Roughex Mediates G1 Arrest through a Physical Association with Cyclin A
Roughex Mediates G1 Arrest through a Physical Association with Cyclin A
Differentiation in the developing Drosophila eye requires synchronization of cells in the G(1) phase of the cell cycle. The roughex gene product plays a key role in this synchronization by negatively regulating cyclin A protein levels in G(1). We show here that coexpressed Roughex and cyclin A physically interact in vivo. Roughex is a nuclear protein, while cyclin A was previously shown to be exclusively cytoplasmic during interphase in the embryo. In contrast, we demonstrate that in interphase cells in the eye imaginal disk cyclin A is present in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. In the presence of ectopic Roughex, cyclin A becomes strictly nuclear and is later degraded. Nuclear targeting of both Roughex and cyclin A under these conditions is dependent on a C-terminal nuclear localization signal in Roughex. Disruption of this signal results in cytoplasmic localization of both Roughex and cyclin A, confirming a physical interaction between these molecules. Cyclin A interacts with both Cdc2 and Cdc2c, the Drosophila Cdk2 homolog, and Roughex inhibits the histone H1 kinase activities of both cyclin A-Cdc2 and cyclin A-Cdc2c complexes in whole-cell extracts. Two-hybrid experiments suggested that the inhibition of kinase activity by Roughex results from competition with the cyclin-dependent kinase subunit for binding to cyclin A. These findings suggest that Roughex can influence the intracellular distribution of cyclin A and define Roughex as a distinct and specialized cell cycle inhibitor for cyclin A-dependent kinase activity.
- National Institute of Health Pakistan
- National Institutes of Health United States
- National Cancer Institute United States
Cell Nucleus, Cytoplasm, Microscopy, Confocal, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Blotting, Western, G1 Phase, Cyclin A, Immunohistochemistry, CDC2 Protein Kinase, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Drosophila, Photoreceptor Cells, Invertebrate, Phosphorylation, Eye Proteins, Luciferases, Cells, Cultured, Conserved Sequence, Gene Deletion, Plasmids
Cell Nucleus, Cytoplasm, Microscopy, Confocal, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Blotting, Western, G1 Phase, Cyclin A, Immunohistochemistry, CDC2 Protein Kinase, Animals, Drosophila Proteins, Drosophila, Photoreceptor Cells, Invertebrate, Phosphorylation, Eye Proteins, Luciferases, Cells, Cultured, Conserved Sequence, Gene Deletion, Plasmids
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