A Dual-Specificity Phosphatase Cdc25B Is an Unstable Protein and Triggers p34cdc2/Cyclin B Activation in Hamster BHK21 Cells Arrested with Hydroxyurea
Open Access
- 8 September 1997
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 138 (5) , 1105-1116
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.138.5.1105
Abstract
By incubating at 30°C in the presence of an energy source, p34cdc2/cyclin B was activated in the extract prepared from a temperature-sensitive mutant, tsBN2, which prematurely enters mitosis at 40°C, the nonpermissive temperature (Nishimoto, T., E. Eilen, and C. Basilico. 1978. Cell. 15:475–483), and wild-type cells of the hamster BHK21 cell line arrested in S phase, without protein synthesis. Such an in vitro activation of p34cdc2/cyclin B, however, did not occur in the extract prepared from cells pretreated with protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, although this extract still retained the ability to inhibit p34cdc2/cyclin B activation. When tsBN2 cells arrested in S phase were incubated at 40°C in the presence of cycloheximide, Cdc25B, but not Cdc25A and C, among a family of dual-specificity phosphatases, Cdc25, was lost coincidentally with the lack of the activation of p34cdc2/cyclin B. Consistently, the immunodepletion of Cdc25B from the extract inhibited the activation of p34cdc2/cyclin B. Cdc25B was found to be unstable (half-life < 30 min). Cdc25B, but not Cdc25C, immunoprecipitated from the extract directly activated the p34cdc2/cyclin B of cycloheximide-treated cells as well as that of nontreated cells, although Cdc25C immunoprecipitated from the extract of mitotic cells activated the p34cdc2/cyclin B within the extract of cycloheximide-treated cells. Our data suggest that Cdc25B made an initial activation of p34cdc2/cyclin B, which initiates mitosis through the activation of Cdc25C.Keywords
This publication has 90 references indexed in Scilit:
- Premature Chromatin Condensation Induced by Loss of RCC1 Is Inhibited by GTP- and GTPγS-Ran, but Not GDP-RanPublished by Elsevier ,1996
- The search for the primary function of the Ran GTPase continuesTrends in Cell Biology, 1996
- The GTP-binding protein Ran/TC4 is required for protein import into the nucleusNature, 1993
- Human wee1 maintains mitotic timing by protecting the nucleus from cytoplasmically activated cdc2 kinaseCell, 1993
- Dephosphorylation of human p34cdc2 kinase on both Thr‐14 and Tyr‐15 by human cdc25B phosphataseFEBS Letters, 1993
- Xenopus oocyte maturation does not require new cyclin synthesis.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Fission yeast p107wee1 mitotic inhibitor is a tyrosine/serine kinaseNature, 1991
- INH, a negative regulator of MPF, is a form of protein phosphatase 2ACell, 1991
- The synthesis of protein(S) for chromosome condensation may be regulated by a post‐transcriptional mechanismJournal of Cellular Physiology, 1981
- Premature chromosome condensation in a ts DNA-mutant of BHK cellsCell, 1978