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APC/CCdh1 is required for the termination of chromosomal passenger complex activity upon mitotic exit

Authors :
Tsunematsu, Takaaki
Arakaki, Rieko
Kawai, Hidehiko
Ruppert, Jan
Tsuneyama, Koichi
Ishimaru, Naozumi
Earnshaw, William C.
Pagano, Michele
Kudo, Yasusei
Tsunematsu, Takaaki
Arakaki, Rieko
Kawai, Hidehiko
Ruppert, Jan
Tsuneyama, Koichi
Ishimaru, Naozumi
Earnshaw, William C.
Pagano, Michele
Kudo, Yasusei
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

During mitosis, the chromosomal passenger complex (CPC) ensures the faithful transmission of the genome. The CPC is composed of the enzymatic component Aurora B (AURKB) and the three regulatory and targeting components borealin, INCENP, and survivin (also known as BIRC5). Although the CPC is known to be involved in diverse mitotic events, it is still unclear how CPC function terminates after mitosis. Here we show that borealin is ubiquitylated by the anaphase promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) and its cofactor Cdh1 (also known as FZR1) and is subsequently degraded in G1 phase. Cdh1 binds to regions within the N terminus of borealin that act as a non-canonical degron. Aurora B has also been shown previously to be degraded by the APC/CCdh1 from late mitosis to G1. Indeed, Cdh1 depletion sustains an Aurora B activity with stable levels of borealin and Aurora B throughout the cell cycle, and causes reduced efficiency of DNA replication after release from serum starvation. Notably, inhibition of Aurora B kinase activity improves the efficiency of DNA replication in Cdh1-depleted cells. We thus propose that APC/CCdh1 terminates CPC activity upon mitotic exit and thereby contributes to proper control of DNA replication.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375223734
Document Type :
Electronic Resource