| Literature DB >> 17042960 |
Abstract
In eukaryotic cells, replication of genomic DNA initiates from multiple replication origins distributed on multiple chromosomes. To ensure that each origin is activated precisely only once during each S phase, a system has evolved which features periodic assembly and disassembly of essential pre-replication complexes (pre-RCs) at replication origins. The pre-RC assembly reaction involves the loading of a presumptive replicative helicase, the MCM2-7 complexes, onto chromatin by the origin recognition complex (ORC) and two essential factors, CDC6 and Cdt1. The eukaryotic cell cycle is driven by the periodic activation and inactivation of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) and assembly of pre-RCs can only occur during the low Cdk activity period from late mitosis through G1 phase, with inappropriate re-assembly suppressed during S, G2, and M phases. It was originally suggested that inhibition of Cdt1 function after S phase in vertebrate cells is due to geminin binding and that Cdt1 hyperfunction resulting from Cdt1-geminin imbalance induces re-replication. However, recent progress has revealed that Cdt1 activity is more strictly regulated by two other mechanisms in addition to geminin: (1) functional and SCFSkp2-mediated proteolytic regulation through phosphorylation by Cdks; and (2) replication-coupled proteolysis mediated by the Cullin4-DDB1Cdt2 ubiquitin ligase and PCNA, an eukaryotic sliding clamp stimulating replicative DNA polymerases. The tight regulation implies that Cdt1 control is especially critical for the regulation of DNA replication in mammalian cells. Indeed, Cdt1 overexpression evokes chromosomal damage even without re-replication. Furthermore, deregulated Cdt1 induces chromosomal instability in normal human cells. Since Cdt1 is overexpressed in cancer cells, this could be a new molecular mechanism leading to carcinogenesis. In this review, recent insights into Cdt1 function and regulation in mammalian cells are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17042960 PMCID: PMC1621056 DOI: 10.1186/1747-1028-1-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Div ISSN: 1747-1028 Impact factor: 5.130
Figure 1A model for the state of pre-replication chromatin and cell cycle regulation in human cells. (A) During late M to G1 phase when Cdk and geminin activities are suppressed by APC/C ubiquitin ligase, ORC, CDC6 and Cdt1 form the machinery on the nuclear matrix necessary to load MCM2-7 complexes. Multiple MCM complexes are loaded onto chromatin beyond ORC binding sites. (B) When cells enter S phase, CDC45 and some other proteins are recruited around MCM dependent on Cdk and CDC7 kinase activity, unwinding DNA. Then, DNA synthetic proteins are assembled on single-stranded DNA. Activated MCM plays an essential role in DNA replication, probably as a replicative DNA helicase, and is simultaneously displaced from chromatin through an unknown mechanism. The steps after DNA unwinding are omitted in the model shown. After S phase, reloading of dissociated MCM (re-licensing) is suppressed by multiple mechanisms. One is by Cdks, which phosphorylates ORC1 and Cdt1 so that they undergo SCFSkp2-mediated proteolysis. Phosphorylation-dependent nuclear export of chromatin-unbound CDC6 could also contribute to inhibition of re-licensing. Cdt1 is further subjected to replication-coupled proteolytic regulation mediated by Cul4-DDB1Cdt2 ubiquitin ligase and PCNA. Geminin also prevents the MCM rebinding by sequestering Cdt1.
Figure 2A model for inhibition of Cdt1 function after entry into S phase. Cyclin A/Cdks phosphorylate Cdt1 on threonine 29 depending on cyclin A binding to RXL-type cyclin-binding motif (Cy moif) then SCFSkp2 ubiquitin ligase recognizes phosphorylated Cdt1 and polyubiquitinated Cdt1 is degraded by proteasomes. In addition, Cdk phosphorylation inhibits Cdt1 DNA binding activity. During DNA replication, Cdt1 binds to PCNA on chromatin and Cul4-DDB1Cdt2 ubiquitin ligase recognizes interfaces generated by such Cdt1-PCNA interaction. This mechanism also appears to operate during repair synthesis of damaged DNA although the biological significance remains unclear. After S phase, geminin protein also accumulates, sequestering Cdt1 by direct binding.