Literature DB >> 8994825

Protein phosphatase 2A regulates MPF activity and sister chromatid cohesion in budding yeast.

J Minshull1, A Straight, A D Rudner, A F Dernburg, A Belmont, A W Murray.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mitosis is regulated by MPF (maturation promoting factor), the active form of Cdc2/28-cyclin B complexes. Increasing levels of cyclin B abundance and the loss of inhibitory phosphates from Cdc2/28 drives cells into mitosis, whereas cyclin B destruction inactivates MPF and drives cells out of mitosis. Cells with defective spindles are arrested in mitosis by the spindle-assembly checkpoint, which prevents the destruction of mitotic cyclins and the inactivation of MPF. We have investigated the relationship between the spindle-assembly checkpoint, cyclin destruction, inhibitory phosphorylation of Cdc2/28, and exit from mitosis.
RESULTS: The previously characterized budding yeast mad mutants lack the spindle-assembly checkpoint. Spindle depolymerization does not arrest them in mitosis because they cannot stabilize cyclin B. In contrast, a newly isolated mutant in the budding yeast CDC55 gene, which encodes a protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) regulatory subunit, shows a different checkpoint defect. In the presence of a defective spindle, these cells separate their sister chromatids and leave mitosis without inducing cyclin B destruction. Despite the persistence of B-type cyclins, cdc55 mutant cells inactivate MPF. Two experiments show that this inactivation is due to inhibitory phosphorylation on Cdc28: phosphotyrosine accumulates on Cdc28 in cdc55 delta cells whose spindles have been depolymerized, and a cdc28 mutant that lacks inhibitory phosphorylation sites on Cdc28 allows spindle defects to arrest cdc55 mutants in mitosis with active MPF and unseparated sister chromatids.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that perturbations of protein phosphatase activity allow MPF to be inactivated by inhibitory phosphorylation instead of by cyclin destruction. Under these conditions, sister chromatid separation appears to be regulated by MPF activity rather than by protein degradation. We discuss the role of PP2A and Cdc28 phosphorylation in cell-cycle control, and the possibility that the novel mitotic exit pathway plays a role in adaptation to prolonged activation of the spindle-assembly checkpoint.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8994825     DOI: 10.1016/s0960-9822(02)70784-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  92 in total

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3.  The Schizosaccharomyces pombe spindle checkpoint protein mad2p blocks anaphase and genetically interacts with the anaphase-promoting complex.

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Authors:  H Yang; W Jiang; M Gentry; R L Hallberg
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6.  A novel and essential mechanism determining specificity and activity of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) in vivo.

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7.  An E3 ubiquitin ligase prevents ectopic localization of the centromeric histone H3 variant via the centromere targeting domain.

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8.  A pathway containing the Ipl1/aurora protein kinase and the spindle midzone protein Ase1 regulates yeast spindle assembly.

Authors:  Chitra V Kotwaliwale; Stéphanie Buvelot Frei; Bodo M Stern; Sue Biggins
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9.  Phosphatase 2A negatively regulates mitotic exit in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

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Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2005-08-03       Impact factor: 4.138

10.  Shugoshin prevents cohesin cleavage by PP2A(Cdc55)-dependent inhibition of separase.

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Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2009-03-15       Impact factor: 11.361

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