pocket proteins
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Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 550
Author(s):  
Indra A. Shaltiel ◽  
Alba Llopis ◽  
Melinda Aprelia ◽  
Rob Klompmaker ◽  
Apostolos Menegakis ◽  
...  

Most Cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) are redundant for normal cell division. Here we tested whether these redundancies are maintained during cell cycle recovery after a DNA damage-induced arrest in G1. Using non-transformed RPE-1 cells, we find that while Cdk4 and Cdk6 act redundantly during normal S-phase entry, they both become essential for S-phase entry after DNA damage in G1. We show that this is due to a greater overall dependency for Cdk4/6 activity, rather than to independent functions of either kinase. In addition, we show that inactivation of pocket proteins is sufficient to overcome the inhibitory effects of complete Cdk4/6 inhibition in otherwise unperturbed cells, but that this cannot revert the effects of Cdk4/6 inhibition in DNA damaged cultures. Indeed, we could confirm that, in addition to inactivation of pocket proteins, Cdh1-dependent anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/CCdh1) activity needs to be inhibited to promote S-phase entry in damaged cultures. Collectively, our data indicate that DNA damage in G1 creates a unique situation where high levels of Cdk4/6 activity are required to inactivate pocket proteins and APC/CCdh1 to promote the transition from G1 to S phase.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Malgorzata Bienkowska-Haba ◽  
Wioleta Luszczek ◽  
Katarzyna Zwolinska ◽  
Rona S. Scott ◽  
Martin Sapp

ABSTRACT It is established that the host cell transcriptomes of natural lesions, organotypic rafts, and human papillomavirus (HPV)-immortalized keratinocytes are altered in the presence of HPV genomes. However, the establishment of HPV-harboring cell lines requires selection and immortalization, which makes it impossible to distinguish between alterations directly induced by HPV or indirectly by the need for immortalization or selection. To address direct effects of HPV infection on the host cell transcriptome, we have used our recently established infection model that allows efficient infection of primary keratinocytes with HPV16 virions. We observed only a small set of genes to be deregulated at the transcriptional level at 7 days postinfection (dpi), most of which fall into the category regulated by pocket proteins pRb, p107, and p130. Furthermore, cell cycle genes were not deregulated in cells infected with a virus lacking E7 despite the presence of episomal genome and viral transcripts. These findings imply that the majority of transcriptional changes are due to the E7 protein impairing pocket protein function. Additional pathways, such as the Fanconi anemia-BRCA pathway, became perturbed only after long-term culturing of infected cells. When grown as organotypic raft cultures, keratinocytes infected with wild-type but not E7 mutant virus had perturbed transcriptional regulation of pathways previously identified in natural lesions and in rafts derived from immortalized keratinocytes. We conclude that the HPV infection model provides a valuable tool to distinguish immediate transcriptional alterations from those induced by persistent infection and the need for selection and immortalization. IMPORTANCE To establish infection and complete the viral life cycle, human papillomavirus (HPV) needs to alter the transcriptional program of host cells. Until recently, studies were restricted to keratinocyte-derived cell lines immortalized by HPV due to the lack of experimental systems to efficiently infect primary keratinocytes. Need for selection and immortalization made it impossible to distinguish between alterations induced by HPV and secondary adaptation due to selection and immortalization. With our recent establishment of an extracellular matrix (ECM)-to-cell transfer system allowing efficient infection of primary keratinocytes, we were able to identify transcriptional changes attributable to HPV16 infection. Most perturbed genes fall into the class of S-phase genes, which are regulated by pocket proteins. Indeed, infection with viruses lacking E7 abrogated most transcriptional changes. It is important to note that many transcriptional alterations thought to be important for the HPV life cycle are actually late events that may reflect immortalization and, possibly, disease progression.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (17) ◽  
pp. 9087-9103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sigrid Uxa ◽  
Stephan H Bernhart ◽  
Christina F S Mages ◽  
Martin Fischer ◽  
Robin Kohler ◽  
...  

Abstract Most human cancers acquire mutations causing defects in the p53 signaling pathway. The tumor suppressor p53 becomes activated in response to genotoxic stress and is essential for arresting the cell cycle to facilitate DNA repair or to initiate apoptosis. p53-induced cell cycle-arrest is mediated by expression of the CDK inhibitor p21WAF1/Cip1, which prevents phosphorylation and inactivation of the pocket proteins RB, p130, and p107. In a hypophosphorylated state, pocket proteins bind to E2F factors forming RB-E2F and DREAM transcriptional repressor complexes. Here, we analyze the influence of RB and DREAM on p53-induced gene repression and cell-cycle arrest. We show that abrogation of DREAM function by knockout of the DREAM component LIN37 results in a reduced repression of cell-cycle genes. We identify the genes repressed by the p53-DREAM pathway and describe a set of genes that is downregulated by p53 independent of LIN37/DREAM. Most strikingly, p53-dependent repression of cell-cycle genes is completely abrogated in LIN37−/−;RB−/− cells leading to a loss of the G1/S checkpoint. Taken together, we show that DREAM and RB are key factors in the p53 signaling pathway to downregulate a large number of cell-cycle genes and to arrest the cell cycle at the G1/S transition.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul D. Goetsch ◽  
Susan Strome

AbstractThe mammalian pocket protein family, which includes the Retinoblastoma protein (pRb) and Rb-like pocket proteins p107 and p130, regulates entry into and exit from the cell cycle by repressing cell cycle gene expression. Although pRb plays a dominant role in mammalian systems, p107 and p130 represent the ancestral pocket proteins. The Rb-like pocket proteins interact with the highly conserved 5-subunit MuvB complex and an E2F-DP transcription factor heterodimer, forming the DREAM (forDp,Rb-like,E2F,andMuvB) complex. DREAM complex formation on chromatin culminates in direct repression of target genes mediated by the MuvB subcomplex. Here, we examined how the Rb-like pocket protein contributes to DREAM formation by disrupting the interaction between the soleCaenorhabditis eleganspocket protein LIN-35 and the MuvB subunit LIN-52 using CRISPR/Cas9 targeted mutagenesis. Disrupting the LIN-35-MuvB association did not affect DREAM chromatin occupancy but did cause a highly penetrant synthetic multivulval (SynMuv) phenotype, indicating that blocking DREAM assembly impairs MuvB function. Some DREAM target genes became derepressed, indicating that for those genes MuvB chromatin binding alone is not sufficient for gene repression and that direct LIN-35-MuvB association potentiates MuvB’s innate repressive activity. In a previous study we showed that in worms lacking LIN-35, E2F-DP and MuvB chromatin occupancy is reduced genome-wide. With LIN-35 present, this study demonstrates that the E2F-DP-LIN-35 interaction promotes E2F-DP’s chromatin localization, which we hypothesize supports MuvB chromatin occupancy indirectly through DNA. Altogether, this study highlights how the pocket protein family may recruit regulatory factors like MuvB to chromatin through E2F-DP to facilitate their transcriptional activity.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (19) ◽  
pp. 4942-4947 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tyler J. Liban ◽  
Edgar M. Medina ◽  
Sarvind Tripathi ◽  
Satyaki Sengupta ◽  
R. William Henry ◽  
...  

The retinoblastoma protein (Rb) and the homologous pocket proteins p107 and p130 negatively regulate cell proliferation by binding and inhibiting members of the E2F transcription factor family. The structural features that distinguish Rb from other pocket proteins have been unclear but are critical for understanding their functional diversity and determining why Rb has unique tumor suppressor activities. We describe here important differences in how the Rb and p107 C-terminal domains (CTDs) associate with the coiled-coil and marked-box domains (CMs) of E2Fs. We find that although CTD–CM binding is conserved across protein families, Rb and p107 CTDs show clear preferences for different E2Fs. A crystal structure of the p107 CTD bound to E2F5 and its dimer partner DP1 reveals the molecular basis for pocket protein–E2F binding specificity and how cyclin-dependent kinases differentially regulate pocket proteins through CTD phosphorylation. Our structural and biochemical data together with phylogenetic analyses of Rb and E2F proteins support the conclusion that Rb evolved specific structural motifs that confer its unique capacity to bind with high affinity those E2Fs that are the most potent activators of the cell cycle.


Oncotarget ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (5) ◽  
pp. 2992-3002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jéssica M. Vilas ◽  
Alba Ferreirós ◽  
Carmen Carneiro ◽  
Lluis Morey ◽  
Sabela Da Silva-Álvarez ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 384 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.S. Svoboda ◽  
A. Paquin ◽  
D.S. Park ◽  
R.S. Slack

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