UBIQUITINATION AND DEGRADATION OF POLO-LIKE KINASE
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Date
2000-07
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental
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Abstract
The actions of many proteins are involved in the initiation and
regulation of the cell cycle. Understanding the function of these
proteins is essential to events such as tumorigenesis, cancer
progression and the regulation of cellular growth. Specific proteins
involved in cell cycle regulation have been extensively studied by
many laboratories in recent years. One class of critical cell cycle
regulators includes cyclins and cyclin dependent kinases. Another
family of cell cycle regulated kinases, the Polo-Like Kinases (Plk's),
have recently been implicated in the regulation of mitosis. Polo and
its homologs have been shown to be involved in multiple aspects of
the cell cycle. Polo-Like Kinase is localized at the spindle poles,
centromeres and midbody during mitosis and can activate cdc25, the
regulator of the maturation promoting factor (MPF), in Xenopus
laevis.
Mammalian Plk protein levels are low in G1, accumulate during
S phase and peak at the G2M transition, coincident with the
appearance of a phosphorylated form of Plk. Following mitosis,
there is an abrupt dephosphorylation and disappearance of Plk
1
protein with kinetics similar to the loss of cyclin B. This loss of
Plk protein cannot be totally accounted for by variations in the
synthesis rate of Plk protein, but could possibly be explained by
either expulsion from the cell in the midbody and/or degradation by
the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. Both in vitro and in vivo
experiments indicate that the loss of Plk protein is mostly a result
of ubiquitin proteasome-mediated degradation. In vitro synthesized
Plk protein can be degraded by partially purified proteasome
preparations. This in vitro degradation can be blocked by specific
proteasome inhibitors. The loss of Plk protein detected in vivo after
release from a mitotic block was also prevented by specific
proteasome inhibitors. Furthermore, poly-ubiquitinated Plk was
detected in cell lysates. It is concluded that Plk protein levels are
apparently regulated by a combination of changes in synthesis rates,
expulsion in the midbody and specific post-mitotic degradation
through the ubiquitination-proteasome pathway.