Not-so-pseudo a substrate: Acm1-mediated inhibition of the APC. (57/136)

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The anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) is required for rereplication control in endoreplication cycles. (58/136)

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Cdh1: a master G0/G1 regulator. (59/136)

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Unique D box and KEN box sequences limit ubiquitination of Acm1 and promote pseudosubstrate inhibition of the anaphase-promoting complex. (60/136)

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Spindle checkpoint activation at meiosis I advances anaphase II onset via meiosis-specific APC/C regulation. (61/136)

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Co-operative roles for E-cadherin and N-cadherin during lens vesicle separation and lens epithelial cell survival. (62/136)

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RhoA-ROCK and p38MAPK-MSK1 mediate vitamin D effects on gene expression, phenotype, and Wnt pathway in colon cancer cells. (63/136)

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Unexpected link between anaphase promoting complex and the toxicity of expanded polyglutamines expressed in yeast. (64/136)

Protein aggregation is intimately linked to a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Expansion of the huntingtin polyglutamine-rich domain causes protein aggregation and neuronal degeneration. Recently we found that, similar to neurons, yeast expressing the expanded domain show markers of programmed cell death. Here we showed that deletion of yeast metacaspase gene YCA1 partly rescues the toxic effect of the domain overexpression. We also performed genetic screen for other genes deletions alleviating the toxic effect and found ASE1. Ase1 is a substrate of the Cdh1 form of anaphase promoting complex, APC/Cdh1. We tested Cdh1 overexpression and the deletion of CLB2 (mitotic cyclin, substrate of APC/Cdh1) and found that both mutations had a rescuing effect on the expanded polyglutamine toxicity. Our data suggest that the toxic effect of aggregated proteins is partly indirect. We speculate that cellular attempt to degrade the aggregates overloads the proteasome, and this leads to pathological accumulation of APC substrates.  (+info)