S-phase feedback control in budding yeast independent of tyrosine phosphorylation of P34cdc28
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 355 (6358) , 365-368
- https://doi.org/10.1038/355365a0
Abstract
IN somatic cells, entry into mitosis depends on the completion of DNA synthesis. This dependency is established by S-phase feed-back controls that arrest cell division when damaged or unreplicated DNA is present1. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, mutations that interfere with the phosphorylation of tyrosine 15 (Y15) of p34cdc2, the protein kinase subunit of maturation promoting factor, accelerate the entry into mitosis and abolish the ability of unreplicated DNA to arrest cells in G2 (ref. 2). Because the tyrosine phosphorylation of p34cdc2 is conserved in S. pombe3, Xenopus4, chicken5 and human6cells, the regulation of p34cdc2-Y15 phosphorylation could be a universal mechanism mediating the S-phase feedback control and regulating the initiation of mitosis7,8. We have investigated these phenomena in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We report here that the CDC28 gene product (the S.cerevisiae homologue of cdc2) is phosphorylated on the equivalent tyrosine (Y19) during S phase but that mutations that prevent tyrosine phosphorylation do not lead to premature mitosis and do not abolish feedback controls. We have therefore demonstrated a mechanism that does not involve tyrosine phosphorylation of p34 by which cells arrest their division in response to the presence of unreplicated or damaged DNA. We speculate that this mechanism may not involve the inactivation of p34 catalytic activity.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coupling M phase and S phase: Controls maintaining the dependence of mitosis on chromosome replicationCell, 1991
- Differential phosphorylation of vertebrate p34cdc2 kinase at the G1/S and G2/M transitions of the cell cycle: identification of major phosphorylation sites.The EMBO Journal, 1991
- Cyclin activation of p34cdc2Cell, 1990
- Universal control mechanism regulating onset of M-phaseNature, 1990
- Mutation of fission yeast cell cycle control genes abolishes dependence of mitosis on DNA replicationCell, 1990
- Checkpoints: Controls That Ensure the Order of Cell Cycle EventsScience, 1989
- Tyrosine phosphorylation of the fission yeast cdc2+ protein kinase regulates entry into mitosisNature, 1989
- Human cdc2 protein kinase is a major cell-cycle regulated tyrosine kinase substrateNature, 1988
- The RAD9 Gene Controls the Cell Cycle Response to DNA Damage in Saccharomyces cerevisiaeScience, 1988
- Purification of a RAS-responsive adenylyl cyclase complex from Saccharomyces cerevisiae by use of an epitope addition method.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1988