Greatwall kinase protects mitotic phosphosites from barbarian phosphatases.

نویسنده

  • Michael L Goldberg
چکیده

T he basic outline of the events controlling entry into mitosis has been clear for more than 20 y: the essential mitotic driver Mphase promoting factor [MPF; a cyclindependent kinase (CDK) composed of CDK1 and cyclin B] becomes rapidly activated and phosphorylates a wide variety of targets, creating mitotic phosphoproteins that contribute to nuclear membrane breakdown, chromosome condensation, and spindle assembly. But is this the entire story? The article in PNAS by Burgess et al. (1) adds to evidence accumulating over the last 2 y arguing that half the picture has been missing. The levels of mitotic phosphoproteins are governed not only by MPF but also by the specific phosphatases that remove MPF-catalyzed phosphorylations. Importantly, both entry into M phase and the maintenance of M phase require the operation of a pathway, mediated by a kinase called Greatwall (Gwl), that can inactivate these phosphatases. On the discovery of MPF, it was widely appreciated that the phosphorylations that this kinase adds to mitotic phosphoproteins (MPF phosphosites) must be removed for cells to exit from M phase after anaphase onset. This fact implied that the phosphatase(s) responsible for this reversal might, in some fashion, be turned off during M phase itself to preserve the MPF phosphosites necessary for M-phase entry and maintenance. This theory was supported by a few tantalizing early observations (2–4), and it could also in theory explain the phenomenon, widely known at the time, that the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid promotes M-phase entry in vertebrate systems (5, 6). However, the concept languished for many years, in large part because the identity of the phosphatases directed against MPF phosphosites remained unknown. Most of the evidence pointed to one or more forms of PP2A (2, 4, 7–9), a prominent group of heterotrimeric phosphatases, but this assignment has remained contentious even until fairly recently (10). Within the last 2 y, Mochida and Hunt (11, 12) have placed on a much firmer footing the hypothesis that the phosphatase targeting MPF-driven mitotic phosphorylations must be down-regulated during M phase. First, by direct measurements using model substrates, they showed that Xenopus egg extracts have abundant phosphatase activity directed against MPF phosphosites during interphase, but the same extracts are almost completely devoid of this activity during M phase (11). Second, biochemical experiments established that the phosphatase measured in these assays was a form of PP2A containing a particular B55-type regulatory subunit called B55δ (12). Because the Drosophila genome has only a single B55family gene, it is assumed hereafter that PP2A enzymes associated with any B55type subunit similarly display activity against MPF phosphosites and are turned off during M phase. Additional strong evidence in favor of this idea has emerged from a separate and originally unrelated series of investigations on the kinase Greatwall (sometimes called MAST-L in humans), whose role in the cell cycle was first intimated in Drosophila (13, 14). The most easily interpreted phenotype associated with lossof-function mutations of Drosophila Gwl is a general slowing of the cell cycle, particularly during the G2-to-M transition (14). Work in Xenopus extracts then revealed that Gwl was required both for M-phase entry and [in so-called cytostatic factor-containing (CSF) extracts made from eggs arrested in metaphase of meiosis II] M-phase maintenance (15). Initial models assumed that Gwl operated exclusively in the autocatalytic loop that ensures a rapid increase in MPF activity on M-phase entry by removing inhibitory phosphorylations from the CDK1 component of MPF. However, subsequent observations suggested that Gwl could also affect the cell cycle in some mysterious fashion independent of the MPF autoregulatory loop (16). Indeed, under certain experimental conditions, the cell-cycle status of extracts seems to be dictated more intimately by Gwl than by MPF itself. For example, CSF extracts in which MPF has been almost completely inactivated by drugs can remain in M phase if they retain active Gwl kinase, but the extracts immediately lose M-phase characteristics when Gwl is removed, even if MPF is still present (16). Publication of the Mochida and Hunt (11) paper described above suggested how this mystery might be resolved. Perhaps Gwl could be a critical component of the mechanism that inactivates, specifically during M phase, the phosphatases directed against MPF phosphosites. Recent publications from two separate laboratories have verified this hypothesis (17, 18), leading to the simple yet powerful general model shown in Fig. 1. MPF can activate Gwl (15), and active Gwl then promotes the inactivation of PP2A/B55 phosphatases through an unknown mechanism that may be either direct (with Gwl phosphorylating a component of the phosphatase) or indirect (with Gwl targeting a different molecule that subsequently acts on PP2A/B55). The power of this model lies in its explanation of how Gwl can be involved in the autoregulatory loop that activates MPF but, at the same time, can govern the cell cycle in a manner that is relatively independent of MPF. By controlling the activity of PP2A/B55, Gwl helps determine the phosphorylation of a wide variety of Fig. 1. Gwl kinase mediates the inactivation of PP2A/B55 phosphatase during M-phase entry. Green boxes indicate active enzymes; red boxes indicate inactive enzymes. MPF becomes activated through an autoregulatory process involving the removal of inhibitory phosphorylations from its CDK1 component. ActiveMPF then phosphorylates many targets, creating phosphoproteins involved in many downstream events in mitosis. Among the targets of MPF are enzymes (such as Cdc25 phosphatase, not shown) that participate in the autoregulatory loop and thus keep MPF activity high. MPF also phosphorylates and activates Gwl kinase. Gwl, in turn, inactivates (through a currently unknown mechanism) PP2A phosphatases with B55 regulatory subunits. If not inactivated by this Gwlmediated process, PP2A/B55 phosphatases would prematurely reverse MPF-driven phosphorylations, preventing M-phase entry.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

دوره 107 28  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2010