| Literature DB >> 31795161 |
Jinyoung Park1, Jinhong Cho2, Eunice EunKyeong Kim2, Eun Joo Song3.
Abstract
Mitosis is a complex and dynamic process that is tightly regulated by a large number of mitotic proteins. Dysregulation of these proteins can generate daughter cells that exhibit genomic instability and aneuploidy, and such cells can transform into tumorigenic cells. Thus, it is important for faithful mitotic progression to regulate mitotic proteins at specific locations in the cells at a given time in each phase of mitosis. Ubiquitin-dependent modifications play critical roles in this process by regulating the degradation, translocation, or signal transduction of mitotic proteins. Here, we review how ubiquitination and deubiquitination regulate the progression of mitosis. In addition, we summarize the substrates and roles of some deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) crucial for mitosis and describe how they contribute error correction during mitosis and control the transition between the mitotic phases.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; deubiquitination; mitosis; ubiquitination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31795161 PMCID: PMC6929034 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20235997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic overview of cell cycle regulation by deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs). USP7 regulates the G1-S and G2-M checkpoints by deubiquitinating claspin. USP16 regulates the G0 and early M phases by deubiquitinating histone H2A and PLK1, thereby regulating chromosome segregation and alignment. USP28 regulates the G1-S checkpoint by deubiquitinating p53 independent of the SAC. AMSH regulates the late M phase by deubiquitinating vesicle-associated membrane protein 8 (VAMP8). Information about USP44, USP9X, Cylindromatosis (CYLD), USP35, and Cezanne is detailed in the manuscript.
Figure 2Functional role of mitosis-related DUBs. (a) CYLD deubiquitinates Disheveled (Dvl), which stabilizes astral microtubules by forming Dvl-NuMA-dynein/dynactin complex. Another DUB, BRISC, adjusts spindle assembly by deubiquitinating NuMA and negatively controlling its association with dynein and importin-β. Furthermore, USP11 also regulates proper mitotic spindle formation. Microtubules interact with NuMA through RAE1, where USP11 deubiquitinates RAE1 to coordinate its functional interaction with NuMA. (b) In early mitosis, some mitotic proteins, such as cyclin B1, cyclin A, and NIMA-related kinase 2A (NEK2A), should be degraded for continuing mitosis. Therefore, APC/CCDC20 ubiquitinates and promotes proteasomal degradation of these proteins. In contrast to APC/CCDC20, USP9X antagonizes the proteasomal degradation of APC/CCDC20 substrates. (c) PLK1 is a potential substrate of CYLD and USP16. USP16 promotes proper chromosome alignment in early mitosis by deubiquitinating PLK1 to retain it on the kinetochores. (d) USP39 is involved in the splicing of Aurora B mRNA. USP35 deubiquitinates Aurora B kinase, thereby maintaining the stability of Aurora B during mitosis. To proceed with the cell cycle, APC/CCDH1 substrates, such as Aurora kinases and forkhead box protein M1 (FOXM1), should be degraded. Cezanne antagonizes APC/CCDH1 activity by deubiquitinating Aurora A and FOXM1, but it does not affect Aurora B levels.
Overview of the involvement of DUBs in mitosis.
| DUB | Type | Substrate(s) | Function(s) | Cancer(s) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| USP44 | USP | CDC20 | Regulation of the SAC | Lung adenocarcinoma | [ |
| USP9X | USP | Survivin, XIAP, CEP131, APC/C substrates | Regulation of CPC functions, centrosome duplication, SAC | Lymphoma, myeloma, ductal, colon, prostate, and small-cell lung adenocarcinomas, glioblastoma, medulloblastoma | [ |
| CYLD | USP | PLK1, Dvl, CEP192 | Regulation of mitotic entry, cytokinesis, spindle orientation, and assembly | Cylindromas, melanoma, salivary gland, cervical, and lung cancers, hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| USP35 | USP | Aurora B | Regulation of chromosome alignment and segregation, and cytokinesis | Breast and lung cancers | [ |
| Cezanne | OTU | APC/C substrates | Counteracting APC/C activity | Breast cancer | [ |
| USP4 | USP | Regulation of the SAC | Lung and breast cancers | [ | |
| BRISC | JAMM | NuMA | Regulation of bipolar spindle assembly | Breast cancer | [ |
| USP11 | USP | RAE1 | Regulation of bipolar spindle assembly | Breast and pancreatic cancers | [ |
| USP39 | USP | Splicing of Aurora B mRNA | Regulation of the SAC | Ovarian cancer, glioma | [ |
| Ubp-M (USP16) | USP | H2A, PLK1 | Regulation of chromosome alignment and segregation, DNA damage response | Hepatocellular carcinoma | [ |
| USP7 | USP | Claspin | Counteracting SCFβTrCP-mediated claspin degradation, DNA damage response | Myeloma, prostate cancer, neuroblastoma, gliomas | [ |
| USP28 | USP | P53 | P53-dependent cell cycle arrest in response to delayed mitosis | [ | |
| AMSH | JAMM | VAMP8 | Regulation of cytokinesis | [ |
Listed are the names (DUB), subfamilies (Type), the known mitotic targets (Substrates), their general effect on the mitotic progression (Functions), DUB-related cancer types (Cancers), as well as important citations (References).