, D.
Karlsson, C.
Pines, J.
Kouzarides, T.
(2001). Differential localization of HDAC4 orchestrates muscle differentiation. Nucleic acids res,
Vol.29
(16),
pp. 3439-3447.
show abstract
The class II histone deacetylases HDAC4 and HDAC5 interact specifically with the myogenic MEF2 transcription factor and repress its activity. Here we show that HDAC4 is cytoplasmic during myoblast differentiation, but relocates to the nucleus once fusion has occurred. Inappropriate nuclear entry of HDAC4 following overexpression suppresses the myogenic programme as well as MEF2-dependent transcription. Activation of the Ca(2+)/calmodulin signalling pathway via constitutively active CaMKIV prevents nuclear entry of HDAC4 and HDAC4-mediated inhibition of differentiation. Consistent with a role of phosphorylation in HDAC4 cytoplasmic localisation, HDAC4 binds to 14-3-3 proteins in a phosphorylation-dependent manner. Together these data establish a role for HDAC4 in muscle differentiation. Recently, HDAC5 has also been implicated in muscle differentiation. However, despite the functional similarities of HDAC4 and HDAC5, their intracellular localisations are opposed, suggesting a distinct role for these enzymes during muscle differentiation..
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
Pines, J.
(2000). Cell lineage analysis Applications of green fluorescent protein. Methods mol biol,
Vol.135,
pp. 279-287.
Hagting, A.
Jackman, M.
Simpson, K.
Pines, J.
(1999). Translocation of cyclin B1 to the nucleus at prophase requires a phosphorylation-dependent nuclear import signal. Curr biol,
Vol.9
(13),
pp. 680-689.
show abstract
BACKGROUND: At M phase, cyclin B1 is phosphorylated in the cytoplasmic retention sequence (CRS), which is required for nuclear export. During interphase, cyclin B1 shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm because constitutive nuclear import is counteracted by rapid nuclear export. In M phase, cyclin B moves rapidly into the nucleus coincident with its phosphorylation, an overall movement that might be caused simply by a decrease in its nuclear export. However, the questions of whether CRS phosphorylation is required for cyclin B1 translocation in mitosis and whether a reduction in nuclear export is sufficient to explain its rapid relocalisation have not been addressed. RESULTS: We have used two forms of green fluorescent protein to analyse simultaneously the translocation of wild-type cyclin B1 and a phosphorylation mutant of cyclin B1 in mitosis, and correlated this with an in vitro nuclear import assay. We show that cyclin B1 rapidly translocates into the nucleus approximately 10 minutes before breakdown of the nuclear envelope, and that this movement requires the CRS phosphorylation sites. A cyclin B1 mutant that cannot be phosphorylated enters the nucleus after the wild-type protein. Phosphorylation of the CRS creates a nuclear import signal that enhances cyclin B1 import in vitro and in vivo, in a manner distinct from the previously described import of cyclin B1 mediated by importin beta. CONCLUSIONS: We show that phosphorylation of human cyclin B1 is required for its rapid translocation to the nucleus towards the end of prophase. Phosphorylation enhances cyclin B1 nuclear import by creating a nuclear import signal. The phosphorylation of the CRS is therefore a critical step in the control of mitosis..
Clute, P.
Pines, J.
(1999). Temporal and spatial control of cyclin B1 destruction in metaphase. Nat cell biol,
Vol.1
(2),
pp. 82-87.
show abstract
The proteolysis of key regulatory proteins is thought to control progress through mitosis. Here we analyse cyclin B1 degradation in real time and find that it begins as soon as the last chromosome aligns on the metaphase plate, just after the spindle-assembly checkpoint is inactivated. At this point, cyclin B1 staining disappears from the spindle poles and from the chromosomes. Cyclin B1 destruction can subsequently be inactivated throughout metaphase if the spindle checkpoint is reimposed, and this correlates with the reappearance of cyclin B1 on the spindle poles and the chromosomes. These results provide a temporal and spatial link between the spindle-assembly checkpoint and ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis..
Pines, J.
(1999). Four-dimensional control of the cell cycle. Nat cell biol,
Vol.1
(3),
pp. E73-E79.
show abstract
The cell-division cycle has to be regulated in both time and space. In the time dimension, the cell ensures that mitosis does not begin until DNA replication is completed and any damaged DNA is repaired, and that DNA replication normally follows mitosis. This is achieved by the synthesis and destruction of specific cell-cycle regulators at the right time in the cell cycle. In the spatial dimension, the cell coordinates dramatic reorganizations of the subcellular architecture at the entrance to and exit from mitosis, largely through the actions of protein kinases and phosphatases that are often localized to specific subcellular structures. Evidence is now accumulating to suggest that the spatial organization of cell-cycle regulators is also important in the temporal control of the cell cycle. Here I will focus on how the locations of the main components of the cell-cycle machinery are regulated as part of the mechanism by which the cell controls when and how it replicates and divides..
Karlsson, C.
Katich, S.
Hagting, A.
Hoffmann, I.
Pines, J.
(1999). Cdc25B and Cdc25C differ markedly in their properties as initiators of mitosis. J cell biol,
Vol.146
(3),
pp. 573-584.
show abstract
We have used time-lapse fluorescence microscopy to study the properties of the Cdc25B and Cdc25C phosphatases that have both been implicated as initiators of mitosis in human cells. To differentiate between the functions of the two proteins, we have microinjected expression constructs encoding Cdc25B or Cdc25C or their GFP-chimeras into synchronized tissue culture cells. This assay allows us to express the proteins at defined points in the cell cycle. We have followed the microinjected cells by time-lapse microscopy, in the presence or absence of DNA synthesis inhibitors, and assayed whether they enter mitosis prematurely or at the correct time. We find that overexpressing Cdc25B alone rapidly causes S phase and G2 phase cells to enter mitosis, whether or not DNA replication is complete, whereas overexpressing Cdc25C does not cause premature mitosis. Overexpressing Cdc25C together with cyclin B1 does shorten the G2 phase and can override the unreplicated DNA checkpoint, but much less efficiently than overexpressing Cdc25B. These results suggest that Cdc25B and Cdc25C do not respond identically to the same cell cycle checkpoints. This difference may be related to the differential localization of the proteins; Cdc25C is nuclear throughout interphase, whereas Cdc25B is nuclear in the G1 phase and cytoplasmic in the S and G2 phases. We have found that the change in subcellular localization of Cdc25B is due to nuclear export and that this is dependent on cyclin B1. Our data suggest that although both Cdc25B and Cdc25C can promote mitosis, they are likely to have distinct roles in the controlling the initiation of mitosis..
Pines, J.
(1999). Cell cycle Checkpoint on the nuclear frontier. Nature,
Vol.397
(6715),
pp. 104-105.
Miska, E.A.
Karlsson, C.
Langley, E.
Nielsen, S.J.
Pines, J.
Kouzarides, T.
(1999). HDAC4 deacetylase associates with and represses the MEF2 transcription factor. Embo j,
Vol.18
(18),
pp. 5099-5107.
show abstract
The acetylation state of histones can influence transcription. Acetylation, carried out by acetyltransferases such as CBP/p300 and P/CAF, is commonly associated with transcriptional stimulation, whereas deacetylation, mediated by the three known human deacetylases HDAC1, 2 and 3, causes transcriptional repression. The known human deacetylases represent a single family and are homologues of the yeast RPD3 deacetylase. Here we identify and characterize HDAC4, a representative of a new human histone deacetylase family, which is homologous to the yeast HDA1 deacetylase. We show that HDAC4, unlike other deacetylases, shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm in a process involving active nuclear export. In the nucleus, HDAC4 associates with the myocyte enhancer factor MEF2A. Binding of HDAC4 to MEF2A results in the repression of MEF2A transcriptional activation, a function that requires the deacetylase domain of HDAC4. These results identify MEF2A as a nuclear target for HDAC4-mediated repression and suggests that compartmentalization may be a novel mechanism for controlling the nuclear activity of this new family of deacetylases..
Furuno, N.
den Elzen, N.
Pines, J.
(1999). Human cyclin A is required for mitosis until mid prophase. J cell biol,
Vol.147
(2),
pp. 295-306.
show abstract
We have used microinjection and time-lapse video microscopy to study the role of cyclin A in mitosis. We have injected purified, active cyclin A/cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) into synchronized cells at specific points in the cell cycle and assayed its effect on cell division. We find that cyclin A/CDK2 will drive G2 phase cells into mitosis within 30 min of microinjection, up to 4 h before control cells enter mitosis. Often this premature mitosis is abnormal; the chromosomes do not completely condense and daughter cells fuse. Remarkably, microinjecting cyclin A/CDK2 into S phase cells has no effect on progress through the following G2 phase or mitosis. In complementary experiments we have microinjected the amino terminus of p21(Cip1/Waf1/Sdi1) (p21N) into cells to inhibit cyclin A/CDK2 activity. We find that p21N will prevent S phase or G2 phase cells from entering mitosis, and will cause early prophase cells to return to interphase. These results suggest that cyclin A/CDK2 is a rate-limiting component required for entry into mitosis, and for progress through mitosis until late prophase. They also suggest that cyclin A/CDK2 may be the target of the recently described prophase checkpoint..
Arnaud, L.
Pines, J.
Nigg, E.A.
(1998). GFP tagging reveals human Polo-like kinase 1 at the kinetochore/centromere region of mitotic chromosomes. Chromosoma,
Vol.107
(6-7),
pp. 424-429.
show abstract
Polo-like kinases (Plks) have been implicated in various aspects of M-phase progression in organisms ranging from yeast to man. In vertebrates, Plks participate in centrosome maturation and spindle assembly, as well as the activation of the Cdk1/cyclin B complex. Moreover, Plks are required for the destruction of mitotic cyclins, indicating that they play an important role in the regulation of the ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic degradation machinery that controls exit from M-phase. Here, we have fused Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) to the N-terminus of human Plk1, and expressed this chimeric construct in human cells. We found that GFP-Plk1 associates with centrosomes, the equatorial spindle midzone and the postmitotic bridge of dividing cells, confirming and extending previous results obtained with conventional immunofluorescence microscopy. In addition, however, we observed fluorescence emanating from the midbody between dividing cells, and from discrete dots associated with mitotic chromosomes. This latter staining pattern being reminiscent of centromeres, we performed double-labeling experiments with antibodies against the centromeric marker CENP-B, and reexamined the subcellular localization of endogenous Plk1 using different fixation procedures. Our data clearly show that both GFP-tagged Plk1 and endogenous Plk1 associate with the kinetochore/centromere region of human mitotic chromosomes. This novel localization of Plk1 suggests that substrates and/or regulators of Plks may be found among kinetochore-associated proteins with important functions in chromosome segregation and/or spindle checkpoint mechanisms..
Hagting, A.
Karlsson, C.
Clute, P.
Jackman, M.
Pines, J.
(1998). MPF localization is controlled by nuclear export. Embo j,
Vol.17
(14),
pp. 4127-4138.
show abstract
In eukaryotes, mitosis is initiated by M phase promoting factor (MPF), composed of B-type cyclins and their partner protein kinase, CDK1. In animal cells, MPF is cytoplasmic in interphase and is translocated into the nucleus after mitosis has begun, after which it associates with the mitotic apparatus until the cyclins are degraded in anaphase. We have used a fusion protein between human cyclin B1 and green fluorescent protein (GFP) to study this dynamic behaviour in real time, in living cells. We found that when we injected cyclin B1-GFP, or cyclin B1-GFP bound to CDK1 (i.e. MPF), into interphase nuclei it is rapidly exported into the cytoplasm. Cyclin B1 nuclear export is blocked by leptomycin B, an inhibitor of the recently identified export factor, exportin 1 (CRM1). The nuclear export of MPF is mediated by a nuclear export sequence in cyclin B1, and an export-defective cyclin B1 accumulates in interphase nuclei. Therefore, during interphase MPF constantly shuttles between the nucleus and the cytoplasm, but the bulk of MPF is retained in the cytoplasm by rapid nuclear export. We found that a cyclin mutant with a defective nuclear export signal does not enhance the premature mitosis caused by interfering with the regulatory phosphorylation of CDK1, but is more sensitive to inhibition by the Wee1 kinase..
Pines, J.
(1998). Regulation of the G2 to M transition. Results probl cell differ,
Vol.22,
pp. 57-78.
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
Pines, J.
McLean Hunter, S.
Dixon, J.P.
Siemering, K.R.
Haseloff, J.
Evans, M.J.
(1997). Following cell fate in the living mouse embryo. Development,
Vol.124
(6),
pp. 1133-1137.
show abstract
It has been difficult to follow many of the dramatic changes in cell fate and cell migration during mouse development. This is because there has been no enduring marker that would allow cells to be recognised in the living embryo. We believe that we have overcome this problem by developing a novel form of green fluorescent protein, named MmGFP, that proves to be easily visible and non toxic to mouse cells and does not perturb embryogenesis. We show that synthetic mRNA encoding MmGFP can be injected into blastomeres to follow the fate of their progeny during preimplantation development. We have made a stable embryonic stem cell line that expresses MmGFP and introduced these fluorescent cells into mouse embryos. For the first time, we have been able to follow the fate of embryonic stem cells in living embryos and to observe directly the contribution of these cells to distinct lineages of the postimplantation embryo. This approach should lead to a more complete description of the dynamics of cell fate in the mouse..
Krude, T.
Jackman, M.
Pines, J.
Laskey, R.A.
(1997). Cyclin/Cdk-dependent initiation of DNA replication in a human cell-free system. Cell,
Vol.88
(1),
pp. 109-119.
show abstract
We describe a cell-free system from HeLa cells that initiates DNA replication under cell cycle control. G1 but not G2 phase nuclei initiate replication when coincubated with S phase nuclei in cytosolic extracts from S phase but not from G1 or G2 phase HeLa cells. S phase nuclei or an S phase nuclear extract are required for the initiation of semiconservative DNA replication in G1 nuclei but not for elongation in S phase nuclei. S phase nuclear extract could be replaced by recombinant human cyclins A and E complexed to Cdk2 but not by Cdk2 alone or by human cyclin B1 complexed to Cdc2. In S phase cytosol, cyclins A/Cdk2 and E/Cdk2 triggered initiation synergistically..
Pines, J.
(1997). Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors: the age of crystals. Biochim biophys acta,
Vol.1332
(1),
pp. M39-M42.
Jackman, M.R.
Pines, J.N.
(1997). Cyclins and the G2/M transition. Cancer surv,
Vol.29,
pp. 47-73.
show abstract
The entry of a cell into mitosis is regulated by an elaborate network of kinases and phosphatases that control both for the timing of cell division and the complete reorganization of the cellular architecture. The mitotic cyclin/Cdks form part of large multiprotein complexes whose other components are only now beginning to be identified. The continuing identification of proteins that contribute to these complexes and changes in the composition of these complexes are likely to give a more integrated view of how mitotic cyclin/Cdk complexes are regulated and how they function-not only to induce mitosis, but also to aid further mitotic progression. Furthermore, assigning specific G2/M functions to distinct mitotic cyclin/Cdk complexes will require the identification of differences in substrate specificities between the mitotic cyclin/Cdk complexes, perhaps in parallel with specific cyclin knockouts in mice. Such investigations will be complicated by potential functional overlap between mitotic cyclin/Cdk complexes in vitro and in vivo. Although cyclin/Cdk1 is thought to be the major kinase that initiates the onset of mitosis, a more complete understanding of how cells move from G2 to a mitotic state will require further identification of kinases operating upstream, downstream and in parallel with Cdk1, their substrates and their relationship with one another during the G2/M transition..
Pines, J.
(1997). Localization of cell cycle regulators by immunofluorescence. Methods enzymol,
Vol.283,
pp. 99-113.
Pines, J.
(1996). Cell cycle: reaching for a role for the Cks proteins. Curr biol,
Vol.6
(11),
pp. 1399-1402.
show abstract
The Cks proteins are essential components of the cyclin-dependent protein kinases that regulate mitosis in all eukaryotes, but their precise function remains obscure. The crystal structures of several Cks proteins offer insights into their roles during the cell cycle..
Pines, J.
(1996). Cyclin from sea urchins to HeLas: making the human cell cycle. Biochem soc trans,
Vol.24
(1),
pp. 15-33.
Zernicka-Goetz, M.
Pines, J.
Ryan, K.
Siemering, K.R.
Haseloff, J.
Evans, M.J.
Gurdon, J.B.
(1996). An indelible lineage marker for Xenopus using a mutated green fluorescent protein. Development,
Vol.122
(12),
pp. 3719-3724.
show abstract
We describe the use of a DNA construct (named GFP.RN3) encoding green fluorescent protein as a lineage marker for Xenopus embryos. This offers the following advantages over other lineage markers so far used in Xenopus. When injected as synthetic mRNA, its protein emits intense fluorescence in living embryos. It is non-toxic, and the fluorescence does not bleach when viewed under 480 nm light. It is surprisingly stable, being strongly visible up to the feeding tadpole stage (5 days), and in some tissues for several weeks after mRNA injection. We also describe a construct that encodes a blue fluorescent protein. We exemplify the use of this GFP.RN3 construct for marking the lineage of individual blastomeres at the 32- to 64-cell stage, and as a marker for single transplanted blastula cells. Both procedures have revealed that the descendants of one embryonic cell can contribute single muscle cells to nearly all segmental myotomes rather than predominantly to any one myotome. An independent aim of our work has been to follow the fate of cells in which an early regulatory gene has been temporarily overexpressed. For this purpose, we co-injected GFP.RN3 mRNA and mRNA for the early Xenopus gene Eomes, and found that a high concentration of Eomes results in ectopic muscle gene activation in only the injected cells. This marker may therefore be of general value in providing long term identification of those cells in which an early gene with ephemeral expression has been overexpressed..
Pines, J.
(1995). Cyclins, CDKs and cancer. Semin cancer biol,
Vol.6
(2),
pp. 63-72.
show abstract
The connections between cancer and the basic machinery of the cell cycle have taken a surprisingly long time to become apparent. However, the past 2 years has seen a dramatic increase in the number of cell cycles regulators that have been implicated as either protooncogenes or as tumour suppressor genes. In this review I will attempt to show how perturbations in the known cell cycle regulators may play a part in the process of oncogenesis..
Pines, J.
(1995). GFP in mammalian cells. Trends genet,
Vol.11
(8),
pp. 326-327.
Pines, J.
(1995). Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases: a biochemical view. Biochem j,
Vol.308 ( Pt 3)
(Pt 3),
pp. 697-711.
full text
Jackman, M.
Firth, M.
Pines, J.
(1995). Human cyclins B1 and B2 are localized to strikingly different structures: B1 to microtubules, B2 primarily to the Golgi apparatus. Embo j,
Vol.14
(8),
pp. 1646-1654.
show abstract
We have raised and characterized antibodies specific for human cyclin B2 and have compared the properties of cyclins B1 and B2 in human tissue culture cells. Cyclin B1 and B2 levels are very low in G1 phase, increase in S and G2 phases and peak at mitosis. Both B-type cyclins associate with p34cdc2; their associated kinase activities appear when cells enter mitosis and disappear as the cyclins are destroyed in anaphase. However, human cyclins B1 and B2 differ dramatically in their subcellular localization. Cyclin B1 co-localizes with microtubules, whereas cyclin B2 is primarily associated with the Golgi region. In contrast to cyclin B1, cyclin B2 does not relocate to the nucleus at prophase, but becomes uniformly distributed throughout the cell. The different subcellular locations of human cyclins B1 and B2 implicate them in the reorganization of different aspects of the cellular architecture at mitosis and indicate that different mitotic cyclin-cyclin-dependent kinase complexes may have distinct roles in the cell cycle..
Pines, J.
(1995). Cell cycle Confirmational change. Nature,
Vol.376
(6538),
pp. 294-295.
Pines, J.
(1995). Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases: theme and variations. Adv cancer res,
Vol.66,
pp. 181-212.
Pines, J.
(1994). Arresting developments in cell-cycle control. Trends biochem sci,
Vol.19
(4),
pp. 143-145.
Pines, J.
(1994). The cell cycle kinases. Semin cancer biol,
Vol.5
(4),
pp. 305-313.
show abstract
This review summarizes our current knowledge of the regulation of the cell cycle by the cyclin-dependent kinase family (CDK). The CDKs are regulated both by binding their cyclin partners, and by phosphorylation of certain key residues. Cyclin synthesis and destruction are regulated during the cell cycle, and there are two broad classes of cyclins: the START or G1 cyclins, and the mitotic or G2 cyclins. In vivo the different cyclins and CDKs demonstrate a high degree of specificity in binding to each other, and it appears that specific cyclin-CDK complexes are involved in the regulation of particular cell cycle events..
Pines, J.
(1994). Protein kinases and cell cycle control. Semin cell biol,
Vol.5
(6),
pp. 399-408.
show abstract
Protein kinases play a central role in the regulation of the eukaryotic cell cycle. Recent research has concentrated on a particular family of protein kinases, the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), and their involvement in regulating particular cell cycle transitions, such as the initiation of DNA synthesis (S phase) or of cell division (mitosis). One can think of these enzymes as the basic machinery of the cell cycle; their activity is then modulated by proteins which transduce signals from the external environment, and by proteins that monitor the progress of events such as DNA replication or the formation of the mitotic spindle. This review will be structured so as to introduce the cyclin-CDK motif, outline which cyclin-CDKs are involved at different cell cycle stages, their direct regulation by other protein kinases and phosphatases, and lastly the importance of other protein kinases in the cell cycle..
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1994). The differential localization of human cyclins A and B is due to a cytoplasmic retention signal in cyclin B. Embo j,
Vol.13
(16),
pp. 3772-3781.
show abstract
We have shown previously that human cyclins A and B1 are localized differentially in the cell during interphase; cyclin A is nuclear and cyclin B1 is a cytoplasmic protein. To understand the basis of this difference we created deletion mutants and various chimeras between the two types of cyclin and expressed them in tissue culture cells by transient transfection. We find that the N-terminus of cyclin B1 contains a 42 amino acid region that is sufficient to retain the normally nuclear cyclin A in the cytoplasm. Conversely, deleting the cytoplasmic retention signal region from cyclin B1 causes the protein to become nuclear. Although the cytoplasmic retention signal region is outside the cyclin box, its sequence is well conserved in human cyclin B2, and is both necessary and sufficient to keep cyclin B2 in the cytoplasm. Thus we propose that the subcellular distribution of the B-type cyclins is determined primarily by a small region of the N-terminus which targets the cyclin--CDK complexes to particular structures in the cytoplasm..
Pines, J.
(1994). Cell cycle p21 inhibits cyclin shock. Nature,
Vol.369
(6481),
pp. 520-521.
Hunter, T.
Pines, J.
(1994). Cyclins and cancer II: Cyclin D and CDK inhibitors come of age. Cell,
Vol.79
(4),
pp. 573-582.
Pines, J.
(1994). Cell cycle Ubiquitin with everything. Nature,
Vol.371
(6500),
pp. 742-743.
Pines, J.
(1993). Clear as crystal?. Curr biol,
Vol.3
(8),
pp. 544-547.
Pines, J.
(1993). Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases: take your partners. Trends biochem sci,
Vol.18
(6),
pp. 195-197.
Pines, J.
(1993). Cyclins and their associated cyclin-dependent kinases in the human cell cycle. Biochem soc trans,
Vol.21
(4),
pp. 921-925.
O'Connor, P.M.
Ferris, D.K.
Pagano, M.
Draetta, G.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
Longo, D.L.
Kohn, K.W.
(1993). G2 delay induced by nitrogen mustard in human cells affects cyclin A/cdk2 and cyclin B1/cdc2-kinase complexes differently. J biol chem,
Vol.268
(11),
pp. 8298-8308.
show abstract
We investigated the temporal regulation of cyclin A- and B1-dependent kinases in human lymphoma cells treated with nitrogen mustard (HN2) and pentoxifylline, to determine whether the activity of these complexes correlated with cell cycle arrest induced by DNA damage. Cells were synchronized in G1/S, treated with HN2, and then postincubated with pentoxifylline. HN2-induced a protracted delay in G2 phase. This delay correlated with suppression of cyclin B1- and cdc2-kinase activities, and stabilization of hyperphosphorylated-cdc2 in the presence of similar cyclin B1 levels to those found in mitosis. HN2 had no discernible effect on the S phase activity of cyclin A- or cdk2-immune complexes. Entry of control cells into mitosis correlated with destruction of cyclin A, disappearance of cyclin A-bound cdk2 and decreased cdk2 kinase activity. G2 delay induced by HN2 was associated with stabilization of cyclin A, increased abundance of cyclin A-bound cdk2, and increased cdk2 activity. Cyclin A was also associated with cdc2, which, contrary to complexes containing cdk2, were only activated upon entry into mitosis. Pentoxifylline abrogated cell cycle arrest induced by aphidicolin and HN2 in human lymphoma cells. Pentoxifylline also reverted the activity of cyclin A- and B1-kinases in HN2-treated cells to approximately that observed in controls. Our findings suggest that delayed entry into mitosis following DNA damage correlates with suppression of cyclin B1/cdc2 and cyclin A/cdc2 complexes, while maintaining cyclin A/cdc2 complexes in an active state. Furthermore, we found that pentoxifylline disrupts the signal transduction pathway that regulates these complexes when damaged DNA is present, resulting in abrogation of cell cycle arrest..
O'Connor, P.M.
Ferris, D.K.
White, G.A.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
Longo, D.L.
Kohn, K.W.
(1992). Relationships between cdc2 kinase, DNA cross-linking, and cell cycle perturbations induced by nitrogen mustard. Cell growth differ,
Vol.3
(1),
pp. 43-52.
show abstract
M phase-promoting factor (MPF) consists of a p34cdc2 (cdc2) kinase and cyclin B complex which in its active form promotes G2 to M transition. The role of MPF in G2 arrest following DNA damage, however, has remained largely uncharacterized. We have investigated whether nitrogen mustard (HN2) interfered with either the formation of MPF or its activation. For this purpose, we measured cdc2 kinase activity relative to cdc2 and cyclin B protein turnover and the phosphorylation status of cdc2. Studies were performed in two exceptional human lymphoma cell lines, which differed in HN2 sensitivity by 5-fold (CA46, 50% growth-inhibitory dose = 1.0 microM; JLP119, 50% growth-inhibitory dose = 0.2 microM) but exhibited virtually identical DNA interstrand and DNA-protein cross-link exposure. Following HN2 treatment, CA46 cells ceased to enter mitosis and exhibited a marked delay in G2 phase. Failure to enter mitosis paralleled inhibition of cdc2 kinase. Inhibition was not due to decreased levels of cdc2 or cyclin B protein; rather, G2 arrest correlated with the accumulation of both tyrosine-phosphorylated cdc2 and cyclin B. These findings implied that G2 arrest resulted from a down-regulation of the processes that activate MPF. We also found that JLP119 cells, within a few hours of mitosis at the time of drug treatment, evaded checkpoint control and continued cell division unabated by DNA damage. Furthermore, despite similar DNA cross-link exposure, JLP119 cells within the window of checkpoint control were more susceptible to S phase delay than CA46 cells. Altered cell cycle responses correlated with the greater susceptibility of JLP119 cells to the cytotoxic effects of HN2..
Bailly, E.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
Bornens, M.
(1992). Cytoplasmic accumulation of cyclin B1 in human cells: association with a detergent-resistant compartment and with the centrosome. J cell sci,
Vol.101 ( Pt 3),
pp. 529-545.
show abstract
Mitotic cyclins are thought to function as key regulatory subunits of the universal M-phase-promoting p34cdc2 protein kinase. Previous immunolocalization studies have demonstrated that a fraction of p34cdc2 undergoes cell cycle-dependent accumulation at the centrosome during G2/M. In order to identify the mitotic cyclins with which this p34cdc2 fraction interacts, we carefully examined the subcellular distribution of both cyclin A and B1 in HeLa cells. We show here that part of cyclin B1 is associated with duplicating centrosomes throughout its accumulation in the cytoplasm and up to metaphase. In contrast cyclin A does not exhibit centrosomal association except at the onset of mitosis, from preprophase up to metaphase. We also present cytological and biochemical evidence that cyclin B1 is preferentially accumulated as a detergent-insoluble protein independently of the state of microtubule assembly and under experimental conditions where most of p34cdc2 is soluble. Interestingly, the electrophoretic pattern of the minor insoluble p34cdc2 fraction was previously shown to be particularly enriched in slow-migrating and presumably hyperphosphorylated isoforms, known to interact specifically with cyclin B1 during interphase. From these results we propose that the interaction of cyclin B1 with the centrosomes and with the cytoplasmic structures is a constitutive feature of the mechanism whereby a fraction of p34cdc2 is recruited and subsequently targeted to the cyclin B-dependent activation pathway..
Pines, J.
(1992). Cell proliferation and control. Curr opin cell biol,
Vol.4
(2),
pp. 144-148.
show abstract
In the past year much of the focus in cell-cycle research has turned from the regulation of mitosis to the control of the initiation of DNA replication. Novel findings include the discovery of vertebrate G1 cyclins, an additional cdc2-related kinase potentially involved in G1 phase, and a positive-feedback loop regulating the start of the cell cycle in yeast..
Hamaguchi, J.R.
Tobey, R.A.
Pines, J.
Crissman, H.A.
Hunter, T.
Bradbury, E.M.
(1992). Requirement for p34cdc2 kinase is restricted to mitosis in the mammalian cdc2 mutant FT210. J cell biol,
Vol.117
(5),
pp. 1041-1053.
show abstract
The mouse FT210 cell line is a temperature-sensitive cdc2 mutant. FT210 cells are found to arrest specifically in G2 phase and unlike many alleles of cdc2 and cdc28 mutants of yeasts, loss of p34cdc2 at the nonpermissive temperature has no apparent effect on cell cycle progression through the G1 and S phases of the division cycle. FT210 cells and the parent wild-type FM3A cell line each possess at least three distinct histone H1 kinases. H1 kinase activities in chromatography fractions were identified using a synthetic peptide substrate containing the consensus phosphorylation site of histone H1 and the kinase subunit compositions were determined immunochemically with antisera prepared against the "PSTAIR" peptide, the COOH-terminus of mammalian p34cdc2 and the human cyclins A and B1. The results show that p34cdc2 forms two separate complexes with cyclin A and with cyclin B1, both of which exhibit thermal lability at the non-permissive temperature in vitro and in vivo. A third H1 kinase with stable activity at the nonpermissive temperature is comprised of cyclin A and a cdc2-like 34-kD subunit, which is immunoreactive with anti-"PSTAIR" antiserum but is not recognized with antiserum specific for the COOH-terminus of p34cdc2. The cyclin A-associated kinases are active during S and G2 phases and earlier in the division cycle than the p34cdc2-cyclin B1 kinase. We show that mouse cells possess at least two cdc2-related gene products which form cell cycle regulated histone H1 kinases and we propose that the murine homolog of yeast p34cdc/CDC28 is essential only during the G2-to-M transition in FT210 cells..
Lock, L.F.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
Gilbert, D.J.
Gopalan, G.
Jenkins, N.A.
Copeland, N.G.
Donovan, P.J.
(1992). A single cyclin A gene and multiple cyclin B1-related sequences are dispersed in the mouse genome. Genomics,
Vol.13
(2),
pp. 415-424.
show abstract
Cyclin activation of protein serine/threonine kinases plays a pivotal role in regulating the cell cycle. Multiple cyclins that fall into at least five classes, A, B, C, D, and E, have been identified. In some organisms, more than one member of a single cyclin class has been observed. To gain insight into the function of cyclin multiplicity, we determined the number of cyclin A- and B1-related sequences present in the mouse genome, the relationship between these cyclin-related sequences and previously described mutations in the mouse, and cyclin A and B1 mRNA expression in mouse embryos. By genetic mapping using human cyclin A and B1 probes, we identified 1 cyclin A gene located on chromosome 3 and 10 cyclin B1-related sequences located on chromosomes 4, 5, 7, 8, 13, 14, 15, and 17. Cyclin B1-related sequences map in the vicinity of the metaphase-arrest mutation oligosyndactyly (Os) and embryonic lethal mutations associated with the albino (c) locus and the t-complex. In Northern analysis, two cyclin A-related transcripts of 2.1 and 3.4 kb and three cyclin B1-related transcripts of 1.7, 2.1, and 2.7 kb were detected in embryonic stem cells and postimplantation embryos from Day 9.5 to 15.5 of development. Identification of multiple cyclin B1-related sequences in the mouse genome and multiple cyclin B1 mRNAs raises the possibility that seemingly redundant cyclin B genes might have developmental- and/or cell-type-specific functions..
Devoto, S.H.
Mudryj, M.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
Nevins, J.R.
(1992). A cyclin A-protein kinase complex possesses sequence-specific DNA binding activity: p33cdk2 is a component of the E2F-cyclin A complex. Cell,
Vol.68
(1),
pp. 167-176.
show abstract
The E2F transcription factor has been found in association with the cyclin A protein, and this complex accumulates during the S phase of the cell cycle, suggesting that E2F may play a role in cell cycle control. In independent studies, cyclin A has been shown to be associated with two other proteins, the Rb-related p107 protein and the cdc2-related p33 cdk2 protein kinase. Through an analysis of the E2F-cyclin A complex, we now find that both the p107 protein and the cdc2-related p33cdk2 kinase are components of the previously described complex. Moreover, the complex possesses H1 kinase activity. These results thus define a cyclin A-cdk2 kinase complex that possesses sequence-specific DNA binding activity. This suggests that the cdk2 kinase may phosphorylate other DNA-bound substrates, and that one role of the E2F factor may be to localize this protein kinase to the DNA..
Lu, X.P.
Koch, K.S.
Lew, D.J.
Dulic, V.
Pines, J.
Reed, S.I.
Hunter, T.
Leffert, H.L.
(1992). Induction of cyclin mRNA and cyclin-associated histone H1 kinase during liver regeneration. J biol chem,
Vol.267
(5),
pp. 2841-2844.
show abstract
Cyclins and cyclin-associated cdc kinases are key regulators of oocyte maturation (Maller, J. L. (1990) in The Biology and Medicine of Signal Transduction (Nishizuka, Y., Endo, M., and Tanaka, C., eds) pp. 323-328, Raven Press, New York), yeast cell cycles (Nurse, P. (1990) Nature 344, 503-508), DNA replication in cell-free systems (D'Urso, F., Marraccino, R. L., Marshak, R. R., and Roberts, J. M. (1990) Science 250, 786-791), and amphibian cell proliferative transitions (Hunt, T. (1991) Nature 350, 462-463). The extent to which these regulatory molecules participate in the growth control of differentiated epithelial cells like hepatocytes is unknown. Therefore, we investigated the expression of "G1" (E, C, and D) and "G2/M" (A, B1, and B2) cyclin mRNAs, the relative levels of cyclin A- and B1-associated histone H1-kinase activity, and the appearance of cyclin-associated kinases (p32/p33cdk2 and p33/p34cdc2) in regenerating rat liver and in control tissues from sham hepatectomized rats. To do this, we exploited a battery of human cyclin cDNAs and cyclin antisera that recognize rat molecules. The results suggest an apparent sequence of regeneration-specific changes: 1) elevated and induced expression of cyclins E (2.1 kilobases (kb)) and C (4 kb), and D mRNAs (4 kb), within 12 h, respectively; 2) induction of cyclins A (3.4 and 1.8 kb), B1 (2.5 and 1.8 kb), and B2 (1.9 kb) mRNAs at 24 h; 3) induction of cyclin A- and B1-associated nuclear histone H1 kinase at 24 h; and 4) enhanced levels of PSTAIRE-containing proteins of Mr approximately 32-33 and 33-34 kDa in nuclear extracts from 24-h regenerating liver that co-immunoprecipitate with cyclin A and B1 antisera, respectively. These observations provide an intellectual framework that unifies the biology of hepatocyte mitogenesis, proto-oncogene expression, and the machinery of the cell cycle..
PINES, J.
HUNTER, T.
(1992). CYCLIN-A AND CYCLIN-B1 IN THE HUMAN CELL-CYCLE. Ciba foundation symposia,
Vol.170,
pp. 187-204.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1992). Cyclins A and B1 in the human cell cycle. Ciba found symp,
Vol.170,
pp. 187-196.
show abstract
Cyclins are a family of proteins involved in the regulation of the eukaryotic cell cycle. The first cyclins to be isolated were the A- and B-type cyclins and we have been studying their behaviour in human somatic cells. The levels of both cyclin A and B1 are regulated transcriptionally as well as post-translationally; both are rapidly and specifically degraded in mitosis. Cyclin A synthesis commences at the start of S phase and the protein is predominantly nuclear, whereas cyclin B1 appears during S phase and is primarily cytoplasmic. Cyclin B1 moves into the nucleus just at the start of mitosis and associates with condensed chromosomes and the mitotic spindle. Both cyclin A and cyclin B1 bind to and activate a protein serine/threonine kinase subunit; cyclin A associates with p33cdk2 and with p34cdc2, whereas cyclin B1 seems to bind exclusively to p34cdc2. Cyclin A-associated kinase activity appears much earlier in the cell cycle than that of cyclin B1, which appears only at the G2 to M transition. Therefore cyclin A may play a role in the events of S phase as well as G2 and M phases. Cyclin A forms a cell cycle-dependent complex with p33cdk2 and the transcription factor E2F, although the function of this complex is not yet clear. We conclude that cyclins A and B1 may differentially regulate the cell cycle in several ways. They form complexes with distinct protein kinases and these complexes are active at different times in the cell cycle; they form distinct multiprotein complexes, such as with the transcription factor E2F; and they are localized to different parts of the cell where different substrates will be available to them..
Pines, J.
(1991). Cyclins: wheels within wheels. Cell growth differ,
Vol.2
(6),
pp. 305-310.
Nishitani, H.
Ohtsubo, M.
Yamashita, K.
Iida, H.
Pines, J.
Yasudo, H.
Shibata, Y.
Hunter, T.
Nishimoto, T.
(1991). Loss of RCC1, a nuclear DNA-binding protein, uncouples the completion of DNA replication from the activation of cdc2 protein kinase and mitosis. Embo j,
Vol.10
(6),
pp. 1555-1564.
show abstract
full text
The temperature-sensitive mutant cell line tsBN2, was derived from the BHK21 cell line and has a point mutation in the RCC1 gene. In tsBN2 cells, the RCC1 protein disappeared after a shift to the non-permissive temperature at any time in the cell cycle. From S phase onwards, once RCC1 function was lost at the non-permissive temperature, p34cdc2 was dephosphorylated and M-phase specific histone H1 kinase was activated. However, in G1 phase, shifting to the non-permissive temperature did not activate p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase. The activation of p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase required protein synthesis in addition to the presence of a complex between p34cdc2 and cyclin B. Upon the loss of RCC1 in S phase of tsBN2 cells and the consequent p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase activation, a normal mitotic cycle is induced, including the formation of a mitotic spindle and subsequent reformation of the interphase-microtubule network. Exit from mitosis was accompanied by the disappearance of cyclin B, and a decrease in p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase activity. The kinetics of p34cdc2 histone H1 kinase activation correlated well with the appearance of premature mitotic cells and was not affected by the presence of a DNA synthesis inhibitor. Thus the normal inhibition of p34cdc2 activation by incompletely replicated DNA is abrogated by the loss of RCC1..
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1991). Human cyclins A and B1 are differentially located in the cell and undergo cell cycle-dependent nuclear transport. J cell biol,
Vol.115
(1),
pp. 1-17.
show abstract
We have used immunofluorescence staining to study the subcellular distribution of cyclin A and B1 during the somatic cell cycle. In both primary human fibroblasts and in epithelial tumor cells, we find that cyclin A is predominantly nuclear from S phase onwards. Cyclin A may associated with condensing chromosomes in prophase, but is not associated with condensed chromosomes in metaphase. By contrast, cyclin B1 accumulates in the cytoplasm of interphase cells and only enters the nucleus at the beginning of mitosis, before nuclear lamina breakdown. In mitotic cells, cyclin B1 associates with condensed chromosomes in prophase and metaphase, and with the mitotic apparatus. Cyclin A is degraded during metaphase and cyclin B1 is precipitously destroyed at the metaphase----anaphase transition. Cell fractionation and immunoprecipitation studies showed that both cyclin A and cyclin B1 are associated with PSTAIRE-containing proteins. The nuclear, but not the cytoplasmic form, of cyclin A is associated with a 33-kD PSTAIRE-containing protein. Cyclin B1 is associated with p34cdc2 in the cytoplasm. Thus we propose that the different localization of cyclin A and cyclin B1 in the cell cycle could be the means by which the two types of mitotic cyclin confer substrate specificity upon their associated PSTAIRE-containing protein kinase subunit..
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1991). Cyclin-dependent kinases: a new cell cycle motif?. Trends cell biol,
Vol.1
(5),
pp. 117-121.
show abstract
Increasing evidence suggests that the eukaryotic cell cycle is controlled at several checkpoints by different members of a novel class of protein kinase, the cyclin-dependent kinases. To phosphorylate their substrates, these enzymes bind to proteins of the cyclin family--proteins that are synthesized and degraded at specific points in each cell cycle. The most well known of these kinases is the 34 kDa product of the cdc2 gene in fission yeast, p34cdc2; however, several putative cyclin-dependent kinases have now been cloned or identified. Some of these closely resemble p34cdc2. Here we review these new proteins, their potential roles in the cell cycle and the cyclins with which they may interact..
Weber, M.
Kubiak, J.Z.
Arlinghaus, R.B.
Pines, J.
Maro, B.
(1991). c-mos proto-oncogene product is partly degraded after release from meiotic arrest and persists during interphase in mouse zygotes. Dev biol,
Vol.148
(1),
pp. 393-397.
show abstract
Recently, it has been shown that the product of the c-mos proto-oncogene is a component of cytostatic factor, an activity present in unfertilized eggs from vertebrates that arrests the cell cycle in metaphase of the second meiotic division (metaphase II) possibly by stabilizing maturation-promoting factor (MPF). We have studied the behavior of the c-mos product in metaphase II mouse oocytes and soon after activation. The amount of c-mos in the oocyte was still very high after second polar body extrusion, when cyclin B has been degraded and MPF activity had decreased dramatically. Degradation of c-mos takes place later, during the G1 phase of the first cell cycle and a residual amount of c-mos is detectable during the first zygotic interphase. Our data show that the degradation of c-mos is not involved in the release from the metaphase arrest..
Hunter, T.
Pines, J.
(1991). Cyclins and cancer. Cell,
Vol.66
(6),
pp. 1071-1074.
Mudryj, M.
Devoto, S.H.
Hiebert, S.W.
Hunter, T.
Pines, J.
Nevins, J.R.
(1991). Cell cycle regulation of the E2F transcription factor involves an interaction with cyclin A. Cell,
Vol.65
(7),
pp. 1243-1253.
show abstract
We have examined E2F binding activity in extracts of synchronized NIH 3T3 cells. During the G0 to G1 transition, there is a marked increase in the level of active E2F. Subsequently, there are changes in the nature of E2F-containing complexes. A G1-specific complex increases in abundance, disappears, and is then replaced by another complex as S phase begins. Analysis of extracts of thymidine-blocked cells confirms that the complexes are cell cycle regulated. We also show that the cyclin A protein is a component of the S phase complex. Each complex can be dissociated by the adenovirus E1A 12S product, releasing free E2F. The release of E2F from the cyclin A complex coincides with the stimulation of an E2F-dependent promoter. We suggest that these interactions control the activity of E2F and that disruption of the complexes by E1A contributes to a loss of cellular proliferation control..
PINES, J.
HUNTER, T.
(1991). HUMAN CELL-DIVISION - THE INVOLVEMENT OF CYCLINS-A AND CYCLINS-B1, AND MULTIPLE CDC2S. Cold spring harbor symposia on quantitative biology,
Vol.56,
pp. 449-463.
NEVINS, J.R.
CHELLAPPAN, S.P.
MUDRYJ, M.
HIEBERT, S.
DEVOTO, S.
HOROWITZ, J.
HUNTER, T.
PINES, J.
(1991). E2F TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR IS A TARGET FOR THE RB PROTEIN AND THE CYCLIN-A PROTEIN. Cold spring harbor symposia on quantitative biology,
Vol.56,
pp. 157-162.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1991). Human cell division: the involvement of cyclins A and B1, and multiple cdc2s. Cold spring harb symp quant biol,
Vol.56,
pp. 449-463.
Nevins, J.R.
Chellappan, S.P.
Mudryj, M.
Hiebert, S.
Devoto, S.
Horowitz, J.
Hunter, T.
Pines, J.
(1991). E2F transcription factor is a target for the RB protein and the cyclin A protein. Cold spring harb symp quant biol,
Vol.56,
pp. 157-162.
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1990). p34cdc2: the S and M kinase?. New biol,
Vol.2
(5),
pp. 389-401.
show abstract
In the yeast cell cycle, the induction of two very different processes, DNA synthesis (S-phase) and mitosis (M-phase), requires the same serine/threonine-specific protein kinase p34cdc2, which has been highly conserved through evolution. On the basis of work conducted largely in multicellular eukaryotes, it has recently been suggested that p34cdc2 is able to perform these two mutually exclusive roles by phosphorylating different sets of substrates through a cell cycle-dependent association with other proteins that dictate the substrate specificity of the protein kinase. To recognize its mitotic substrates, p34cdc2 associates with one of the cyclins--a family of proteins of two distinct but related types (A and B) characterized by their periodic destruction at each mitosis. In interphase, the formation of a complex between p34cdc2 and another protein (or proteins) would allow the phosphorylation of a different set of proteins involved in the G1 to S transition. This review focuses on the evidence for this appealing simple model and the nature of the putative substrates proposed..
Yamashita, K.
Yasuda, H.
Pines, J.
Yasumoto, K.
Nishitani, H.
Ohtsubo, M.
Hunter, T.
Sugimura, T.
Nishimoto, T.
(1990). Okadaic acid, a potent inhibitor of type 1 and type 2A protein phosphatases, activates cdc2/H1 kinase and transiently induces a premature mitosis-like state in BHK21 cells. Embo j,
Vol.9
(13),
pp. 4331-4338.
show abstract
When BHK21 cells synchronized in early S phase were exposed to okadaic acid (OA), an inhibitor of protein phosphatases 1 and 2A, mitosis specific events such as premature chromosome condensation, the production of MPM-2 antigens, dispersion of nuclear lamins and the appearance of mitotic asters were induced, and then disappeared upon further incubation. These mitosis specific events occurred even in the presence of cycloheximide. Within 1 h of exposure to OA, cdc2/histone H1 kinase activity rose 10-fold compared with untreated controls, but returned to the control level upon further incubation. Using antibodies against either p34cdc2 or cyclin B it was found that p34cdc2 complexed with cyclin B was dephosphorylated after OA treatment concomitant with the activation of cdc2 kinase, and that cyclin B was subsequently degraded concomitant with a decrease in cdc2 kinase activity, as in normal mitosis. In contrast, when cells in G1 phase were treated with OA no increase in cdc2 kinase activity was observed. Moreover when cells in pseudo-metaphase induced by nocodazole were treated with OA, cdc2 kinase was inactivated. These results suggest that OA sensitive protein phosphatases control both the activation and inactivation of the p34cdc2 kinase..
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1990). Human cyclin A is adenovirus E1A-associated protein p60 and behaves differently from cyclin B. Nature,
Vol.346
(6286),
pp. 760-763.
show abstract
CYCLINS are proteins synthesized during each cell cycle and abruptly destroyed in each mitosis. Cyclins have been implicated in the induction of mitosis and are associated with the serine-threonine protein kinase p34cdc2 as components of mitosis promoting factor (MPF). On the basis of conserved sequence motifs cyclins can be divided into A or B types. We recently cloned a human cyclin B and showed that cyclin B expression is regulated transcriptionally and post-translationally during the cell cycle, and that cyclin B associates with p34cdc2. Here we report that human cyclin A messenger RNA and protein levels also vary during the cell cycle, and increase and decrease in advance of cyclin B levels. Cyclin A is associated with a protein of relative molecular mass 33,000 that is related to, but distinct from, p34cdc2, and this complex has histone H1 kinase activity in vitro. Cyclin A is identical to p60, a protein that associates with p34cdc2 in interphase cells and with adenovirus E1A in transformed cells..
Pines, J.
Hunter, T.
(1989). Isolation of a human cyclin cDNA: evidence for cyclin mRNA and protein regulation in the cell cycle and for interaction with p34cdc2. Cell,
Vol.58
(5),
pp. 833-846.
show abstract
This paper reports the nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequence of a human B-type cyclin. The predicted protein sequence shows strong homology to the other known cyclins in the central third of the protein. We show that the level of cyclin mRNA is regulated during the cell cycle, increasing during G2 phase to four time that present in G1. The protein accumulates steadily during G2 to at least 20 times its level in G1 and is abruptly destroyed at mitosis. In G2/M phase, cyclin is associated with p34cdc2, the human homolog of the fission yeast gene cdc2+, and this complex has histone H1 kinase activity..
Meijer, L.
Arion, D.
Golsteyn, R.
Pines, J.
Brizuela, L.
Hunt, T.
Beach, D.
(1989). Cyclin is a component of the sea urchin egg M-phase specific histone H1 kinase. Embo j,
Vol.8
(8),
pp. 2275-2282.
show abstract
A so-called 'growth-associated' or 'M-phase specific' histone H1 kinase (H1K) has been described in a wide variety of eukaryotic cell types; p34cdc2 has previously been shown to be a catalytic subunit of this protein kinase. In fertilized sea urchin eggs the activity of H1K oscillates during the cell division cycle and there is a striking temporal correlation between H1K activation and the accumulation of a phosphorylated form of cyclin. H1K activity declines in parallel with proteolytic cyclin destruction of the end of the first cell cycle. By virtue of the high affinity of the fission yeast p13suc1 for the p34cdc2 protein, H1K strongly binds to p13-Sepharose beads. Cyclin, p34cdc2 and H1K co-purify on this affinity reagent as well as through several conventional chromatographic procedures. Anticyclin antibodies immunoprecipitate the M-phase specific H1K in crude extracts or in purified fractions. Sea urchin eggs appear to contain much less cyclin than p34cdc2, suggesting that p34cdc2 may interact with other proteins. These results demonstrate that cyclin and p34cdc2 are major components of the M-phase specific H1K..
Felix, M.A.
Pines, J.
Hunt, T.
Karsenti, E.
(1989). A post-ribosomal supernatant from activated Xenopus eggs that displays post-translationally regulated oscillation of its cdc2+ mitotic kinase activity. Embo j,
Vol.8
(10),
pp. 3059-3069.
show abstract
A cell-free extract prepared from activated Xenopus eggs by high-speed centrifugation displays one spontaneous cycle of activation and inactivation of histone H1 kinase and MPF activity that is largely attributable to Xenopus p32cdc2. The timing of the oscillation closely follows that observed in intact eggs, is associated with large changes in endogenous protein phosphorylation and depends entirely on post-translational events. The extract can be fractionated into soluble and particulate material, both of which components are required for the oscillatory behaviour. Kinase activation does not require Mg+ ATP, but its rapid inactivation, which coincides with the destruction of cyclin, is inhibited both by EDTA and the protein kinase inhibitor 6-dimethylaminopurine. This suggests that protein phosphorylation is required for cyclin destruction and kinase inactivation..
Minshull, J.
Pines, J.
Golsteyn, R.
Standart, N.
Mackie, S.
Colman, A.
Blow, J.
Ruderman, J.V.
Wu, M.
Hunt, T.
(1989). The role of cyclin synthesis, modification and destruction in the control of cell division. J cell sci suppl,
Vol.12,
pp. 77-97.
show abstract
This paper reviews our current knowledge of the cyclins based on observations of the oocytes and eggs of sea urchins, clams and frogs. Cyclins are proteins found in all eukaryotes whose special property is rapid destruction at specific stages in the cell cycle. The cyclins fall into three families. A-type cyclins have been found in clams, flies and frogs. B-type cyclins have been found in clams, flies, frogs, sea urchins and fission yeast. A more distantly related family of three genes is found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. B-type cyclins appear to be required for cells to enter mitosis, and their destruction is thought to be necessary for exit from mitosis. We describe evidence in support of these ideas, and describe various conditions under which cyclin destruction is delayed or deranged. We conclude with a discussion of the relationship between the cyclins and maturation- (or M phase-) promoting factor and some ideas on how the cyclins may work..
Pines, J.
Hunt, T.
(1987). Molecular cloning and characterization of the mRNA for cyclin from sea urchin eggs. Embo j,
Vol.6
(10),
pp. 2987-2995.
show abstract
full text
We have isolated a cDNA clone encoding sea urchin cyclin and determined its sequence. It contains a single open reading frame of 409 amino acids which shows homology with clam cyclins. RNA transcribed in vitro from this sequence was efficiently translated in reticulocyte lysates, yielding full-length cyclin. Injection of nanogram amounts of this synthetic mRNA into Xenopus oocytes caused them to mature more rapidly than with progesterone treatment. The sea urchin cyclin underwent two posttranslational modifications in the Xenopus oocytes during maturation. The first occurred at about the time that maturation became cycloheximide-resistant, when a small apparent increase in the molecular weight of cyclin was observed. The second modification involved destruction of the cyclin at about the time of white spot appearance, just as would have occurred at the metaphase/anaphase transition in the natural environment of a cleaving sea urchin embryo..
Standart, N.
Minshull, J.
Pines, J.
Hunt, T.
(1987). Cyclin synthesis, modification and destruction during meiotic maturation of the starfish oocyte. Dev biol,
Vol.124
(1),
pp. 248-258.
show abstract
The pattern of protein synthesis in oocytes of starfish Marthasterias glacialis changes during 1-methyladenine-induced meiotic maturation. One of the newly synthesized proteins, a major 54-kDa polypeptide, was synthesized continuously after activation but was destroyed abruptly just before appearance of the polar bodies at each meiotic division. This protein thus resembles the cyclin proteins identified in cleaving sea urchin and clam embryos. RNA extracted from oocytes before and after maturation encoded virtually identical polypeptides when translated in the reticulocyte lysate. However, there was poor correspondence between the in vitro translation products and the labelling pattern of intact cells. There was no exact in vitro counterpart to the in vivo-labelled cyclin. Instead, a major polypeptide of 52 kDa was seen which appears to be a precursor of the 54-kDa form of cyclin. The 52-kDa polypeptide was identified as cyclin by hybrid arrest of translation. Cyclin mRNA is ot translated to a significant extent before oocyte activation and is present in oocytes as nonadenylated form. It becomes polyadenylated when the oocytes mature. This behavior is also seen in the case of the mRNA for the small subunit of ribonucleotide reductase, another abundant maternal mRNA whose translation is activated at maturation..