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1.
EMBO J ; 42(20): e112630, 2023 10 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37712330

RESUMEN

Two major mechanisms safeguard genome stability during mitosis: the mitotic checkpoint delays mitosis until all chromosomes have attached to microtubules, and the kinetochore-microtubule error-correction pathway keeps this attachment process free from errors. We demonstrate here that the optimal strength and dynamics of these processes are set by a kinase-phosphatase pair (PLK1-PP2A) that engage in negative feedback from adjacent phospho-binding motifs on the BUB complex. Uncoupling this feedback to skew the balance towards PLK1 produces a strong checkpoint, hypostable microtubule attachments and mitotic delays. Conversely, skewing the balance towards PP2A causes a weak checkpoint, hyperstable microtubule attachments and chromosome segregation errors. These phenotypes are associated with altered BUB complex recruitment to KNL1-MELT motifs, implicating PLK1-PP2A in controlling auto-amplification of MELT phosphorylation. In support, KNL1-BUB disassembly becomes contingent on PLK1 inhibition when KNL1 is engineered to contain excess MELT motifs. This elevates BUB-PLK1/PP2A complex levels on metaphase kinetochores, stabilises kinetochore-microtubule attachments, induces chromosome segregation defects and prevents KNL1-BUB disassembly at anaphase. Together, these data demonstrate how a bifunctional PLK1/PP2A module has evolved together with the MELT motifs to optimise BUB complex dynamics and ensure accurate chromosome segregation.


Asunto(s)
Cinetocoros , Puntos de Control de la Fase M del Ciclo Celular , Humanos , Cinetocoros/metabolismo , Proteínas Serina-Treonina Quinasas/metabolismo , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/metabolismo , Segregación Cromosómica , Fosforilación , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Mitosis , Células HeLa
2.
EMBO J ; 41(6): e108599, 2022 03 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35037284

RESUMEN

CDK4/6 inhibitors arrest the cell cycle in G1-phase. They are approved to treat breast cancer and are also undergoing clinical trials against a range of other tumour types. To facilitate these efforts, it is important to understand why a cytostatic arrest in G1 causes long-lasting effects on tumour growth. Here, we demonstrate that a prolonged G1 arrest following CDK4/6 inhibition downregulates replisome components and impairs origin licencing. Upon release from that arrest, many cells fail to complete DNA replication and exit the cell cycle in a p53-dependent manner. If cells fail to withdraw from the cell cycle following DNA replication problems, they enter mitosis and missegregate chromosomes causing excessive DNA damage, which further limits their proliferative potential. These effects are observed in a range of tumour types, including breast cancer, implying that genotoxic stress is a common outcome of CDK4/6 inhibition. This unanticipated ability of CDK4/6 inhibitors to induce DNA damage now provides a rationale to better predict responsive tumour types and effective combination therapies, as demonstrated by the fact that CDK4/6 inhibition induces sensitivity to chemotherapeutics that also cause replication stress.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias de la Mama , Neoplasias de la Mama/tratamiento farmacológico , Neoplasias de la Mama/genética , Neoplasias de la Mama/patología , Ciclo Celular , División Celular , Línea Celular Tumoral , Quinasa 4 Dependiente de la Ciclina/genética , Quinasa 6 Dependiente de la Ciclina/genética , Femenino , Fase G1 , Humanos
3.
Soft Matter ; 17(11): 3105-3112, 2021 Mar 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33598667

RESUMEN

Yield stress materials deform as elastic solids or flow as viscous liquids, depending on the applied stress, which also allows them to trap particles below a certain size or density threshold. To investigate the conditions for such a transition at the microscale, we use an optofluidic microrheometer, based on the scattering of an infrared beam onto a microbead, which reaches forces in the nN scale. We perform creep experiments on a model soft material composed of swollen microgels, determining the limits of linear response and yield stress values, and observe quantitative agreement with bulk measurements. However, the motion of the microbead, both below and above yielding, reflects distinctive microscale features of the surrounding material, whose plastic rearrangements were investigated by us using small, passive tracers.

4.
Life Sci Alliance ; 2(3)2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31068378

RESUMEN

Eukaryotic cells treated with microtubule-targeting agents activate the spindle assembly checkpoint to arrest in mitosis and prevent chromosome mis-segregation. A fraction of mitotically arrested cells overcomes the block and proliferates even under persistent checkpoint-activating conditions. Here, we asked what allows proliferation in such unfavourable conditions. We report that yeast cells are delayed in mitosis at each division, implying that their spindle assembly checkpoint remains responsive. The arrest causes their cell cycle to be elongated and results in a size increase. Growth saturates at mitosis and correlates with the repression of various factors involved in translation. Contrary to unperturbed cells, growth of cells with an active checkpoint requires Cdh1. This peculiar cell cycle correlates with global changes in protein expression whose signatures partly overlap with the environmental stress response. Hence, cells dividing with an active checkpoint develop recognisable specific traits that allow them to successfully complete cell division notwithstanding a constant mitotic checkpoint arrest. These properties distinguish them from unperturbed cells. Our observation may have implications for the identification of new therapeutic windows and targets in tumors.


Asunto(s)
Puntos de Control del Ciclo Celular , Mitosis/fisiología , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , División Celular , Proliferación Celular , Tamaño de la Célula , Perfilación de la Expresión Génica , Modelos Biológicos , Mutación , Análisis de la Célula Individual , Transcriptoma
5.
ACS Nano ; 12(10): 9750-9762, 2018 10 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30280566

RESUMEN

Self-synthesizing materials, in which supramolecular structuring enhances the formation of new molecules that participate to the process, represent an intriguing notion to account for the first appearance of biomolecules in an abiotic Earth. We present here a study of the abiotic formation of interchain phosphodiester bonds in solutions of short RNA oligomers in various states of supramolecular arrangement and their reaction kinetics. We found a spectrum of conditions in which RNA oligomers self-assemble and phase separate into highly concentrated ordered fluid liquid crystal (LC) microdomains. We show that such supramolecular state provides a template guiding their ligation into hundred-bases long chains. The quantitative analysis presented here demonstrates that nucleic acid LC boosts the rate of end-to-end ligation and suppresses the formation of the otherwise dominant cyclic oligomers. These results strengthen the concept of supramolecular ordering as an efficient pathway toward the emergence of the RNA World in the primordial Earth.


Asunto(s)
Cristales Líquidos/química , ARN/síntesis química , Animales , Crotalus , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Cinética , Fosfodiesterasa I/metabolismo , Polimerizacion , ARN/química , ARN/aislamiento & purificación
6.
Curr Biol ; 28(1): 28-37.e7, 2018 01 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29249657

RESUMEN

Improperly attached chromosomes activate the mitotic checkpoint that arrests cell division before anaphase. Cells can maintain an arrest for several hours but eventually will resume proliferation, a process we refer to as adaptation. Whether adapting cells bypass an active block or whether the block has to be removed to resume proliferation is not clear. Likewise, it is not known whether all cells of a genetically homogeneous population are equally capable to adapt. Here, we show that the mitotic checkpoint is operational when yeast cells adapt and that each cell has the same propensity to adapt. Our results are consistent with a model of the mitotic checkpoint where adaptation is driven by random fluctuations of APC/CCdc20, the molecular species inhibited by the checkpoint. Our data provide a quantitative framework for understanding how cells overcome a constant stimulus that halts cell cycle progression.


Asunto(s)
Cromosomas Fúngicos/fisiología , Puntos de Control de la Fase M del Ciclo Celular/fisiología , Nocodazol/efectos adversos , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/fisiología , Moduladores de Tubulina/efectos adversos , Adaptación Fisiológica , Modelos Teóricos , Procesos Estocásticos
7.
J Proteome Res ; 16(4): 1719-1727, 2017 04 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28282139

RESUMEN

In global proteomic analysis, it is estimated that proteins span from millions to less than 100 copies per cell. The challenge of protein quantitation by classic shotgun proteomic techniques relies on the presence of missing values in peptides belonging to low-abundance proteins that lowers intraruns reproducibility affecting postdata statistical analysis. Here, we present a new analytical workflow MvM (missing value monitoring) able to recover quantitation of missing values generated by shotgun analysis. In particular, we used confident data-dependent acquisition (DDA) quantitation only for proteins measured in all the runs, while we filled the missing values with data-independent acquisition analysis using the library previously generated in DDA. We analyzed cell cycle regulated proteins, as they are low abundance proteins with highly dynamic expression levels. Indeed, we found that cell cycle related proteins are the major components of the missing values-rich proteome. Using the MvM workflow, we doubled the number of robustly quantified cell cycle related proteins, and we reduced the number of missing values achieving robust quantitation for proteins over ∼50 molecules per cell. MvM allows lower quantification variance among replicates for low abundance proteins with respect to DDA analysis, which demonstrates the potential of this novel workflow to measure low abundance, dynamically regulated proteins.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/aislamiento & purificación , Péptidos/aislamiento & purificación , Proteoma/genética , Proteómica , Proteínas de Ciclo Celular/genética , Péptidos/genética , Espectrometría de Masas en Tándem
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