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BC4 – The Cell Cycle Boris Pfander Max Planck Ins9tute of Biochemistry [email protected] +49-‐89-‐8578-‐3050 www.biochem.mpg.de/pfander 1 Topics Overview on the Cell Cycle The discovery of CDK – the master regulator of the cell cycle S-‐phase and DNA replica9on Checkpoints that sense DNA damage M-‐phase – mitosis and cytokinesis Chromosome condensa9on & cohesion 2 Cell cycle stages and transitions G1>S START G2>M metaphase > anaphase & mitotic exit 3 Mitosis 4 5 5 Phases of Mitosis 6 6 Changes in chromosome morphology during mitosis Condensin Cohesin 7 Condensin shapes mitotic chromosomes Condensin Condensin DNA Condensin Cohesin P Condensin Houlard et al., NCB, 2015 8 Condensin might trap loops of DNA. Condensin Cdk1-Cyclin B target 9 Cohesin mediates sister chromatid cohesion. Cohesin Cohesin Cohesin The cohesin ring model 10 Metaphase > anaphase transition 11 Cyclin levels drop at the metaphase to anaphase transition Cdk1 activity drops! 12 Cyclin B levels and (kinase) activity of MPF change in parallel in cycling Xenopus egg extracts 13 Metaphase to anaphase transition 14 -> exit from mitosis requires degradation of cyclin B by what mechanism? Glotzer, Murray & Kirschner, 1991: 1) radio-label cyclin B ↓ incubation in Xenopus egg extracts, which are in anaphase or interphase ↓ SDS-PAGE and auto-radiography anaphase cyclin B T [min.]: interphase ↓ extract in: 0 30 0 30 15 2) radio-label cyclin B or ubiquitin ↓ incubation in Xenopus egg extracts, which are in anaphase or interphase ↓ after 10 min.: SDS-PAGE and auto-radiography (overexposure!!!) I125-labeled: cyclin B ubiquitin A A x4 x3 ubiquitin x 1 cyclin B cyclin B ↓ ↓ x2 extract in: I I (A = anaphase; I = interphase) at the time of its degradation cyclin B is covalently modified by addition of ubiquitin è 16 Proteolysis controls late mitotic events Exit from mitosis requires inactivation of Cdk1 by degradation of mitotic cyclin The degradation is mediated by the anaphase-promoting-complex (APC), an E3 ubiquitin ligase APC activation requires Cdk1 activity (ensures correct order of events) Cdk1 facilitates its own inactivation (mitotic checkpoint and unknown mechanisms ensure delay to give Cdk1 enough time to act) 17 Anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome or Cdc20 An atomic model of APC/C determined by cryo-EM. By David Barford APC – a gigantic E3 ubiquitin ligase 18 Metaphase to anaphase transition and mitotic exit 19 20 APCCdc20 ??? Are really both dependent on APCCdc20? M cyclin stable cyclin B anaphase mitotic exit 21 amount of DB-peptide è experimental evidence for existence of another APC substrate, which inhibits anaphase (Holloway & Murray, 1993) APCCdc20 anaphase inhibitor anaphase destruction-box (DB) peptide M cyclin = APC recognition sequence (RxxL); competitive inhibitor of APC mitotic exit 22 What inhibits anaphase? What keeps the replicated chromosomes together? Metaphase spread Cohesin blocks chromosome segregation. 23 Cohesin cleavage promotes sister separation Anaphase Cohesin Scc1 subunit Scc1 Protease Scc1 Ct fragment Uhlmann and Nasmyth, 1999 APC Protease inhibitor 24 Sister chromatid cohesion & separation Nasmyth lab 25 Sister chromatid cohesion Emergence of sister chromatid cohesion ê memory of which chromatids belong to each other ê "division of labor" made possible: timely separation of duplication and segregation of chromosomes ê evolution of large genomes with many chromosomes 26 APC controls (all) late mitotic events Spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) 27 Summary metaphase-to-anaphase transitions 1. Maximal activity of Cdk-mitotic cyclin (cyclin B) 2. Chromosomes align on metaphase plate, attached and ready to segregate into the daughter cells. 3. Cdk-cyclin B activates APC by phosphorylation; 4. APC is a large E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, for its activity in mitosis it requires a co-factor Cdc20 5. Phosphorylated APC ubiquitylates cyclin B – degradation and decrease of Cdk activity. 6. APC ubiquitylates SECURIN, which frees SEPARASE – sister chromatid cohesion is removed from sister chromatids – onset of anaphase 7. Multiple different proteins are degraded through APC activity. 8. Cdk activity decreases at the end of mitosis, proteins are dephosphorylated by phosphatases. 28 Transition into the next G1 29 Two antagonistic oscillators control the cell cycle. CDK off CDK on CDK off APC on APC off APC on 30 The G1 phase of somatic cells cycles is a state of stable Cdk inactivity How do you establish a G1 (a prolonged, stable state of Cdk inactivity)? Problem? Cdk-cyclin B activate APCCdc20 – only phosphorylated APCCdc20 is active APCCdc20 degrades cyclin B – decrease in Cdk activity Less Cdk activity – less APCCdc20 phosphorylated – cyclin concentrations start to increase again – cell cannot move out of mitosis to reach G1 31 The G1 phase of somatic cells cycles is a state of stable Cdk inactivity How do you establish a G1 (a prolonged, stable state of Cdk inactivity)? Cdh1 1) keep APC active after mitosis How? > 2nd APC-activator: Cdh1; APCCdh1 is inhibited by CDK > becomes active only upon decrease of CDK activity followed by dephosphorylation of Cdh1 2) activate a CKI (e.g. Sic1 in S. cerevisiae) 32 Two flavors of APC/cyclosome APCCdc20 Becomes active at mitotic entry upon activation by M-cyclin/CDK – Cdc20 binds only phosphorylated APC APCCdh1 Active from the anaphase onset to the end of G1 phase - Ensured by at least 2 different mechanisms 1. Inactivating phosphorylation of Cdh1 by M-cyclin/CDK 2. Inhibitors of Cdh1 activated during interphase ONLY unphosphorylated Cdh1 binds unphosphorylated APC The two versions of APC are active at different times during cell cycle, they are differently regulated (and target different substrates) Finishing mitosis, one step at a time Matt Sullivan & David O. Morgan Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 8, 894-903 (November 2007) 33 The G1 phase of somatic cells cycles is a state of stable Cdk inactivity 34 Test yourself! 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Which a2ributes of the cell cycle are conserved throughout eukaryotes? Order of phases? Length of phases? Presence of alternaGng S-‐ and M-‐ phases? Presence of alternaGng G1 and G2 phases? Mutants of Cdc28 in budding yeast arrest in G1; mutants of Cdc2 in fission yeast arrest in M-‐phase? Both genes encode for CDK, how is this possible? Why are fission yeast wee mutants small? Explain! Describe two mechanisms that contribute to the G1/S cell cycle switch at start! The introducGon of many replicaGon origins brings about a specific challenge for eukaryotes. Name it and describe how cells regulate replicaGon iniGaGon in order to avoid this problem! Can the DNA damage checkpoint be arGficially acGvated in the absence of DNA damage? How? How are sister chromaGds held together? By which mechanism is this linkage removed at the metaphase-‐to-‐anaphase transiGon? Two different forms of the APC are acGve during the cell cycle. Describe similariGes and differences and why cells rely on two forms of the APC. 35 Thank you and good luck with the cell cycle! 36 Q&A session II Dr. Sara Batelli [email protected] 16.01. 2017 Review Session Cytoskeletal components give structure and movement to cells Actin, Tubulin, Intermediate filaments Motor proteins Cell Cycle Regulation – How and when a cell divides How cyclins control the cell cycle How check points insure that the cell cycle is progressing properly Replication of a cell and its components to undergo mitosis How cytoskeletal components help with the segregation of genetic material and the division of one cell into two daughter cells The three filament networks tubulin Intermediate filaments Size? Nucleotide binding? Polarity? Organization? f-actin Actin cytoskeleton Actin filaments allow cells to adopt different shapes and perform different functions Actin filaments are important for the morphology of the cell Villi Contractile bundles Contractile ring Generation of mechanical forces Sheet-like and finger-like protrusions Cell motility Actin protein and fibers Inside cells, actin exists in two states, the monomeric protein, called G-actin (for globular actin) and the 7 nm diameter filament, called F-actin (for filamentous actin). The factor that determines the relative proportions of F-actin and G-actin is the concentration of actin protein G- actin (globular) Polar molecule the actin molecule has a plus (+) end and a minus (-) end the actin molecule has a nucleotide binding site (for ADP or ATP) F- actin (filamentous) Actin polymerization involved three steps: nucleation elongation steady-state (equilibrium) Actin polymerization: 3 steps Actins has a characteristic concentration, called the "critical concentration," below which the monomer state is favored and above which the polymer state is favored. Increasing the subunit concentration favors filament building, and decreasing it favors filament deconstruction. This property allows the cell to rapidly control cytoskeleton structure. the resulting actin filament has a polarity: fast-growing (+) end slow-growing (-) ends Actin polymerization – rate limiting step Actin nucleation is the rate-limiting step and takes the longest Elongation of an existing actin filament is fast Three actin monomers form a nucleus The actin monomer is bound to ATP; upon polymerization, actin ATPase activity cleaves ATP to ADP The rate of polymerization (kon) depends on the concentration of free actin monomers The depolymerization rate (koff) does not depend on the concentration of the free subunit As the filament grows, a critical concentration (Cc) will be reached at which subunits addition equals subunit dissociation Actin treadmilling Treadmilling is a phenomenon observed in many cellular cytoskeletal filaments, especially in actin filaments and microtubules. It occurs when one end of a filament grows in length while the other end shrinks resulting in a section of filament "moving" if the concentration is above Cc for the (+) end but below Cc of the (-) end, filaments will undergo an assembly at the (+) end and disassembly at the (-) end despite the constant assembly and disassembly the length of the filament remains constant – this is called treadmilling Actin architecture and function is governed by actin-binding proteins Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (I) 1) How does the cell maintain a pool of unpolymerized actin? Regulation of monomeric actin concentration (Profilin, Thymosin) Profilin prevents nucleation but promotes + end elongation Thymosin prevents polymerization Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (II) 2) How does the cell control actin polymerization? Actin nucleation by the Arp2/3 complex The activated Arp2/3 complex bypasses the rate-limiting step of actin nucleation Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (III) 3) How does the cell control actin polymerization? Actin elongation by formins Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (IV) 4) How can actin networks be stabilized? Capping, crosslinking actin-crosslinking proteins are characterized by actin-binding domains Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (V) 5) How can F-actin be disassembled? Cofilin Binding to F-actin induces a twist in the filament, which increases the chance of severing Actin dynamics – regulation of the actin network Actin network is spatio-temporally regulated (Rho-GTPases) Actin – questions How does the cell maintain a pool of unpolymerized actin? How are the actin networks stabilized? How can f-actin fibers quickly be removed? How can cell signalling modulate the actin cytoskeleton? What step of the actin polymerization process is the slowest? What end of the actin polymer is more likely to grow and which one will shrink? What is treadmilling? Why does it occur? Which are the main functions of the actin cytoskeleton? Tubulin protein and tubulin network α-tubulin and β-tubulin form a heterodimer both subunits have a GTPbinding site β-tubulin can be in a GDP-or GTP-bound form Tubulin heterodimers form protofilaments, which have a polarity Microtubules are very stiff due to multiple molecular interactions between subunits Assembly of microtubules: three steps if the rate of subunit addition is faster than hydrolysis, a GTP-cap is formed (true also for F-actin → ATP-cap) Tubulin polymerization and treadmilling Subunits with bound nucleoside triphosphate (T) polymerize at both ends and then undergo hydrolysis in the filament (D) As the filament grows, elongation is faster than hydrolysis at the (+) end However, hydrolysis is faster than elongation at the (-) end The critical concentration for polymerization on the (+) end in T form is lower than for the (-) end in the D form. If the subunit concentration is between these two values, the (+) end grows while the (-) end shrinks, resulting in treadmilling If the GTP-cap is lost, a filament may start to shrink (catastrophe) / (rescue) Tubulin catastrophe and rescue: dynamic instability Microtubules stability depends on the levels od GTP/GDP Tubulin dynamics – regulation of the tubulin network (I) 1) How does the cell prevent spontaneous tubulin polymerization? Stathmin stathmin-bound tubulin heterodimers can not polymerize Tubulin dynamics – regulation of the actin network (II) 2) Microtubule nucleation γ- Tubulin/centrosome Polar Filament Tubulin dynamics – regulation of the tubulin network (III) 3) How do cells stabilize microtubules? Microtubules- associated protein (MAPs) DIRECT BINDING or τ proteins, after the Greek letter by that name Tubulin dynamics – regulation of the tubulin network (IV) 4) How do cells disassemble microtubules? Katanin, some kinesins Break bonds between tubulin heterodimers Tubulin network is spatio-temporally regulated (as for actin network !!!) Microtubules (MT) biological functions Cell division Intracellular transport Tubulin – questions How does the cell prevent tubulin polymerization? How is microtubule nucleation regulated? How do cells stabilize microtubules? How do cells break or disassemble microtubules? Why are microtubules so important? How is the structure of actin and tubulin different? What causes catastrophe? Where does the nucleation of microtubules occur? How are intermediate filaments different from actin and tubulin? Intermediate filaments (Diameter) MT (25nm) Int. Filaments (10 nm) F-actin (7 nm) Intermediate filaments Intermediate filaments have a diameter of about 10 nm, which is intermediate between the diameters of the two other principal elements of the cytoskeleton, actin filaments (about 7 nm) and microtubules (about 25 nm). In contrast to actin filaments and microtubules, the intermediate filaments are not directly involved in cell movements. Instead, they appear to play basically a structural role by providing mechanical strength to cells and tissues. They do not have a polarity and they do not bind nucleotides Cytoskeletal motor proteins Motor proteins bind to a polarized cytoskeletal filament and use the energy derived from repeated cycles of ATP hydrolysis to move steadily along it. Dozens of different motor proteins coexist in every eukaryotic cell. They differ in the type of filament they bind to (either actin or microtubules), the direction in which they move along the filament, and the “cargo” they carry. Many motor proteins carry membrane-enclosed organelles such as mitochondria, or secretory vesicles to their appropriate locations in the cell. Other motor proteins cause cytoskeletal filaments to slide against each other, generating the force that drives such phenomena as muscle contraction, ciliary beating, and cell division The three cytoskeletal motor protein families ACTIN MICROTUBULE The cycle of myosin-II Structural changes are used by myosin to walk along an actin filament → ATP hydrolysis induces a conformational change Conformational change The cycle of kinesin -1 cargo binding domain stalk motor domain Exchange of ADP to ATP in the leading head (light green) causes a structural change in the neck region; detachment of the lagging head (dark green) is facilitated by release of Pi most kinesins move toward the microtubule (+) end but some kinesins can move toward the (-) end Comparison of the cycles of kinesin and myosin II The cycle of dynein motor domain associated peptides microtubule binding domain dyneins moves toward the microtubule (-) end The cycle of dynein Cytoplasmic dynein is a multi-protein motor complex responsible for all minus-end directed microtubule transport in most eukaryotic cells. Dynein carries out a large number of functions in the cell and is subject to complicated regulatory control by accessory factors. In relation to the other microtubule motor family, the kinesins, dynein is much larger and complicated. Despite being identified 20 years earlier than kinesin, dynein’s complexity has made it relatively intractable to studies of its mechanism of movement. Dynein functions All of the myosins except one move toward the plus end of an actin filament, although they do so at different speeds. The exception is myosin VI, which moves toward the minus end. Most of kinesins have the motor domain at the N-terminus of the heavy chain and walk toward the plus end of the microtubule. A particularly interesting family has the motor domain at the C-terminus and walks in the opposite direction, toward the minus end of the microtubule. The dyneins are a family of minus-end-directed microtubule motors, but they are unrelated to the kinesin superfamily. Motor proteins – questions Some one is diagnosed with Alzheimer…..which cytoskeletal component could be disrupted in the neurons? What are cytoskeletal motors? What are some of the roles of myosin? How is myosin activity regulated? How are the structures of kinesin and myosin similar and different? Why do we need vesicle transport? What is the main role of dyneins? Which motor proteins mostly move things in the + directions which in the direction? The cell cycle and its regulation S-phase = DNA synthesis G2 phase = gap S/M G1 phase = gap M/S M-phase = mitosis and cytokinesis The cell cycle and its regulation Is the length of the cell cycle phases the same between different organisms? … but there is always an alternation of S and M phases !!! How is the progression of the cell cycle regulated? Cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs) Small family of serine-threonine kinases Highly conserved Cyclin-binding is ESSENTIAL for their activity Highly regulated Can phosphorylate hundreds of distinct proteins Are constant throughout the cell cycle CDKs are the MASTER REGULATORS of the cell cycle The term “master regulator” or “master regulatory gene” was first coined by Susumu Ohno over 30 years ago for a “gene that occupies the very top of a regulatory hierarchy,” which, by its definition, should not be under the regulatory influence of any other gene. How is the progression of the cell cycle regulated? Cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs) Small family of serine-threonine kinases Highly conserved Cyclin-binding is ESSENTIAL for their activity Highly regulated Can phosphorylate hundreds of distinct proteins Are constant throughout the cell cycle CDKs are the MASTER REGULATORS of the cell cycle Cyclins A diverse family of proteins All contain conserved cyclin box (≈ 100 amino acids Cdk interaction site) Cyclins are oscillating – different types are produced at different cell-cycle stages All cyclins associate with CDKs Cyclins affect the substrate specificity of CDKs and their localization (BUT Not all cyclins are cycling during the cell cycle) (AND Not all cyclins act in cell cycle (e.g. in transcription)) Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis Which model organism have been used in order to study the cell cycle? Budding and Fission Yeast Simple system Early embryos – synchronized cells Mammalian cell lines – similarity with humans Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis Which are the two main features of the cell cycle? The cell cycle is DIRECTIONAL and ORDERED Timer theory From embryos experiments Domino theory From yeast experiments Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis Yeast cell cycle mutants (easy model) Forward genetic screen for temperature sensitive mutants that arrest in a specific cell cycle phase The morphology is an indication of the specific cell cycle phase Forward genetics (or a forward genetic screen) is an approach used to identify genes responsible for a particular phenotype of an organism. Reverse genetics (or a reverse genetic screen), on the other hand, analyzes the phenotype of an organism following the disruption of a known gene. In short, forward genetics starts with a phenotype and moves towards identifying the gene(s) responsible, where as reverse genetics starts with a known gene and assays the effect of its disruption by analyzing the resultant phenotypes. Both forward and reverse genetic screens aim to determine gene function. Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis Yeast cell cycle mutants (easy model) Forward genetic screen for temperature sensitive mutants that arrest in a specific cell cycle phase WT Arrested The morphology is an indication of the specific cell cycle phase Among the different mutants, cdc28 was very interesting because caused an arrest in G1 Which protein is the yeast cdc28 ??? Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis Yeast cell cycle mutants – discovery of CDK Cdc28 = Cdk of budding yeast Cdc2 = Cdk of fission yeast → Reduced activity of Cdc2 (cycle slower, cell bigger) → Increased activity of Cdc2 (cycle faster, cell smaller) Oocytes and embryos – discovery of cyclins Experiments in model organisms for cell cycle analysis The different cyclins confer the specificity of the cell cycle No cyclins No cyclins Principles of cell cycle regulation and Checkpoints Intra S checkpoint G0 At the end of mitosis, all cyclins are degraded and there is NO ACTIVITY of CDKs G1 cyclin(s) must appear to drive the G1>S transition Principles of cell cycle regulation The regulation of the cell cycle is conserved among eukaryotes The cell cycle contains checkpoints (= control mechanisms which ensure proper division of the cell. Each checkpoint serves as a potential halting point along the cell cycle, during which the conditions of the cell are assessed, with progression through the various phases of the cell cycle occurring when favorable conditions are met) The cell cycle is directional (= each phase depends on the previous one) and ordered (= no phase is ever left out and occurs in a temporal order but its length differs between organisms) G1 > S transition (STARTing the cell cycle) G1: external stimuli Can the cell divide? Synthesis of new G1 cyclin(s) (activation of Cdk/G1 cyclin complex) 1 Restriction point (no way back!) Phosphorylation of targets (transcription factors) 2 Transcription of G1- cyclin(s) and 3 Transcription of S-phase cyclin(s) Transition G1 > S Main components Only S-phase cyclins promote DNA replication G1 > S transition (STARTing the cell cycle) G1: external stimuli Can the cell divide? Synthesis of new G1 cyclin(s) (activation of Cdk/G1 cyclin complex) 1 Phosphorylation of targets (transcription factors) 2 Sic1 Transcription of G1- cyclin(s) and 3 Transcription of S-phase cyclin(s) Transition G1 > S What is Sic1? Sic1 is an inhibitor of Cyclin Dependent Kinases (CKI). It blocks the activity of Cdk in the presence of S-phase cyclins (It binds to S-Cdk but not G1-Cdk) CKI has to be removed before S-phase !!! Multisite phosphorylation of Sic1 S-Cdk complex inactive G1-Cdk complex S-Cdk complex active Multisite phosphorylation of Sic1 Multiple phosphorylation of Sic1 (from G1/S-Cdk complexes) is required for its efficient degradation Cooperativity Creation of a switch -> proper length of G1 ensured Multisite phosphorylation of Sic1 feedback Summary G1 There is nearly no Cdk activity in G1 phase because all cyclins get degraded at the end of mitosis New cyclins need to be synthesized in order to start the next cell cycle The G1 cyclins are synthesized in response to EXTERNAL factors G1 cyclins are resistant to the degradation G1 cyclins/CDKs trigger transcription of many genes required for cellular proliferation – including S-phase cyclins Before S-phase can start, CKI (Cdk Kinase Inhibitors) needs to be removed by degradation. S phase – genome replication Semiconservative replication describes the mechanism by which DNA is replicated in all known cells. This mechanism of replication was one of three models originally proposed for DNA replication: - Semiconservative replication would produce two copies that each contained one of the original strands and one new strand. - Conservative replication would leave the two original template DNA strands together in a double helix and would produce a copy composed of two new strands containing all of the new DNA base pairs. - Dispersive replication would produce two copies of the DNA, both containing distinct regions of DNA composed of either both original strands or both new strands. S phase – genome replication The majority of organisms use multiple replication origins PROBLEM The different ORIs need to be synchronized because the DNA must be duplicated exactly once per cell cycle How? There are 2 steps S phase – genome replication 1) Licensing = Process in which ORIs acquire competence to replicate through the loading of inactive helicase precursors; occurs prior to S phase (in G1) through formation of pre-replicative complexes (pre-RCs) LOADING 2) Firing = Process in which the replication starts (in S phase) ACTIVATION S phase – genome replication LOADING – CDK off Phosphorylation (-) ACTIVATION – CDK on Phosphorylation (+) S phase summary DNA replication is semi-conservative and initiates at many sites in order to be fast Pre-RC can be established only from unphosphorylated proteins – end of the M phase - G1 For replication initiation, the pre-RC needs to be phosphorylated by Cdk-S phase cyclins No pre-RC can be established when there is Cdk activity – PREVENTION OF RE-REPLICATION Checkpoints 1 2 3 4 Checkpoints – kinase cascade Control mechanisms which ensure proper division of the cell. Each checkpoint serves as a potential halting point along the cell cycle, during which the conditions of the cell are assessed, with progression through the various phases of the cell cycle occurring when favorable conditions are met. Different Signals of DNA alteration The expression of sensor + effector kinases are sufficient to activate the checkpoint, even without DNA damage Local Sensor kinases Phosphorylation Effector kinases Effects Checkpoints – kinase cascade How does the checkpoint induce cell cycle arrest? Inhibition of CDK (in mammals) Inhibition of CDK targets (in yeast) Different regulation of Cdk activity: Activation by cyclins Inhibition by CKI Inhibitory and stimulatory phosphorylation M phase and chromosome condensation/cohesion First step: preparation (from prophase to metaphase) Metaphase > Anaphase transition Second step: real cell division (from anaphase to cytokinesis) M phase and chromosome condensation/cohesion Chromosomes need to condense!!! Condensin Sister chromatid Cohesin 1) Cohesin forms a ring that mediates sister chromatid cohesion (it keeps the 2 chromatids together). It starts to be deposited during the S phase 2) Condensin also forms a ring and helps chromosomes condensation. It has a similar structure compared to cohesin Metaphase > anaphase transition. Exit from mitosis Exit from mitosis (between metaphase and anaphase) requires inactivation of Cdk by degradation of mitotic cyclin The degradation is mediated by the anaphase-promoting-complex (APC), an E3 ubiquitin ligase Metaphase > anaphase transition. Exit from mitosis APC activation requires both MPF activity (M-cyclin/Cdk) and the presence of the Cdc20 activating subunit Cdk facilitates its own inactivation (mitotic checkpoint and unknown mechanisms ensure delay to give Cdk enough time to act) What keeps the replicated chromosomes together? Sister chromatid cohesion (= protein complex that forms a ring around the two chromatids) 1 2 Two different events drive the mitotic exit !!! 1) 2) Active APC complex degrades securin with activation of separase (that cleaves cohesin) Active APC complex also induces the degradation of cyclin with subsequent inactivation of Cdk Transition from M phase to the next G1 Problem: Cdk-Mcyclin phosphorylates/activates the APC complex (only phosphorylated APC/Cdc20 is functional) APC/Cdc20 complex degrades cyclin > decrease in Cdk activity Less Cdk activity induces a reduction in the phosphorylation of the APC complex Cyclin concentration starts to increase again > the cell cannot move out of mitosis to reach a new G1 phase Metaphase > anaphase transition. Exit from mitosis Solution (to keep the level of M-cyclin low): The APC complex has to stay active after mitosis There is a second APC activator: Cdh1 (green line in figure below) APC/Cdh1 is inhibited by MPF (= Cyclin M/Cdk complex) and becomes active only upon drop of MPF activity → M-cyclins degradation → exit from mitosis Cdh1- Two APC complexes