4.5 Article

UbcH10 has a rate-limiting role in G1 phase but might not act in the spindle checkpoint or as part of an autonomous oscillator

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 121, Issue 14, Pages 2319-2326

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.031591

Keywords

APC/C; mitosis; cyclin; cell cycle; ubiquitin

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Ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis mediated by the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) ubiquitin ligase lies at the heart of the cell cycle. The APC/C targets mitotic cyclins for destruction in mitosis and G1 phase and is then inactivated at S phase, thereby generating the alternating states of high and low cyclin-Cdk activity required for the alternation of mitosis and DNA replication. Two key questions are how the APC/C is held in check by the spindle-assembly checkpoint to delay cells in mitosis in the presence of improperly attached chromosomes, and how the APC/C is inactivated once cells exit mitosis. The ubiquitin-conjugating protein UbcH10 has been proposed to be crucial in the answers to both questions. However, here we show that the behaviour of UbcH10 is inconsistent with both a crucial role in the spindle checkpoint and in inactivating the APC/C as part of an autonomous oscillator. Instead, we find that the rate-limiting role of UbcH10 is only at the end of G1 phase, just before DNA replication begins.

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