c-Myc regulates cyclin D-Cdk4 and -Cdk6 activity but affects cell cycle progression at multiple independent points. (33/908)

c-myc is a cellular proto-oncogene associated with a variety of human cancers and is strongly implicated in the control of cellular proliferation, programmed cell death, and differentiation. We have previously reported the first isolation of a c-myc-null cell line. Loss of c-Myc causes a profound growth defect manifested by the lengthening of both the G1 and G2 phases of the cell cycle. To gain a clearer understanding of the role of c-Myc in cellular proliferation, we have performed a comprehensive analysis of the components that regulate cell cycle progression. The largest defect observed in c-myc-/- cells is a 12-fold reduction in the activity of cyclin D1-Cdk4 and -Cdk6 complexes during the G0-to-S transition. Downstream events, such as activation of cyclin E-Cdk2 and cyclin A-Cdk2 complexes, are delayed and reduced in magnitude. However, it is clear that c-Myc affects the cell cycle at multiple independent points, because restoration of the Cdk4 and -6 defect does not significantly increase growth rate. In exponentially cycling cells the absence of c-Myc reduces coordinately the activities of all cyclin-cyclin-dependent kinase complexes. An analysis of cyclin-dependent kinase complex regulators revealed increased expression of p27(KIP1) and decreased expression of Cdk7 in c-myc-/- cells. We propose that c-Myc functions as a crucial link in the coordinate adjustment of growth rate to environmental conditions.  (+info)

BRCA1 is phosphorylated at serine 1497 in vivo at a cyclin-dependent kinase 2 phosphorylation site. (34/908)

BRCA1 is a cell cycle-regulated nuclear protein that is phosphorylated mainly on serine and to a lesser extent on threonine residues. Changes in phosphorylation occur in response to cell cycle progression and DNA damage. Specifically, BRCA1 undergoes hyperphosphorylation during late G1 and S phases of the cell cycle. Here we report that BRCA1 is phosphorylated in vivo at serine 1497 (S1497), which is part of a cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) consensus site. S1497 can be phosphorylated in vitro by CDK2-cyclin A or E. BRCA1 coimmunoprecipitates with an endogenous serine-threonine protein kinase activity that phosphorylates S1497 in vitro. This cellular kinase activity is sensitive to transfection of a dominant negative form of CDK2 as well as the application of the CDK inhibitors p21 and butyrolactone I but not p16. Furthermore, BRCA1 coimmunoprecipitates with CDK2 and cyclin A. These results suggest that the endogenous kinase activity is composed of CDK2-cyclin complexes, at least in part, concordant with the G1/S-specific increase in BRCA1 phosphorylation.  (+info)

Synthesis and application of functionally diverse 2,6,9-trisubstituted purine libraries as CDK inhibitors. (35/908)

BACKGROUND: Purines constitute a structural class of protein ligands involved in mediating an astonishing array of metabolic processes and signal pathways in all living organisms. Synthesis of purine derivatives targeting specific purine-binding proteins in vivo could lead to versatile lead compounds for use as biological probes or drug candidates. RESULTS: We synthesized several libraries of 2,6, 9-trisubstituted purines using both solution- and solid-phase chemistry, and screened the compounds for inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) activity and human leukemic cell growth. Lead compounds were optimized by iterative synthesis based on structure-activity relationships (SARs), as well as analysis of several CDK-inhibitor cocrystal structures, to afford several interesting compounds including one of the most potent CDK inhibitors known to date. Unexpectedly, some compounds with similar CDK inhibitory activity arrested cellular proliferation at distinctly different phases of the cell cycle and another inhibitor directly induced apoptosis, bypassing cell-cycle arrest. Some of these compounds selectively inhibited growth of cells derived from specific tumors. CONCLUSIONS: 2,6,9-Trisubstituted purines have various and potent biological activities, despite high concentrations of competing endogenous purine ligands in living cells. Purine libraries constitute a versatile source of small molecules that affect distinct biochemical pathways mediating different cellular functions.  (+info)

Expression of cyclin A in soft tissue sarcomas correlates with tumor aggressiveness. (36/908)

Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases regulate the cell cycle. Cyclin A has a dual role in cell proliferation. It is essential in the S phase for DNA replication, and it is also involved in G2-M-phase transition, signifying actively dividing cells. The expression of cyclin A was determined by immunohistochemistry in paraffin sections of 126 soft tissue sarcomas. The median cyclin A score was 10.8% (range, 1-54%). Cyclin A expression correlated with the S-phase fraction, Ki-67 score, G2-M phase, and grade. It did not correlate with the size of the tumor. A high cyclin A score predicted a poor metastasis-free survival (P < 0.01) and a poor disease-specific overall survival (P = 0.01). We concluded that the expression of cyclin A is a powerful prognostic factor in soft tissue sarcoma. Moreover, the cyclin A score determines the fraction of tumor cells in the S phase and the G2 phase, which are the most sensitive cell cycle phases for current modalities of cancer treatment.  (+info)

Cyclin D1 promotes mitogen-independent cell cycle progression in hepatocytes. (37/908)

Cyclin D1 is widely believed to regulate progression through G1 phase of the cell cycle, and previous studies have shown that this protein is induced during hepatocyte proliferation in culture and in vivo. In this study, the role of cyclin D1 in the cell cycle of primary rat hepatocytes was further examined. Following epidermal growth factor stimulation, cyclin D1 was upregulated at time points corresponding to the mitogen restriction point, and this was associated with enhanced cyclin D1-associated kinase activity. To test whether cyclin D1 expression was sufficient to promote mitogen-independent progression through the G1-S transition, we constructed a replication-defective adenovirus that overexpressed human cyclin D1. Transfection with the cyclin D1 vector but not a control vector resulted in hepatocyte DNA synthesis in the absence of growth factor that was similar to that seen in mitogen-treated cells. Furthermore, cyclin D1 transfection led to activation of downstream biochemical events, including cyclin A and proliferating cell nuclear antigen expression and cyclin E- and cyclin A-associated kinase activation. These results suggest that cyclin D1 expression is sufficient to promote progression of hepatocytes through the G1 restriction point.  (+info)

Bovine papillomavirus E2 protein activates a complex growth-inhibitory program in p53-negative HT-3 cervical carcinoma cells that includes repression of cyclin A and cdc25A phosphatase genes and accumulation of hypophosphorylated retinoblastoma protein. (38/908)

The bovine papillomavirus E2 protein can inhibit the proliferation of HT-3 cells, a p53-negative cervical carcinoma cell line containing integrated human papillomavirus type 30 DNA. Here, we analyzed HT-3 cells to explore the mechanism of p53-independent E2-mediated growth inhibition. Expression of the E2 protein repressed expression of the endogenous human papillomavirus type 30 E6/E7 genes. This was accompanied by hypophosphorylation and increased accumulation of p105Rb and repression of E2F1 expression. The E2 protein also caused reduced cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) 2 activity, but this did not appear to be due to increased expression of cdk inhibitors. Rather, expression of cyclin A, which regulates cdk2 activity, and the cdc25A and cdc25B phosphatases, which are thought to activate cdk2, was significantly reduced at both the RNA and protein levels in response to E2 expression. The E2 protein reduced expression of cdc25A and cdc25B in both HT-3 and HeLa cells, but not in cells that were not growth-inhibited by the E2 protein. E2 point mutants unable to inhibit cell growth did not repress cdc25A and cdc25B expression, nor did the cell cycle inhibitors hydroxyurea and mimosine. Based on these results and the known properties of cell cycle components, we propose a model to account for E2-induced growth inhibition of cervical carcinoma cell lines.  (+info)

9-(2-Phosphonylmethoxyethyl)adenine induces tumor cell differentiation or cell death by blocking cell cycle progression through the S phase. (39/908)

In addition to its inhibitory activity against viral DNA polymerases and reverse transcriptase, the acyclic nucleoside phosphonate 9-(2-phosphonylmethoxyethyl)adenine (PMEA) also markedly inhibits the replicative cellular DNA polymerases alpha, delta, and epsilon. We have previously shown that PMEA is a strong inducer of differentiation in several in vitro tumor cell models and has marked antitumor potential in vivo. To elucidate the molecular mechanism of the differentiation-inducing activity of PMEA, we have now investigated the effects of the drug on cell proliferation and differentiation, cell cycle regulation, and oncogene expression in the human erythroleukemia K562 cell line. Terminal, irreversible erythroid differentiation of PMEA-treated K562 cells was evidenced by hemoglobin production, increased expression of glycophorin A on the K562 cell membrane, and induction of acetylcholinesterase activity. After exposure to PMEA, K562 cell cultures displayed a marked retardation of S-phase progression, leading to a severe perturbation of the normal cell cycle distribution pattern. Whereas no substantial changes in c-myc mRNA levels and p21, PCNA, cdc2, and CDK2 protein levels were noted in PMEA-treated K562 cells, there was a marked accumulation of cyclin A and, most strikingly, cyclins E and B1. A similar picture of cell cycle deregulation was also observed in PMEA-exposed human myeloid THP-1 cells. However, in contrast to the strong differentiation-inducing activity of PMEA in K562 cells, the drug completely failed to induce monocytic maturation of human myeloid THP-1 cells. On the contrary, THP-1 cells underwent apoptotic cell death in the presence of PMEA, as demonstrated by prelytic, intracellular DNA fragmentation and the binding of annexin V to the cell surface. We hypothesize that, depending on the nature of the tumor cell line, PMEA triggers a process of either differentiation or apoptosis by the uncoupling of normally integrated cell cycle processes through inhibition of DNA replication during the S phase.  (+info)

Human transcription factor hTAF(II)150 (CIF150) is involved in transcriptional regulation of cell cycle progression. (40/908)

Here we present evidence that CIF150 (hTAF(II)150), the human homolog of Drosophila TAF(II)150, plays an important and selective role in establishing gene expression patterns necessary for progression through the cell cycle. Gel filtration experiments demonstrate that CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) seems to be less tightly associated with human transcription factor IID than hTAF(II)130 is associated with hTAF(II)250. The transient functional knockout of CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) protein led to cell cycle arrest at the G(2)/M transition in mammalian cell lines. PCR display analysis with the RNA derived from CIF150-depleted cells indicated that CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) is required for the transcription of only a subset of RNA polymerase II genes. CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) directly stimulated cyclin B1 and cyclin A transcription in cotransfection assays and in vitro assays, suggesting that the expression of these genes is dependent on CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) function. We defined a CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) consensus binding site and demonstrated that a CIF150-responsive cis element is present in the cyclin B1 core promoter. These results suggest that one function of CIF150 (hTAF(II)150) is to select specific RNA polymerase II core promoter elements involved in cell cycle progression.  (+info)