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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1998, p. 6224-6237, Vol. 18, No. 11
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Ectopic Expression of cdc2/cdc28 Kinase Subunit Homo
sapiens 1 Uncouples Cyclin B Metabolism from the Mitotic
Spindle Cell Cycle Checkpoint
Mary L.
Hixon,
Ana I.
Flores,
Mark W.
Wagner, and
Antonio
Gualberto*
Department of Physiology & Biophysics and
Ireland Cancer Center, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve
University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106
Received 27 March 1998/Returned for modification 15 May
1998/Accepted 4 August 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Primary human fibroblasts arrest growth in response to the
inhibition of mitosis by mitotic spindle-depolymerizing
drugs. We show that the mechanism of mitotic arrest is transient and implicates a decrease in the expression of cdc2/cdc28
kinase subunit Homo sapiens 1 (CKsHs1) and a delay in
the metabolism of cyclin B. Primary human fibroblasts infected with a
retroviral vector that drives the expression of a mutant p53
protein failed to downregulate CKsHs1 expression, degraded
cyclin B despite the absence of chromosomal segregation,
and underwent DNA endoreduplication. In addition, ectopic expression of
CKsHs1 interfered with the control of cyclin B metabolism by the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint and resulted in a higher
tendency to undergo DNA endoreduplication. These results demonstrate
that an altered regulation of CKsHs1 and cyclin B in cells that
carry mutant p53 undermines the mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint and facilitates the development of aneuploidy.
These data may contribute to the understanding of the origin of
heteroploidy in mutant p53 cells.
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INTRODUCTION |
The onset of each phase of the cell
cycle depends on the completion of the previous phase. These events are
coordinated by cell cycle checkpoints (19). Cell cycle
checkpoints are pathways that ensure the timely progression of the cell
cycle, and they play a crucial role in the maintenance of genomic
integrity by coordinating the cell cycle regulatory machinery with DNA
repair and cell death pathways. At mitosis, the mitotic spindle
cell cycle checkpoint prevents the onset of anaphase, the actual
segregation of chromosomes, if the integrity of the mitotic
spindle is compromised. Recent data have suggested a role for the p53
tumor suppressor gene product in the control of cell ploidy.
Fibroblasts isolated from individuals with Li-Fraumeni syndrome have a
marked tendency to become heteroploid in culture (5). These
individuals are born with heterozygous mutations in the p53 tumor
suppressor gene (39, 57). Heteroploidy is also commonly
found in p53 null cells in culture (27) and in vivo
(13) in p53 knockout mice. Intriguingly, overexpression of a
mutant p53 protein on a p53 null background accelerated the appearance
of polyploidy in a myelomonocytic cell line (50).
Also, the expression of mutant p53 proteins in human colon carcinoma
cells and murine cell lines causes karyotypic abnormalities, including
an increase in ploidy levels during growth in culture
(1). We have seen that Li-Fraumeni syndrome fibroblasts
that carry heterozygous structural p53 mutant proteins progress
to polyploidy when incubated in the presence of
mitotic spindle inhibitors (22). However,
normal human fibroblasts, p53 null Li-Fraumeni fibroblasts, and
normal human fibroblasts infected with a retrovirus that expresses the
human papillomavirus 16 E6, which binds to and promotes the degradation
of p53, arrest growth when incubated in the presence of mitotic
inhibitors (22). Progression to polyploidy in
E6-expressing human fibroblasts, however, has been reported by others
(16). In agreement with our previous results, Lanni and
Jacks have recently reported that p53 null mouse fibroblasts have a
normal mitotic spindle checkpoint (35). However,
these fibroblasts may progress to polyploidy due to the
inactivation of a p53-dependent postmitotic checkpoint (35). In addition, inactivation of wild-type p53 by the
overexpression of a truncated (C terminus) p53 protein in a murine
prolymphocytic cell line led to polyploidy (41).
The cell cycle G2/M transition and progression through
mitosis is driven by the kinase activity of a complex referred
to as maturation- or M-phase-promoting factor (MPF). This complex
consists of a catalytic subunit (34-kDa cyclin-dependent kinase, cdc2), a regulatory subunit (cyclin B proteins), and associated proteins (47). Entry into mitosis requires MPF activation, a
process that depends upon an increase in cyclin B expression and the
dephosphorylation of cdc2. Progression through mitosis and
cytokinesis requires the subsequent inactivation of MPF, which depends
in part on cyclin B degradation. Experiments with yeast indicate that
the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint feeds into the cell
cycle regulatory machinery at mitosis by a pathway that delays
the degradation of cyclin B and maintains cdc2 kinase activity
(3). Thus, cyclin B is degraded and MPF is inactivated only
after certain aspects of mitosis related to spindle assembly
and disassembly are properly completed. The activity of the
p34cdc2-cyclin B complex is thought to be regulated by its interaction
with other proteins (47). We have focused our attention on
two low-molecular-weight proteins known as cdc2/cdc28 kinase subunit
Homo sapiens, CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 (53).
These proteins were previously identified as the human homologs of the
small cdc28- and cdc2-associated proteins of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Cks1, and Schizosaccharomyces pombe,
Suc1 (53). CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 bind the
cyclin B-cdc2 complex (53). In S. pombe,
inactivation of suc1 causes cells to arrest in mitosis with
high levels of Cdc13 (the S. pombe cyclin B homolog) and high MPF kinase activity (4, 42). Thus, suc1 inactivation mimics the effects of the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint on cyclin B levels and MPF activity. It has been proposed that Cks
family members may play a critical role in the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint (54).
We show that primary human fibroblasts arrest growth in response to the
inhibition of mitosis by mitotic
spindle-depolymerizing drugs. This growth arrest was transient
and was accompanied by a delay in the metabolism of cyclin B and
a transient decrease in the expression of CKsHs1.
Inactivation of p53 by the expression of the human papillomavirus 16 protein E6 did not affect the effect of a mitotic inhibitor on
cyclin B metabolism. By contrast, primary human fibroblasts expressing
a dominant mutant p53 protein responded very differently to
mitotic inhibition: they failed to downregulate CKsHs1
expression, degraded cyclin B despite the absence of chromosomal segregation, and underwent DNA endoreduplication. These results show
that in human cells, mutant p53 proteins abrogate the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint by interfering with the regulation of
CKsHs1 expression and cyclin B metabolism at mitosis.
Consistent with this conclusion, we further show that ectopic
expression of CKsHs1 abrogates the control of cyclin B metabolism
by the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint pathway and
facilitates the development of polyploidy. These data
demonstrate that CKsHs1 plays a key role in the control of
mitosis in human cells and that altered expression of
CKsHs1 in human cells carrying mutant p53 proteins contributes to
the development of aneuploidy.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids and cell culture.
The expression vectors pBabe
CKsHs1 and pBabe CKsHs2 were created by subcloning CKsHs1
and CKsHs2 cDNA fragments into the retroviral vector pBabe, which
contains a puromycin selectable marker (42a). CKsHs1 and
CKsHs2 cDNA fragments were cloned by reverse transcription
PCR (RT-PCR) with primers
5'-AGAGCGATCATGTCGCACAAACAA-3' and
5'-TCATTTCTTTGGTTTCTTGGGTAG-3' (CKsHs1) and primers
5'-ACGAGGATGGCCCACAAGCAGATCTACTAC-3' and
5'-TTTTTGTTGATCTTTTGGAAGAGG-3' (CKsHs2) and 1 µg of
poly(A) mRNA isolated from neonatal human foreskin fibroblasts (NHF). CKsHs cDNA sequences were then subcloned into the pBabe
snaB1 site. Plasmid construction was verified by DNA
sequencing. The retroviral expression vector pBabe p53 143A was a gift
from J. Jacobberger, Case Western Reserve University (Cleveland, Ohio), and was generated by the subcloning of a p53 mutant 143A cDNA fragment
formed by BamHI digestion of plasmid CMV-p53 143A into the
pBabe BamHI site (33). The murine sarcoma virus
long terminal repeat-based p53 expression vectors were a gift from C. Finlay, GlaxoWellcome (Research Triangle Park, N.C.) (21).
The retroviral vectors LXSN and LXSN-E6 were a gift from D. A. Galloway, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center (Seattle, Wash.)
(26). The CMV-bcl2 plasmid was a gift from M. W. Mayo
and A. S. Baldwin, University of North Carolina Lineberger
Comprehensive Cancer Center (Chapel Hill, N.C.).
NHF, C2C12, and 10T1/2 cells were incubated in Dulbecco's modified
Eagle's medium (DMEM) plus 10% dialyzed fetal bovine serum (FBS;
GIBCO) supplemented with penicillin (10 U/ml) and streptomycin (10 U/ml). NHF were a gift from C. Muro-Cacho, University of South Florida
(Tampa, Fla.). C2C12 and 10T1/2 cells were a gift from K. Guo, Rhone
Poulenc Rorer (Philadelphia, Pa.). NHF were incubated in
Polybrene-supplemented medium obtained from PA317 cells infected with
the retroviral vector pBabe, pBabe-p53 143A, or pBabe-CKsHs1. Selection was carried out by incubation in media supplemented with 3 µg of puromycin (Sigma) per ml. NHF pBabe/LXSN, NHF pBabe/LXSN-E6, and NHF pBabe 143A/LXSN-E6 cells were generated by coinfection of
primary NHF with the corresponding pBabe- and LXSN-based vectors followed by double selection in puromycin (3 µg/ml)- and G418 (400 µg/ml)-supplemented media. C2C12-pBabe and C2C12-pBabe 143A cells
were generated by transfection of pBabe or pBabe p53 143A followed by
selection in puromycin-supplemented medium. C2C12-bcl2/pBabe and
C2C12-bcl2/pBabe p53 143A cells were generated by cotransfection of
C2C12 cells with CMVneo-bcl2 and pBabe or pBabe p53 143A and double
selection in puromycin (3 µg/ml)- and G418 (500 µg/ml)-supplemented media. Control 10T1/2 cells (10T1/2 pBabe) and 10T1/2 cells
overexpressing CKsHs1 or CKsHs2 were generated by transfection
of 10T1/2 cells with the respective pBabe-based vector followed by
selection in puromycin-supplemented medium. Cell populations were
analyzed at passages 1 to 3 after drug selection.
Analysis of mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint
status.
Cells were analyzed by a modification of the technique
described previously (22). When both total DNA content and
newly synthesized DNA were determined, the cells were labeled with 10 µM bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for 4 h, trypsinized, counted, and fixed with 70% ethanol. Fixed cells were centrifuged and treated with
0.08% pepsin for the preparation of nuclei. The nuclear pellet was
resuspended in 100 µl of a 1:5 dilution of anti-BrdU fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated antibody (Becton Dickinson), incubated for 30 min, washed, stained with 50 µg of propidium iodide (Aldrich Chemical
Co.) per ml, and analyzed by flow cytometry for cell cycle distribution
of the DNA content. For sorting, cells were stained with Hoechst 33342 (Sigma) at a final concentration of 2.0 µg/ml in culture medium at
37°C for 1 h. Flow cytometry was carried out with a Coulter
Elite ESP flow cytometer and analyzed with CellQuest software (Becton
Dickinson).
Immunoprecipitations and Western analysis.
Antibodies
were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotech, except for
anti-
-actin, which was from Sigma. In immunoprecipitation studies, 2 × 107 human fibroblasts were washed twice for 10 min in 10 ml of methionine-free DMEM and incubated for 4 h at
37°C in 5 ml of new medium supplemented with 2.5 mCi of
[35S]methionine (1,175 Ci/mmol; NEN). The cells were
collected by centrifugation, lysed in 1 ml of immunoprecipitation
buffer (phosphate-buffered saline containing 1% Triton X-100, 0.1%
sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS], 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM
dithiothreitol, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride), and
subjected to centrifugation at 1,500 × g for 10 min.
Cell lysates were incubated in the presence of 1 µg of the indicated
antibody at 4°C for 4 h and then subjected to incubation for
1 h with protein A/G-agarose (Santa Cruz). Immunoprecipitates were
collected by centrifugation at 5,000 × g for 10 min,
washed twice with 250 µl of immunoprecipitation buffer, and
resuspended in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) sample
buffer, boiled for 5 min, and subjected to SDS-PAGE (15%
polyacrylamide). Gels were exposed to a PhosphorImager screen and
analyzed with ImageQuant software (Molecular Dynamics).
For Western analysis, cells were harvested, lysed in 1 ml of lysis
buffer (phosphate-buffered saline containing 1% Triton
X-100, 0.1%
SDS, 1 mM dithiothreitol, and 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl
fluoride), and
subjected to centrifugation at 1,500 ×
g for 5
min.
Equal amounts of proteins were assayed under each set of
conditions as
determined by the Bradford protein assay (Bio-Rad).
SDS-PAGE was
carried out at a 30-mA constant current in a 15%
polyacrylamide gel
(Bio-Rad). Proteins were transferred to Immobilon-P
membranes
(Millipore) and probed as recommended by the manufacturer.
Anti-p53
(DO-1), anti-bcl2, anti-CKsHs1, and anti-

-actin antibodies
were
used (unless otherwise indicated) at dilutions of 1:500,
1:1,000, 1:100
and 1:10,000, respectively, in phosphate-buffered
saline-5% dry
milk. The membranes were hybridized overnight at
4°C. For detection,
the membranes were incubated for 1 h in a
1:10,000 or 1:5,000
dilution of horseradish peroxidase-linked
anti-mouse or
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G, respectively (Santa
Cruz). Horseradish
peroxidase luminescence reactions were carried
out with the ECL kit
(Amersham). The membranes were exposed to
Hyperfilm (Kodak), and
protein bands were detected by autoradiography.
Low-exposure
autoradiographs were scanned with an LKB densitometer
to determine peak
areas.
Northern analysis.
RNA was isolated from human fibroblasts,
C2C12 cells, or 10T1/2 cells with Trizol reagent (GIBCO). For Northern
analysis, 30 µg of total RNA was resolved in a 1.3%
agarose-formaldehyde gel, visualized with ethidium bromide,
transferred to nitrocellulose filters (Amersham), fixed by UV
cross-linking, and baked at 80°C for 1 h. For
hybridizations, 106 cpm of a random-primed
32P-labeled (Boehringer Mannheim) CKsHs1 or
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) cDNA fragment per ml
was used as a probe. Hybridizations were carried out as described
previously (52). The membranes were exposed to Hyperfilm
(Kodak), and RNA bands were detected by autoradiography.
 |
RESULTS |
Expression of a dominant mutant p53 protein in primary NHF
abrogates a transient mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint.
To study the molecular mechanisms underlining the
effects of mutant p53 on mitosis in human cells, we created
cell populations of mutant-p53-expressing primary NHF by the stable
expression of a dominant p53 mutant protein in these cells, using a
retroviral vector (pBabe p53 143A). Control cells were infected with an
insertless retroviral vector (pBabe). Stable expression of the mutant
p53 protein in NHF was demonstrated by metabolic labeling and
immunoprecipitation with an anti-mutant p53-specific antibody (Fig.
1A).

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FIG. 1.
(A) Immunoprecipitation of mutant p53 with antibody P Ab
240 in primary NHF infected with vector pBabe (NHF-pBabe) or vector
pBabe p53 143A (NHF-pBabe p53 143A). The cells were incubated with
radiolabeled methionine, harvested, and lysed, P Ab 240-reactive p53
was immunoprecipitated, and the immunoprecipitates were resolved by
SDS-PAGE and exposed to a PhosphorImager screen. (B) Analysis of the
cell cycle distribution of the DNA content in NHF-pBabe and NHF-pBabe
p53 143A cells. Cells were incubated in the absence or presence of 200 ng of colcemid per ml for two to four population doubling times (PDL).
The population doubling times for NHF-pBabe and NHF-pBabe p53 143A
cells were 48 and 42 h, respectively. Following incubations, the
cells were harvested and processed for flow cytometric determination of
DNA content as indicated in Materials and Methods. Polyclonal
populations at passage 2 were assayed. The data are representative of
at least three independent experiments.
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|
Control and mutant p53-expressing cell populations were analyzed for
the integrity of the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint.
The cells were incubated in the presence of the mitotic
spindle-depolymerizing
drug colcemid or nocodazol. Mitotic
arrest in the control cells
and S-phase reentry and generation of cells
with an octaploid
DNA (8N) content in the mutant-p53 cell population
were observed
(Fig.
1B, colcemid 2 PDL). Polyploid DNA content
was seen in mutant-p53-expressing
cells incubated with a
mitotic inhibitor (colcemid or nocodazol)
but not with a cell
cycle S-phase inhibitor (thymidine or hydroxyurea
[results not
shown]). When both cultures were incubated with colcemid
for up to
four population doubling times, a significant level
of
polyploidy was observed not only in the mutant-p53-expressing
cells but also in the control cells (Fig.
1B, NHF pBabe, colcemid
4 PDL, 12% of 8N cells). Nevertheless, the proportion of cells
with a
polyploid DNA content was always higher in the mutant-p53-expressing
cell population (Fig.
1B, NHF pBabe-p53 143A, colcemid 4 PDL,
28% of
8N cells and 4% of 16N cells). The presence of polyploidy
in
these cells was confirmed by counting chromosomes in metaphase
spreads
(results not shown). These results extend our previous
observations
with mutant-p53-expressing fibroblasts (
22) and
suggest that
the activation of the mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint
in human cells does not result in permanent growth
arrest but in
transient delay of mitosis. We hypothesized that
the cell
population carrying a mutant p53 protein accumulated
polyploid cells at
a higher rate than normal cells did because
mutant p53 proteins
abrogate a transient mechanism of mitotic
arrest.
The results shown in Fig.
1 are consistent with an alternative
mechanism. These cells were obtained from biopsy specimens
of human
skin. Therefore, they are not clonal in origin, and so
polyploidy could be originated by the growth of a subpopulation
of cells with an inactive mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint,
namely, mitotic checkpoint-negative cells.
In this scenario, the
effect of mutant p53 could be but an increase in
the fraction
of mitotic checkpoint-negative cells rather
than the abrogation
of the mitotic spindle checkpoint. This
hypothesis was discarded
on the basis of experiments in which NHF
arrested by colcemid
at the G
2/M boundary (mitotic
checkpoint-positive cells) were
sorted, grown, and then incubated
for four population doubling
times in the presence of colcemid. Again,
the generation of polyploid
cells was observed (data not
shown). These experiments support
the conclusion that NHF arrest
growth in response to an anomalous
chromosomal segregation but that
this growth arrest is transient
and may be abrogated by the expression
of a dominant mutant p53
protein.
Unscheduled degradation of cyclin B protein in NHF carrying a
mutant p53 protein.
Work by Kung et al. demonstrated that the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint regulates the
progression through mitosis in mammalian cells by means of a
tight control of cyclin B metabolism (34). Activation of the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint blocks cyclin B
degradation and causes sustained levels of cyclin B protein. To
elucidate the mechanisms underlying the generation of
polyploidy in mutant-p53-expressing NHF, we analyzed the
ability of control and p53-expressing NHF to regulate cyclin B turnover in response to mitotic inhibition. Both cell groups were made quiescent and then stimulated to enter the cell cycle synchronously in
the presence or absence of colcemid. Cell extracts were prepared at various intervals after stimulation (16 to 152 h) and
processed for Western analysis of cyclin B.
In the absence of colcemid, cyclin B protein levels oscillated
similarly in control and mutant-p53-expressing cells (Fig.
2A and B). Cyclin B protein was first
detected at 28 h after stimulation;
its level reached a maximum at
32 to 40 h and decreased by 56
to 72 h; the level decreased
sharply in control cells and at a
variable rate in different
experiments in mutant-p53-expressing
cells (results not shown),
suggesting a quick desynchronization
of the latter cell group. By
contrast, when cells were incubated
in the presence of colcemid, a
differential ability to regulate
cyclin B turnover was observed (Fig.
2C and D). Control fibroblasts
accumulated cyclin B protein at 72 h after stimulation, a 40-h
delay relative to the situation for control
fibroblasts incubated
in the absence of the drug. Cyclin B levels
remained elevated
for up to 128 h and then decreased sharply.
Thus, in response
to a spindle-depolymerizing agent, NHF
delayed cyclin B degradation
for approximately 72 h. However, when
mutant-p53-expressing cells
were incubated in colcemid, the cyclin B
levels rose at 32 h and
declined by 88 h, an 8-h delay
relative to the situation for untreated
cells. Similar results were
obtained with another two human cell
populations infected with the
pBabe or pBabe 143A vectors. These
results show that
mutant-p53-expressing fibroblasts fail to regulate
cyclin B levels in
response to mitotic spindle depolymerization.
These
results underscore the role played by the control cyclin
B metabolism
at the mitotic spindle checkpoint in human cells.
Moreover,
since cyclin B metabolism eventually proceeded in control
cells, these
experiments supported the conclusion that the mitotic
spindle
checkpoint arrest is transient. The accelerated cyclin
B
degradation in mutant-p53-expressing NHF was accompanied by
S-phase
reentry as determined by flow cytometry of DNA content
(results not
shown). Mutant p53 protein levels did not change
during the
mitotic progression (results not shown).

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FIG. 2.
Western analysis of cyclin B and -actin in NHF
carrying the control retroviral vector (NHF-pBabe) or a retroviral
vector containing mutant 143A p53 sequences (NHF-pBabe p53 143A).
Confluent cell cultures (4 × 104 to 5 × 104 cells/cm2) were synchronized by a 2-day
incubation in low-serum medium (0.5% calf serum), incubated at low
density (1 × 104 to 2 × 104
cells/cm2) in 10% FBS in the absence (A and B) or presence
(C and D) of 200 ng of colcemid per ml, and harvested at the indicated
intervals. Colcemid was added at 12 h after cell passage. Western
blotting was carried out as indicated in Materials and Methods. Data
are representative of three independent experiments.
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NHF expressing the human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16)
E6 oncoprotein regulate cyclin B metabolism in response to the
inhibition of mitosis.
Mutant p53 proteins may exert
dominant negative effects on wild-type p53 functions. Alternatively,
mutant p53 proteins may exhibit properties that are not originated by
the inactivation of wild-type p53 (gain-of-function) (36).
Thus, expression of a mutant p53 protein in NHF may interfere
with putative wild-type p53-dependent or -independent mechanisms
of checkpoint control at mitosis. To distinguish between
these two possibilities, we created a functional knockout of wild-type
p53 in primary NHF by the expression of the human papillomavirus type
16 E6 oncoprotein in these cells with the retroviral vector LXSN
(26). Several experimental controls were introduced in these
series of experiments. Primary NHF were coinfected with LXSN (control
empty vector) and pBabe (control empty vector) or with LXSN-E6 and
pBabe p53 143A. Cells infected with LXSN-E6 were also coinfected
with pBabe. The status of p53 in these cell populations is shown in
Fig. 3A and B. HPV16 E6 promoted
selectively the degradation of wild-type but not mutant p53. Therefore,
NHF pBabe p53 143A/LXSN-E6 showed a dramatic decrease in wild-type
p53 levels but expressed similar levels of mutant p53 protein to those
found in the NHF pBabe p53 143A/LXSN population. Primary NHF
coinfected with both control retroviral vectors demonstrated an 80-h
delay in cyclin B metabolism in response to colcemid (Fig. 3C). We then
compared the ability of the NHF pBabe/LXSN-E6 and NHF pBabe p53
143A/LXSN-E6 to regulate cyclin B metabolism in response to the
mitotic inhibitor. E6-expressing NHF delayed cyclin B
metabolism in response to colcemid in a similar way to the control
population, i.e., by approximately 80 h (Fig. 3C and D).
However, the cell population coexpressing E6 and p53 143A showed
a much shorter mitotic pause, i.e., 16 h, in
response to the mitotic inhibitor (Fig. 3E), similar to what we
previously observed in mutant-p53-expressing cells (Fig. 2B and C). A
second E6-expressing NHF population also displayed a prolonged delay in
cyclin B metabolism when incubated in the presence of colcemid (results
not shown). These experiments suggest that expression of a mutant p53
protein, but not wild-type p53 inactivation, abrogates the ability
of NHF to regulate the metabolism of cyclin B protein in response
to an anomalous chromosomal segregation (see Discussion). This
hypothesis is in agreement with recent data by Lanni and Jacks that
shows similar mitotic delays in normal and p53 null mouse
embryo fibroblasts challenged by a mitotic inhibitor
(35). These results do not contradict the fact that p53
inactivation may facilitate an increase in the fraction of polyploid
cells in a given cell population by a different mechanism, such as the abrogation of a postmitotic p53-dependent cell death response (35, 41).

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FIG. 3.
(A) Western analysis of p53 and -actin in NHF
carrying the retroviral vectors pBabe (puromycin resistance, no
insert) and LXSN (neomycin resistance, no insert) or LXSN-E6. For the
induction of p53, the cells were incubated for 2 days in 10 µM
mycophenolic acid (a GMP biosynthesis inhibitor). (B)
Immunoprecipitation of mutant p53 and -actin in primary NHF
following double infection with the retroviral vector pBabe and
LXSN or LXSN-E6 or with the vector pBabe p53 143A and LXSN or
LXSN-E6. The cells were metabolically labeled and the proteins were
analyzed as in Fig. 1. (C to E) Western analysis of cyclin B and
-actin in NHF carrying the retroviral vectors pBabe and LXSN
(C), pBabe and LXSN-E6 (D), or pBabe p53 143A and LXSN-E6 (E).
The cells were incubated and Western blotting was carried out as in
Fig. 2. Data are representative of three independent experiments.
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Mutant p53 interferes with the regulation of CKsHs1
expression.
The metabolism of cyclin B is regulated in part by
proteins of the Cks family, which interact with the cyclin B-cdc2
complex (42, 49). Two human homologs of these proteins,
CKsHs1 and CKsHs2, have been isolated from HeLa cells
(53). Using RT-PCR and oligonucleotide primers designed from
the reported CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 sequences (53), we
cloned the cDNAs encoding these proteins in NHF. Sequence analysis
demonstrated no differences from the previously reported HeLa cDNAs
(results not shown). Using Northern analysis, we determined the level
of expression of CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 transcripts in confluent
cultures of control and mutant-p53-expressing cells. Higher levels
of CKsHs1 expression were found in mutant-p53-expressing NHF
than in their isogenic controls (Fig.
4A). No significant differences in
CKsHs2 expression were detected (results not shown). Similar
results were obtained by RT-PCR (results not shown).

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FIG. 4.
(A) Northern analysis of CKsHs1 and GAPDH expression
in NHF-pBabe (pB), NHF-pBabe p53 143A (pB-143A), and
HT1080 cells. HT1080 is a fibrosarcoma cell line that carries two
mutated p53 alleles. The cells were incubated in DMEM with 10% FBS
until confluent (approximately 4 × 104 to 5 × 104 cells/cm2) and processed for Northern
analysis. A CKsHs1 sequence obtained by RT-PCR from NHF was
subcloned into Bluescribe (Stratagene), sequenced, and used as a probe.
RNA integrity was verified by reprobing with a GAPDH sequence (American
Type Culture Collection). Other experimental details were as indicated
in Materials and Methods. (B) Northern analysis of the expression of a
murine homolog of CKsHs1 (CKsMm1) and GAPDH in C2C12-pBabe
(pB) and C2C12-pBabe p53 143A (pB-143A) cells. The cells
were incubated as in panel A. (C) Northern analysis of CKsHs1 and
GAPDH expression in quiescent or exponentially growing NHF-pBabe
(pB) and NHF-pBabe p53 143A (pB-143A) cells. The cells were
incubated for 2 days at confluence in DMEM with 0.5% calf serum (No
Serum) or for 2 days at low density (1 × 104 to
2 × 104 cells/cm2) in DMEM with 10% FBS
(Exp. Growth). (D) Flow-cytometric analysis of the cell cycle
distribution of the DNA content in NHF-pBabe (pB) and
NHF-pBabe p53 143A (pB-143A) cells at confluence. The cells
were incubated for 2 days at confluence (4 × 104 to
5 × 104 cells/cm2) in DMEM with 10% FBS,
100 µM BrdU was added, and the cells were incubated for an additional
4 h. The cultures were harvested, fixed, and processed for flow
cytometry as indicated in Materials and Methods.
|
|
As an additional control, C2C12 myoblasts, which contain only wild-type
p53 (
56), were stably transfected with plasmids
pBabe
(no insert) or pBabe p53 143A, the cells were incubated
as
described above, and the level of the murine homolog of CKsHs1
was
determined by Northern analysis. Consistent with our findings
in
human cells, the expression of the murine CKsHs1 transcript
(CKsMm1 [Fig.
4B]) was higher in cells carrying mutant p53.
To further characterize the expression of CKsHs1 in the
control and mutant-p53-expressing NHF, we performed Northern
analysis
of CKsHs1 in these cells incubated under quiescent or
exponential
growth conditions. Incubation of confluent cell cultures
for 2
days in medium containing 0.5% calf serum resulted in no
detectable
CKsHs1 expression in either cell group (Fig.
4C, No
Serum). On
the other hand, incubation of control and
mutant-p53-expressing
cells at low density and with high
concentrations of serum resulted
in similar levels of CKsHs1
expression in both cells groups (Fig.
4C, Exp. Growth). These
experiments indicated that in the absence
of cell cycle checkpoint
signals, such as contact inhibition,
mutant p53 had no effect on the
basal expression of CKsHs1. Importantly,
confluent cultures of
p53-expressing cells incubated in high-serum
medium rapidly progressed
to a polyploid DNA content (Fig.
4D).
Thus, expression of a mutant p53
protein interfered with the downregulation
of CKsHs1 expression and
cell cycle arrest in confluent cultures
of NHF.
We then investigated whether CKsHs1 expression was under the
control of the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint in
NHF.
For this purpose, we determined the expression of CKsHs1 in
control
and mutant-p53-expressing cells incubated in the absence or
presence
of colcemid. Cells were made quiescent and stimulated to enter
the cell cycle synchronously for 40 h in the presence of
increasing
concentrations of colcemid. Colcemid treatment resulted in a
drastic
decrease in the level of CKsHs1 expression in control
fibroblasts
(Fig.
5A). However, NHF
expressing the mutant p53 143A protein
incubated in colcemid at
up to 1 µg/ml showed no change in CKsHs1
expression levels
(Fig.
5B). Thus, downregulation of CKsHs1 expression
in response to
mitotic spindle depolymerization was abrogated
by
expression of mutant p53 in NHF. The decrease in CKsHs1 expression
in NHF was not secondary to the accumulation of cells at the
G
2/M
boundary, since maximal levels of CKsHs1
expression were observed
at the G
2 and M cell cycle phase
in control cells incubated in
the absence of colcemid (Fig.
5C).
In addition, the downregulation
of CKsHs1 expression in
response to colcemid treatment was transient.
CKsHs1
expression recovered partially and peaked at approximately
120 h, an 80-h delay relative to the peak in untreated cells (Fig.
5D). In contrast, a 16-h delay was found in NHF expressing mutant
p53
(Fig.
5E).

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FIG. 5.
Northern analysis of CKsHs1 expression in
NHF-pBabe (A) and NHF-pBabe p53 143A (B) cells incubated in the
presence of increasing concentrations of colcemid. The cells were
synchronized at G0 by incubation in low-serum medium as in
Fig. 2 and then incubated for 40 h in 10% FBS in the presence of
0 (lanes a), 100 (lanes b), 200 (lanes c), or 1,000 (lanes d) ng of
colcemid per ml. Colcemid was added 12 h after cell passage. (C
and D) Northern analysis of CKsHs1 expression in NHF-pBabe
cells incubated in the absence (C) or presence (D) of 200 ng of
colcemid per ml. The cells were synchronized and incubated as indicated
above. Northern analysis was carried out as in Fig. 4. Data are
representative of three independent experiments. (E and F) Northern
analysis of CKsHs1 expression in NHF-pBabe 143A cells incubated
in the absence (E) or presence (F) of 200 ng of colcemid per ml. The
cells were synchronized and incubated as indicated above. Northern
analysis was carried out as described in Fig. 4. Data are
representative of two independent experiments.
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|
Subsequent experiments investigated the effect of mitotic
inhibition and mutant p53 on CKsHs1 protein expression. We
performed
Western analysis of CKsHs1 protein in control and
mutant-p53-expressing
NHF treated or not treated with colcemid. The
cells were made
quiescent by incubation in low-serum medium as
indicated above,
and CKsHs1 protein levels were determined at
different intervals
following cell cycle entry. In the control
NHF-pBabe cell population,
CKsHs1 protein levels were maximal
at approximately 48 h following
cell passage (Fig.
6A, No Colcemid). Addition of colcemid to
the
cell culture resulted in a drastic downregulation of CKsHs1
protein
levels. The 48-h peak was not detected (Fig.
6A, Colcemid).
Instead,
CKsHs1 levels increased steadily to reach a moderate peak
at 128
h, an 80-h delay with respect to the peak in
untreated cells.
By contrast, colcemid had a minor effect on the
level of CKsHs1
protein in NHF-pBabe p53 143A cells (Fig.
6B).
In untreated cells,
maximal levels of CKsHs1 protein were
found at 32 h, whereas in
colcemid-treated cells,
CKsHs1 peaked at approximately 48 h. Thus,
colcemid treatment caused a marked delay in CKsHs1 protein
expression
in NHF that was substantially abrogated by mutant p53.
Interestingly,
peak levels of CKsHs1 protein were detected at the
same time as
the onset of cyclin B degradation (Fig.
2 and
6).
These results
are in agreement with genetic and biochemical evidence,
obtained
with fission yeast and frog eggs, that indicates a
requirement
for CKsHs1 homologs for cyclin B degradation
(
4,
42,
49).

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FIG. 6.
(A) Western analysis of CKsHs1 and -actin levels
in control NHF (NHF-pBabe) (A) and in NHF expressing mutant p53
proteins (NHF-pBabe p53 143A) (B). The cells were synchronized by a
2-day incubation in low-serum medium (0.5% calf serum) and then
incubated in 10% FBS in the absence (No Colcemid) or presence
(Colcemid) of 200 ng of colcemid per ml and harvested at the indicated
intervals. Colcemid was added 12 h after cell passage. Western
blotting was carried out as indicated in Materials and Methods, except
for the colcemid-treated NHF-pBabe blot, which was probed with a
1:25 CKsHs1 antibody dilution. Data are representative of three
independent experiments.
|
|
CKsHs1 protein levels decreased by 30 to 70% in exponentially
growing control cells but not in mutant-p53-expressing cells
following colcemid treatment (Fig.
7A and
data not shown). A minor
decrease in CKsHs1 protein levels
was observed in mutant-p53-expressing
cells treated with colcemid,
suggesting that mechanisms not affected
by mutant p53 may also play a
role in the regulation of CKsHs1
levels by the mitotic
spindle cell cycle checkpoint. Stable expression
of another two
structural p53 mutant forms, 175H and 273H, in
NHF also blocked the
downregulation of CKsHs1 protein levels by
colcemid (Fig.
7B).
Importantly, these effects of colcemid were
caused by its ability to
act as a mitotic inhibitor. Addition
of this compound to
control cells up to 32 h following cell cycle
entry significantly
decreased CKsHs1 levels (Fig.
7C). Also, colcemid
did not affect
the progression of cells through S phase; 10 to
15% of control cells
were detected in S phase in the absence or
presence of colcemid
(results not shown).

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FIG. 7.
(A) Western analysis of CKsHs1 and -actin levels
in control NHF (NHF-pBabe) and in NHF expressing mutant p53
proteins (NHF-pBabe p53 143A). Exponentially growing cells were
incubated in the presence (+) or absence ( ) of 200 ng of colcemid per
ml for 40 h. (B) Western analysis of CKsHs1 and -actin in
primary NHF stably transfected with murine sarcoma virus long terminal
repeat neo-based expression plasmids containing no insert
(NHF-LTR), mutant p53 175H (NHF-LTR p53 175H), or mutant p53 273H
(NHF-LTR p53 273H) cDNA sequences. The cells were incubated as in
panel A. (C) Western analysis of CKsHs1 and -actin in NHF
pBabe cells. Confluent cell cultures (4 × 104 to
5 × 104 cells/cm2) were synchronized by a
2-day incubation in low-serum medium (0.5% calf serum) and then
incubated at low density (1 × 104 to 2 × 104 cells/cm2) in 10% FBS. Colcemid (200 ng/ml) was added to the cells at the indicated times, and the cultures
were harvested at 48 h. Western analysis was performed as
indicated in Materials and Methods. Data are representative of three
independent experiments.
|
|
CKsHs1 has been shown to associate with cdc2 (
53).
Studies with
S. pombe and
Xenopus extracts
suggest that association of
CKsHs1 homologs with cdc2 is required
for targeting of the cdc2-cyclin
B complex to the
anaphase-promoting complex and, consequently,
for cyclin B
proteolysis (
4,
42,
49). In addition, it has
been argued
that members of the Cks1 family are involved in targeting
the cdc2
kinase to its mitotic substrates (
53). In the
absence
of these proteins, cdc2 cannot phosphorylate the appropriate
substrates,
and this results in mitotic arrest. Thus,
association of Cks1
proteins with cdc2 seems to be essential for the
role of these
proteins at mitosis. We investigated the effect
of mitotic spindle
depolymerization on the association
of CKsHs1 with cdc2 in NHF.
Using metabolic labeling and
immunoprecipitation, we investigated
the cell cycle-dependent
association of CKsHs1 with cdc2. Figure
8A shows that CKsHs1 associates with
cdc2 in the 40- to 56-h period
following cell cycle entry. Control NHF
were then incubated in
the presence or absence of colcemid. Incubation
of exponentially
growing cells (48 h after synchronization) with
colcemid resulted
in a 65% decrease in the amount of CKsHs1
protein associated with
cdc2 (Fig.
8B).

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FIG. 8.
(A) Immunoprecipitation of cdc2-associated CKsHs1.
NHF pBabe cells were synchronized and incubated as in Fig. 2 and
metabolically labeled for 2 h before being harvested at the
indicated times. Preparation of extracts and cdc2 immunoprecipitations
(CDC2 IP) were carried out as indicated in Materials and Methods.
CKsHs1 was independently immunoprecipitated (CKsHs1 IP) at the
48-h timepoint. As a control, 5 µg of the CKsHs1 peptide epitope
was added to half of the CKsHs1 immunoprecipitation extract.
Immunoprecipitates were resolved by PAGE (15% polyacrylamide), and the
gels were dried and exposed to a PhosphorImager screen. (B)
Immunoprecipitation of total and cdc2-associated CKsHs1.
Exponentially growing cells (48 h after synchronization) were incubated
in the presence (+) or absence ( ) of 200 ng of colcemid per ml.
Extracts were immunoprecipitated with the indicated antibodies. Other
experimental details are as in panel A. Data are representative of
three independent experiments.
|
|
Ectopic expression of CKsHs1 uncouples cyclin B metabolism from
the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint.
Since
members of the Cks family are key regulators of progression
through mitosis in yeast and frog oocytes (4, 8, 15, 18,
20, 28, 42, 43, 49, 53), we reasoned that CKsHs1 may also
play a role in the regulation of mitosis in human cells. Also, CKsHs1 overexpression might interfere with the control of the cell cycle at mitosis in cells with altered p53 status. To test these hypotheses, we attempted to ectopically express CKsHs1 in NHF by using retroviral vectors. However, several attempts to
express exogenous CKsHs1 in primary NHF resulted in no viable cells
(not shown). In contrast, ectopic expression of CKsHs1
in C2C12 myoblasts resulted in cellular clones. However, when the CKsHs1-expressing C2C12 cells were incubated with colcemid, they suffered extensive cell death (results not shown).
Cells expressing mutant p53 showed high levels of CKsHs1 protein
despite their incubation in the presence of colcemid (Fig.
6). However,
they did not undergo cell death (Fig.
1). These results
suggest that
mutant p53 proteins, in addition to abrogating the
cell cycle
regulatory machinery at mitosis, promote the survival
of cells
with aberrant DNA content. We reasoned that whereas uncoupling
of
cyclin B metabolism from the mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint
could be caused by CKsHs1 overexpression, it was
unlikely that
the survival effect exerted by mutant p53 proteins
was due to
higher levels of CKsHs1. Hence, to test the effect of
CKsHs1 overexpression
while avoiding cell death, we
cotransfected C2C12 cells with an
expression vector containing
cDNA sequences encoding the anti-apoptosis
protein bcl2 and the
vector pBabe or pBabe CKsHs1. The control
cell line
C2C12-bcl2/pBabe and the C2C12-bcl2/pBabe CKsHs1
cells
were then synchronized and incubated in the presence or
absence
of colcemid, and the level of CKsHs1 protein
was determined by
Western analysis. CKsHs1 protein was
expressed at lower levels
and at later times in control cells when they
were incubated in
the presence of colcemid (Fig.
9A and B). However, C2C12-bcl2/pBabe
CKsHs1 cells demonstrated steady levels of CKsHs1 protein
that
were not inhibited by colcemid treatment (Fig.
9C). bcl2
expression
was also determined by Western analysis. Similar levels were
detected
in C2C12-bcl2/pBabe and C2C12-bcl2/pBabe
CKsHs1 cells (results
not shown).

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FIG. 9.
Western analysis of CKsHs1 and -actin in C2C12
cells stably transfected with CMVneo-bcl2 and pBabe or
pBabe-CKsHs1 expression vectors. The cells were synchronized as
in Fig. 2 and then incubated for the indicated times in 10% FBS in the
absence (A, No colcemid) or presence (B and C, Colcemid) of 200 ng of
colcemid per ml. Colcemid was added 12 h after cell passage.
Western blotting was carried out as indicated in Materials and Methods.
Data are representative of two independent experiments.
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|
Control and CKsHs1-overexpressing C2C12 cells were then analyzed
for their ability to regulate cyclin B protein levels in
response to
mitotic inhibition. Control cells delayed the degradation
of cyclin B for 8 to 16 h when incubated in the presence of
colcemid
(Fig.
10A and C and data not
shown). However, there was no delay
in the onset of cyclin B
degradation in cells ectopically expressing
CKsHs1 incubated in
colcemid (Fig.
10B and D). Thus, overexpression
of CKsHs1 abrogated
the ability of C2C12 to regulate cyclin B
metabolism at
mitosis.

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FIG. 10.
Western analysis of cyclin B levels in C2C12 cells
ectopically expressing bcl2 or expressing bcl2 and CKsHs1. The
cells were synchronized as in Fig. 2, incubated in 10% FBS in the
absence (A and B) or presence (C and D) of 200 ng of colcemid per ml,
and harvested at the indicated intervals. Colcemid was added 12 h
after cell passage. Western blotting was carried out as indicated in
Materials and Methods. Data are representative of two independent
experiments.
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|
Since CKsHs1 overexpression rendered cells unable to control cyclin
B metabolism in response to mitotic inhibition, we reasoned
that ectopic expression of CKsHs1 might also allow cell cycle
progression in the absence of chromosomal segregation. To test
this
hypothesis, we performed flow cytometry analysis of the DNA
content of the C2C12 cell populations described above, incubated
in the
presence or absence of colcemid. The results of these experiments
are shown in Fig.
11.
C2C12-bcl2/pBabe cells incubated for two
population
doubling times accumulated at the G
2/M boundary.
However,
the C2C12 cells overexpressing CKsHs1 rapidly
progressed to an
octaploid DNA content (Fig.
11A). Likewise, the
bivariate analysis
of total DNA content (propidium iodide
staining) and newly synthesized
DNA (BrdU incorporation) demonstrated
that cells overexpressing
CKsHs1 had a higher tendency to undergo
S-phase reentry at a 4N
DNA content than did their isogenic controls
(results not shown).

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FIG. 11.
(A) Flow-cytometric analysis of the cell cycle
distribution of the DNA content in C2C12 cells ectopically expressing
CKsHs1 and/or bcl-2. Cells were incubated in the absence or
presence of 200 ng of colcemid per ml for two population doubling times
(the population doubling times of C2C12 bcl2/pBabe and C2C12
bcl2/pBabe CKsHs1 cells were 38 and 32 h, respectively).
Following incubations, the cells were harvested and processed for flow
cytometry of DNA content as indicated in Materials and Methods.
Polyclonal populations at passage 2 were assayed. (B) Flow-cytometric
analysis of the cell cycle distribution of the DNA content in 10T1/2
cells stably transfected with pBabe, pBabe CKsHs1, or
pBabe CKsHs2. The cells were incubated in the absence or
presence of 200 ng of colcemid per ml for two population doubling times
(72, 66, and 62 h, respectively). Other experimental details are
as in panel A. Data are representative of three independent
experiments.
|
|
In addition, we generated 10T1/2 cell lines that carry wild-type p53
(
12), stably expressing CKsHs1 or CKsHs2. Incubation
of these cells for two population doubling times in the presence
of
colcemid also resulted in a marked increase in the number of
polyploid
cells compared to those for a control cell line stable
transfected with
an empty pBabe vector (Fig.
11B). In this case,
cotransfection with
the bcl2 vector was not required to avoid
CKsHs toxicity. These
experiments confirmed that CKsHs1 overexpression
promotes cell
cycle progression despite the absence of chromosomal
segregation. They
also suggested that CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 may have
some common
functions at mitosis. Overexpression of CKsHs1 and
CKsHs2 in these cell lines was determined by Northern analysis
of
confluent cultures (results not shown).
In conclusion, these experiments demonstrated that an unregulated
expression of CKsHs1 leads to abrogation of the
mitotic
spindle cell cycle checkpoint. Since cells that
carry a mutant
p53 protein failed to downregulate CKsHs1
in response to mitotic
checkpoint signals (Fig.
5 and
6),
our results indicate that an
altered expression of CKsHs1 mediates,
at least in part, the effects
of mutant p53 on cyclin B metabolism and
the mitotic spindle cell
cycle checkpoint.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Genetic alterations may occur spontaneously in the general
population, but certain individuals are predisposed to their
accumulation because of a failure in the mechanisms that correct or
eliminate them. We have investigated the activity of the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint, a pathway that
contributes to the maintenance of euploidy, in human fibroblasts.
Primary human fibroblasts infected with a retroviral vector that drives
expression of a mutant p53 protein underwent accelerated DNA
endoreduplication in response to spindle-depolymerizing drugs.
Normal human fibroblasts arrested growth at mitosis transiently
and, eventually, also progressed to mitosis. These results
indicated that although the mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint delays the cell cycle, mitotic progression eventually takes place. This conclusion is also supported by our cyclin
B experiments (see below). The abrogation by a p53 dominant negative
mutant (p53 C terminus) of a transient delay in cell cycle
progression caused by mitotic spindle-depolymerizing
agents has been described previously (41). However, the
effect of p53 inactivation appeared to result from the inhibition of
the function of this protein at the G1 cell cycle phase
that follows a round of anomalous mitosis (without
segregation). Our results do not rule out an effect of mutant p53
proteins (working as dominant negatives) on the G1 cell
cycle phase following altered mitosis. However, they support
the hypothesis that structural p53 mutant proteins have an effect on
the control of mitosis.
Cells carrying a mutant p53 protein showed an unscheduled degradation
of cyclin B protein. In response to an anomalous chromosomal segregation induced by a mitotic spindle-depolymerizing
drug, normal human fibroblasts delayed cyclin B metabolism. However, when the mutant-p53-expressing cells were incubated in colcemid, the
onset of cyclin B metabolism was slightly affected (Fig. 2). It has
been shown that treatment of HeLa cells with a mitotic inhibitor for 12 to 48 h results in elevated cyclin B levels
(34, 51). These data led to the conclusion that prolonged
inhibition of the segregation of chromosomes in human cells results in
sustained cyclin B levels and mitotic arrest. Our results also
underscore the importance of the control of cyclin B metabolism at the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint in human cells. In
addition, the use of primary cells and the inclusion of longer
incubation periods (up to 152 h) in our studies allowed us to
distinguish between normal human cells, in which cyclin B degradation
was significantly delayed (48 to 128 h), and human cells carrying
a mutant p53 protein, in which altered regulation of cyclin B turnover
was observed.
NHF in which wild-type p53 was inactivated by expression of the human
papillomavirus type 16 E6 protein demonstrated active control of cyclin
B metabolism in response to colcemid treatment. Previous studies
have demonstrated that mutant p53 proteins not only inactivate
wild-type p53 tumor suppressor function (dominant negative effect) but
also have oncogenic properties (gain-of-function). For example, mutated
forms of p53 can transactivate certain promoters that do not have
wild-type p53 consensus binding sites and can do so in the absence of
wild-type p53 protein (11, 14, 17, 23-25, 36, 58).
Also, mutant p53 proteins, in addition to blocking wild-type
p53-dependent growth arrest, may positively contribute to cell
proliferation (9, 10, 17, 31, 32, 44, 59). Using
time-lapse videomicroscopy, Lanni and Jacks demonstrated that
wild-type p53 does not participate in the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint in mouse fibroblasts (35). Our E6
experiments suggested that p53 is not required for the activity of the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint in NHF. However, we
cannot discard the fact that a residual amount of p53 in E6-expressing
NHF could be sufficient for the activity of the mitotic spindle
checkpoint. p53 null human fibroblast lines have been generated,
but they are genetically unstable (38, 62) and strikingly
sensitive to colcemid toxicity (22). Therefore, in the
absence of primary p53 null human fibroblasts, we can conclude only
that expression of a structural mutant p53 protein abrogates the
control of cyclin B metabolism by the mitotic spindle
checkpoint in NHF.
Our results identified CKsHs1 as a key element in the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint. A role for Cks1
family members at this checkpoint was postulated previously by
Rudner and Murray (54). Interestingly, downregulation of
CKsHs1 was transient (Fig. 5, 6, and 9), suggesting a phenomenon of
adaptation (16, 41) or mitotic slippage
(2). Moreover, the regulation of CKsHs1 expression in
response to mitotic spindle depolymerization was
altered in NHF carrying a mutant p53 protein relative to that in their
isogenic controls (Fig. 5 and 6). While control NHF downregulated CKsHs1 expression in response to mitotic inhibition, no
change in CKsHs1 expression was observed in mutant-p53-expressing
NHF incubated under similar conditions. CKsHs1 may be one of
multiple genes targeted by the mitotic spindle checkpoint.
A wild-type p53 target, p21cip, has also been implicated in the
mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint. A wild-type p53
target, p21cip, has also been implicated in the mitotic spindle
cell cycle checkpoint. However, p21 expression is controlled by
both p53-dependent and p53-independent mechanisms, and recent data
indicate that the p21 G2/M growth arrest does not correlate
with p53 status (46). p21 may be implicated in a
postmitotic growth arrest (35). Transcription of the
G2/M cell cycle regulator 14-3-3 has also been shown to be
regulated by p53 (29). In addition, recent data show that wild-type p53 negatively regulates the expression of Map4
(45), a microtubule-associated protein that interacts with
cyclin B (45, 48).
Mutant p53 may directly activate the expression of CKsHs1.
Gain-of-function transcriptional properties have been described for some p53 mutants (24, 37, 58), and it has been
proposed that mutant p53 proteins mimic the biological functions of a
proliferative conformational stage of wild-type p53 (40,
61). The fact that structural mutant p53 forms that carry
mutations in their transcriptional domain still can promote
polyploidy (22) does not rule out transcription as
their mechanism of action, since mutant p53 proteins may work in
association with other transcription factors, such as Sp1
(23). Mutant p53 may also regulate CKsHs1 expression
indirectly, affecting the levels of a CKsHs1 regulatory factor(s).
Interestingly, p53 is itself a target for phosphorylation by cdc2
(6), suggesting a potential mechanism for feedback control
of p53 at mitosis. Our data provide one of the first
observations of the regulation of the expression of a Cks family member
in mammalian cells. In agreement with Richardson et al.
(53), we found that CKsHs1 transcript levels oscillate
in a cell cycle-dependent manner, with maximal expression at the
G2 and M cell cycle phases (Fig. 5). Downregulation of
CKsHs1 expression has also been observed in epithelial cells that
were growth inhibited by transforming growth factor
(55).
An 8- to 14-h delay in cyclin B metabolism was observed in control
murine C2C12 cells treated with colcemid (Fig. 10). This delay was
shorter than that observed in NHF (Fig. 2) and similar to that observed
in mouse embryo fibroblasts (35). The fact that human cells
exhibit a more stringent mitotic spindle cell cycle
checkpoint than rodent cells has been reported previously (34). Ectopic expression of CKsHs1 in C2C12 cells caused
a failure to regulate cyclin B turnover, S-phase reentry, and the
accumulation of cells with a polyploid DNA content (Fig. 9 to 11).
These results indicate that CKsHs1 is a positive regulator of the
progression through mitosis. A clear understanding of the
functions of Cks family members remains elusive. It has been shown that
Suc1 is required in fission yeast for cyclin B degradation, cdc2 kinase inactivation, and exit from mitosis (42). Also,
conditional mutation of Cks1 in budding yeast decreases the ability of
the cells to undergo the G1/S and G2/M
transitions (60). Moreover, removal of Xe-p9, the frog Cks
homolog, from Xenopus oocyte interphase extracts abolished
the activation of the cyclin B-cdc2 complex by tyrosine
dephosphorylation (G2/M transition) and the
progression through mitosis as a result of a defect in
the degradation of cyclin B (49). Interestingly, we have
seen that exponentially growing control C2C12 cells have high levels of
CKsHs1 protein (Fig. 9, 32 h), similar to the levels observed
in C2C12 cells stably transfected with a retroviral vector that drives
the expression of CKsHs1 (Fig. 9C). Likewise, exponentially growing
control and p53-expressing NHF have similar levels of CKsHs1
mRNA and protein (Fig. 6). Differences in CKsHs1 expression
between mutant-p53-expressing cells and control NHF (Fig. 5 and 6) or
between C2C12-pBabe and C2C12-pBabe CKsHs1 cells (Fig. 5
and 9) were apparent only following contact inhibition or colcemid
treatment. Thus, the phenotype that we observed in cells
ectopically expressing CKsHs1 was not the
"overexpression" but the "unregulated expression" of
CKsHs1. These data indicated that CKsHs1 is normally
expressed at maximal levels during exponential growth. These results
also suggest that an excess of CKsHs1 may be deleterious to the
cells. C2C12 pBabe CKsHs1 cells with excessively high levels of
CKsHs1 may suffer negative selection. It has been reported that
overexpression of CKsHs1 and CKsHs2 in an S. cerevisiae Cks1 null mutant caused cell enlargement and
elongation, suggesting that CKsHs overexpression delays the
G2/M transition (53). Likewise, overexpression
of Suc1 delays entry into mitosis in fission yeast (28,
30), and addition of Xe-p9 to Xenopus extracts delays
rather than promotes cell cycle progression (49). A simple
explanation for these potentially contradictory results is that
CKsHs1 expression levels may be critical due to its interaction
with rate-limiting components of cyclin-cdk complexes. In this regard,
it has been proposed that Cks proteins may work as "docking
factors" for cdc2 regulators (49). This model is supported
by the crystallographic mutational analysis of CKsHs1 complexed
with Cdk2 (7).
In conclusion, we show that NHF carrying a p53 protein with a
structural mutation fail to regulate the expression of CKsHs1 in
response to mitotic spindle depolymerization. Elevated
levels of CKsHs1 interfere with the control of cyclin B metabolism
by the mitotic spindle cell cycle checkpoint pathway and
facilitate the accumulation of cells with a polyploid DNA content.
These data provide a key component to our understanding of the origin of heteroploidy in cells carrying mutant p53 proteins.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
M. L. Hixon and A. I. Flores contributed equally to
this paper.
We thank A. S. Baldwin, C. A. Finlay, D. A. Galloway, K. Guo, J. Jaccoberger, M. W. Mayo, C. Muro-Cacho, G. Nunez, M. I. Rico, P. Ruiz-Lozano, and R. M. Sramkoski for reagents and suggestions. We thank J. Campisi for
careful reading of the manuscript and for encouragement.
This work was supported in part by grants NIH AR39750, ACS
IRG91022, AHA 9750205N, and CWRU RIG to A.G.
 |
ADDENDUM IN PROOF |
While the manuscript was under review, D. Patra and W. G. Dunphy
(Genes Dev. 12:2549-2559, 1998) reported that the frog
homolog of CKsHs1 is required for the hyperphosphorylation of cdc27 by
the cdc2-cyclin B complex and the activation of the cyclin B
destruction machinery. These results indicate that Cks proteins
regulate substrate recognition by cdc2-cyclinB.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Physiology & Biophysics SOM E553, CWRU, 10900 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106-4970. Phone: (216) 368-3487. Fax: (216) 368-3952. E-mail:
axg29{at}po.cwru.edu.
 |
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