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Molecular and Cellular Biology, February 1999, p. 1190-1201, Vol. 19, No. 2
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Cell-Free Degradation of
p27kip1, a G1 Cyclin-Dependent
Kinase Inhibitor, Is Dependent on CDK2 Activity and the
Proteasome
Hoang
Nguyen,1
Diana M.
Gitig,1 and
Andrew
Koff1,2,*
Program in Molecular Biology and Cell Biology
and Genetics, Cornell University Graduate School of Medical
Sciences,1 and
Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center,2 New York, New York 10021
Received 11 August 1998/Returned for modification 1 October
1998/Accepted 27 October 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Entry into S phase is dependent on the coordinated activation of
CDK4,6 and CDK2 kinases. Once a cell commits to S phase, there must be
a mechanism to ensure the irreversibility of this decision. The
activity of these kinases is inhibited by their association with p27.
In many cells, p27 plays a major role in the withdrawal from the cell
cycle in response to environmental cues. Thus, it is likely that p27 is
a target of the machinery required to ensure the irreversibility of
S-phase entry. We have been interested in understanding the mechanisms
regulating p27 at the G1/S transition. In this report, we
define a cell-free degradation system which faithfully recapitulates
the cell cycle phase-specific degradation of p27. We show that this
reaction is dependent on active CDK2 activity, suggesting that CDK2
activity is directly required for p27 degradation. In addition to CDK2, other S-phase-specific factors are required for p27 degradation. At
least some of these factors are ubiquitin and proteasome dependent. We
discuss the relationships between CDK2 activity, ubiquitin-dependent, and possibly ubiquitin-independent proteasomal activities in S-phase extracts as related to p27.
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INTRODUCTION |
Protein degradation is a key
regulator of cell cycle transitions. Entry into S phase, separation of
sister chromatids, and exit from mitosis are all dependent on the
degradation of proteins by the proteasome (reviewed in references
26 and 30). Once a cell is
committed to a transition by the action of cyclin-dependent kinases
(CDKs), proteolytic events might act to ensure the irreversibility of
this transition, thus maintaining order in the cell cycle.
Proteasomal ATP-dependent protein degradation is a mechanism to remove
proteins that are either misfolded, not in appropriate complexes, or
regulated during the cell cycle or by signal transduction pathways.
Many of these proteins are targeted to the proteasome in a
ubiquitin-dependent fashion (reviewed in references
10 and 30). This allows further
regulation at the level of ubiquitin attachment and ubiquitin
polymerization. Following ubiquitination, the protein is recognized by
specific subunits on the 26S proteasome complex. There are a number of
recognition proteins in 19S complexes, a subcomplex of the 26S particle
(4, 45). This probably reflects the existence of multiple
types of proteasomes, some nuclear and some cytosolic (1, 41,
65), as well as proteasomes with different substrate recognition
properties, such as affinities for linkages through either K48
(8) or K63 (18) of ubiquitin and other potential
lysines (2, 62). Ubiquitination is an ATP-dependent process.
Ubiquitin is activated by the formation of a carboxyl-adenylate
intermediate and conjugated to the E1 enzyme by a thioester bond. Next,
it is trans-esterfied to a member of a family of
ubiquitin-conjugating proteins called E2. Finally, it is transferred to
a lysine residue on a target protein, either directly or with the aid
of an E3 or ubiquitin-ligase complex. During the cell cycle, the
specificity of the ubiquitination reaction, in both substrate choice
and timing, is probably conferred by the E2 and E3 complexes
(24).
The 26S proteasome is also ATP dependent. This might be due to the
requirement for protein unfolding by the 19S complex (4). Thus, the ATP dependence of a proteasomal reaction is by no means a
reflection of the need for ubiquitination, and protein degradation by
the proteasome is not entirely dependent on ubiquitination. For
example, ornithine decarboxylase is degraded by the proteasome following interaction with another factor, antizyme, neither of which
has been reported to be ubiquitinated (16, 40). Furthermore, cyclin B1 degradation is initiated by a site-specific proteolytic cleavage activity which is ATP dependent and ubiquitin independent and
copurifies with 26S proteasomes (59). Subsequently, the carboxyl fragment is likely to be ubiquitinated and degraded (19, 23, 58).
There are two paradigms for cell cycle-dependent proteolysis. One is
exemplified by the cell cycle-dependent activity of the E3 complex.
Cyclin B1 degradation is dependent on cell cycle changes in the
anaphase-promoting complex (29, 58). The other regulates proteolysis by controlling the cell cycle-dependent phosphorylation of
the substrate (11, 14, 21, 35, 63, 66, 67). A role for
ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis at the G1/S transition in
yeast has been demonstrated (reviewed in references
34 and 44). Entry into S phase
requires the S-phase Clb5 and Clb6-associated kinases (50),
which are held inactive by their association with the inhibitor
p40sic1 (49). To enter S phase,
p40sic1 has to by phosphorylated by
G1-phase Cln-associated kinases (63) before
being degraded (48, 61). Yeast with mutations in CLN or any
of the SCFcdc4 components, CDC4, CDC34, CDC53,
or SKP1, fails to degrade p40sic1 and cannot
enter S phase and replicate DNA (3, 48, 49, 61, 63). cdc4
has a WD40 repeat domain which recognizes phosphorylated p40sic1 (55) and an F-box domain
which interacts with the F-box domain of skp1 (3). In turn,
skp1 has a binding domain to cdc53, which associates with cdc34, an E2
ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme (20, 37, 55). Phosphorylated
p40sic1, through its interaction with cdc4, is
recruited to this SCFcdc4 complex, where it is
ubiquitinated. In vitro ubiquitination of phosphorylated
p40sic1 had been established with reconstituted
purified components of SCFcdc4 (17,
55).
In Xenopus, ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis is required for
DNA replication. Extracts depleted of CDC34 cannot support DNA replication (68). Reconstitution of these with recombinant
CDC34 leads to degradation of Xic1, a Xenopus homologue of
mammalian p27kip1 (54, 57), and the
ability to replicate DNA (68). This suggests that p27 might
be a target of CDC34-mediated degradation in higher eukaryotes as well.
Consistent with this possibility Pagano et al. have reported on the
ubiquitin attachment to p27 in reticulocyte lysates supplemented with
CDC34 (42). However, this system has not yet proven
tractable for the identification of the enzymes and processes required
for p27 degradation.
Recently, it was shown that p27 could be phosphorylated by CDK2
complexes in vitro (51), and in vivo this phosphorylation might depend on a transient association of p27 with the cyclin subunit
(64). Increasing the abundance of p27 by expressing the cDNA
from heterologous promoters leads to G1 arrest, which can
be overcome by coexpression with cyclin E (51) or cyclin D
(9, 51). Furthermore, the abundance of p27 protein often decreases at the G1/S boundary when CDK2 associated kinases
become active (22, 39), although in some cell lines it does
not (56). During cyclin E overexpression, the accumulation
of p27 is reduced at the G1/S boundary (51).
During cyclin D1 overexpression, the cell enters S phase but p27 is not
degraded (9). Together, these data suggest that cyclin E and
CDK2 might directly phosphorylate p27 at the G1/S
transition, which may target p27 for ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis,
analogous to how yeast CLN kinases phosphorylate p40sic1, targeting it for ubiquitination and
subsequent proteolysis.
We have sought to define a cell-free degradation system that is cell
cycle phase dependent and mimics the functions of CDK activity
postulated for degradation. We hope to use this system eventually to
entirely reconstitute the cell cycle phase dependence of p27
degradation. As a step toward this goal, we now present evidence
demonstrating the relationship between CDK activity, the proteasome,
and degradation of p27. We have shown that S-phase extracts are capable
of degrading p27 in a CDK2-dependent manner and that mutation of
threonine 187 to alanine can prevent this degradation. Furthermore,
G1 extracts are incapable of degrading p27 even when
supplemented with purified CDK2 kinases and are not able to inhibit
degradation by S-phase extracts. This suggests that there are proteins
in addition to the CDKs that are directly involved in the degradation
pathway and might be regulated in a cell cycle phase-dependent manner.
When S-phase extracts were depleted of p27T187A binding proteins and
supplemented with CDK2 activity, the extracts could not degrade p27.
Thus, we have established that CDK2 kinase can activate p27 degradation
in a posttranscriptional manner in S-phase extracts and that
degradation of p27 also requires S-phase-specific p27 binding proteins.
Furthermore, p27 degradation was blocked in S extracts in the presence
of K48R ubiquitin and in S extracts depleted of either ubiquitin
binding proteins or the proteasome. These data suggested that p27
degradation was dependent on ubiquitin and proteasomal activity. In
addition, we could detect a small amount of slower-migrating p27
following incubation of excess probe with extracts supplemented with
K48R-ubiquitin and LLnL, an inhibitor of the proteasome. These forms
were cell cycle phase dependent, being detected in S-phase extracts and not in G1 extracts, and could not be detected on the T187A
mutant, which is not degraded in S phase. We discuss our findings in
light of our current understanding of the cell cycle.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
In vitro-translated probes.
The alanine-substituted mutant,
p27T187A, was generated by PCR from the pCITE-p27 vector previously
described (31). Oligonucleotides 5'-GTGGAGCAGGCGCCCAAGAAG-3' and
5'-GATCAGCTAGCAATGGAAGCA-3' were used for first-strand
synthesis, and oligonucleotides 5'-CTTCTTGGGCGCCTGCTCCAC-3' and 5'-GCCACGTTGTGAGTTGGATAG-3' were used for
second-strand synthesis, with pCITE-p27 as a template. The final
product of the PCR was cut with XmaI and NcoI and
subcloned directly into the pCite1 vector.
A cDNA encoding cyclin B1 was excised from pGEM4Z (46) by
BamHI digestion. The digested DNA was made blunt ended with
Klenow, cut with NcoI, and subcloned into NcoI-
and StuI-digested pCITE1 vector.
[35S]methionine-labeled proteins were prepared by in
vitro transcription with T7 polymerase and in vitro translation in
nuclease-treated rabbit reticulocyte lysate as specified by the
manufacturer (Promega). We calculated the amount of in vitro-translated
p27 added to each reaction mixture by determining the counts per minute
incorporated into trichloroacetic acid-precipitable product.
Recombinant proteins.
Human p27, the N terminus of p27
containing amino acids 1 to 86, and the C terminus of p27 containing
amino acids 87 to 197, were cloned into pET21a (a gift of J. Massagué). These proteins were purified as described previously
(36). Human p21 (15) was cloned into the pET21a
vector, expressed in Escherichia coli, and purified on
Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid with urea as a denaturant as specified by the
manufacturer (Qiagen). All proteins were eluted with an imidazole
gradient and dialyzed against 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.5)-50 mM KCl-1.5 mM
MgCl2-1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT).
Lysates from Sf9 cells infected with baculovirus encoding cyclin E,
cyclin A, CDK2, or CDK2K at a multiplicity of infection
of 5 to 10 were
prepared by the method of Desai et al. (
12).
The generation
of complexes containing cyclin E and either CDK2
or CDK2K was described
previously (
33,
47).
Cyclin A and CDK2 were purified essentially as described previously
(
12). The cyclin A-CDK2 complex was purified by incubating
equal molar amounts of purified cyclin A and CDK2 at 4°C overnight
and then at room temperature for 1 h and applying the mixture
to
an ATP-agarose column. Purified cyclin A-CDK2 was incubated
at 37°C
for 30 min with purified cdk activating kinase (CAK; a
kind gift from
Robert Fisher) at an 8:1 ratio by mass in a buffer
containing 3 mM ATP,
7 mM MgCl
2, 0.5 mM DTT; 1 U is arbitrarily
defined as 42 ng
(or 483 fmol) of cyclin A-CDK2 with 5.2 ng of
CAK.
Purified recombinant protein and ubiquitin (Sigma) were coupled to
cyanogen bromide (CNBr)-activated Sepharose as recommended
by the
manufacturer. The efficiency of coupling was determined
by Coomassie
blue staining to be greater than 90%, which was approximately
10 mg/ml.
Cell cultures and extract preparation.
HeLa-S3 cells were
grown in minimal essential medium-spinner supplemented with 10%
enriched calf serum. For synchronization of cells in G1,
the cells were incubated in 2 µM nocodozole (Sigma) for 12 h,
thoroughly washed, and subsequently cultured in medium without
nocodozole for another 5 h. For synchronization of cells in S
phase, the cells were incubated in 2 mM hydroxyurea (Sigma) for 24 h, thoroughly washed, and subsequently cultured in medium without
hydroxyurea for another 3 h. Extracts were prepared as described
by Brandeis and Hunt (6) with minor modifications. Briefly,
the cell pellet was washed twice with cold phosphate-buffered saline
without magnesium or calcium and once with hypotonic buffer (20 mM
HEPES [pH 7.5], 1.5 mM MgCl2, 5 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT) and
resuspended in 0.75 volume of hypotonic buffer. The cell suspension was
allowed to stand on ice for 30 min, and then the cells were lysed by
Dounce homogenization. Subsequently, the crude cell lysate was
clarified at 100,000 × g for 30 min at 4°C, and
supernatants were collected, aliquoted, and stored at
80°C.
Extracts were depleted of p27 binding proteins as follows. A 1-ml
volume of extract was incubated with 200 µl of affinity
matrix for 45 min at 4°C with rotation. Supernatants were collected
after a brief
centrifugation and mixed with a fresh aliquot of
matrix as above. The
supernatant obtained after two sequential
depletions was used in the
assays described
below.
To deplete the proteasome, extracts supplemented with rabbit
reticulocyte lysate (RRL) were centrifuged for 6 h at 100,000
×
g at 4°C and fractionated into supernatant and pellet.
The pellets
were subsequently resuspended in an equivalent volume of
hypotonic
buffer.
Degradation assay.
The degradation assay was performed
essentially as described by Brandeis and Hunt (6) with some
minor modifications. Unless otherwise specified for particular
experiments, assay mixtures contained 200 µg of extract supplemented
with an ATP-regenerating system (25 mM phosphocreatine, 10 µg of
creatine kinase per ml), 1 mM ATP, and 1/15 volume of rabbit
reticulolysate lysate (Promega) in a total volume of 20 µl with 0.1 µl of radiolabelled substrate. The reaction mixtures were incubated
at 30°C for 2 h, and the reactions were stopped by the addition
of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer. Proteins were resolved
by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and detected by
autoradiography following amplification of the signal with 1 M sodium salicylate.
Addition of reagents to degradation assay mixtures.
For
addition of purified CAK-activated cyclin A-CDK2, either 0.3 or 1.5 U
of the activated kinase was added to extracts that had been
preincubated with p27T187A for 15 min. The mixture was then incubated
for another 15 min before the addition of radiolabeled p27.
Either 10 µM staurosporine (Sigma), 10 µM olomoucine (Research
Biochemicals International), or apyrase (Sigma) was preincubated
with
extracts and the ATP-regenerating system for 15 min at room
temperature
before the addition of the radiolabelled substrate.
N-Acetyl-
L-leucinyl-
L-leucinyl-
L-norleucinol
(LLnL; Sigma), MG132
(Calbiochem), and adenosine
5'-
O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (ATP

S)
(Sigma) were added
directly to the degradation
assay.
Ubiquitination assay.
In a total volume of 20 µl, 1 µl
of radiolabelled p27 was incubated in 100 µg of G1- or
S-phase extracts or hypotonic buffer supplemented with ATP regenerating
system and 1 mM ATP, with or without the addition of 10 µg of
K48R-ubiquitin or ubiquitin and in the presence of 100 µM LLnL, at
25°C for 30 min or for the times indicated in the figure legends. The
reactions were stopped by the addition of SDS sample buffer.
Immunoprecipitation kinase assay.
One tenth of the
degradation assay mixture was adjusted to 50 mM Tris (pH 7.4), 250 mM
NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, and 0.5% Nonidet P-40 (NP-40 RIPA) and
immunoprecipitated with 1 µg of antibody. The antibodies we used were
CDK2-M2 (Santa Cruz), cyclin A-H432 (Santa Cruz), a rabbit anti-mouse
antibody (Zymed), and 10 µl of a normal rabbit polyclonal serum or a
rabbit polyclonal serum against cyclin E (31). Immune
complexes were precipitated with protein A-Sepharose (Repligen) and
washed twice with NP-40 RIPA buffer and four times with H1 kinase
buffer (20 mM Tris [pH 7.4], 7.5 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol), and phosphorylation assays were performed as described
by Koff et al. (32).
Immunoblot assays.
Immunoblot assays were performed as
described previously (56). Unless specified, 50-µg
portions of extracts were used. The following antibodies were used: a
1:1,000 dilution of p27-C19 (Santa Cruz), a 1:1,000 dilution of p27-N20
(Santa Cruz), a 1:1,000 dilution of CDK2-M2 (Santa Cruz), a 1:2,000
dilution of cdc34 (Transduction), and 1:1,000 dilutions each of
antibodies directed to the
and
subunits of the 20S proteasome (Calbiochem).
 |
RESULTS |
The degradation of p27 varies in a cell cycle phase-specific
manner.
To identify proteins that regulate p27 stability during
the cell cycle, we wanted to develop a cell-free system which would faithfully recapitulate the cell cycle phase-dependent changes in
protein stability. To accomplish this, we either treated asynchronously growing HeLa cells with hydroxyurea for 24 h and released them from the drug for 3 h prior to harvest or treated them with
nocadazole for 12 h and released them from the block for 5 h
prior to harvest. This generated cells that were either 100% S phase
or 60% G1 and 40% G2/M phase, respectively
(Fig. 1A). Extracts were prepared from
these cells and supplemented with an ATP-regenerating system and RRL.
We examined the ability of these extracts to degrade tracer amounts of
either cyclin B1, a protein unstable in G1 cell extract
(6); p27, a protein unstable in S-phase cells (22, 39); or a mutant, p27T187A. We used only tracer amounts (0.3 fmol) of in vitro-translated protein because we did not remove endogenous proteins and suspected that stoichiometric elements in the
proteolysis pathway might be limiting. RRL alone is incapable of
degrading p27 under these conditions (Fig. 1B). We observed that these
extracts faithfully mimic in vivo observations (Fig. 1C): p27 was
degraded in S-phase extracts but not in G1 extracts, and
this could be prevented by mutagenesis of the threonine at position 187 to alanine (Fig. 1D). Furthermore, degradation was dependent on
elements in the C terminus, since deletion of amino acids 83 to 197 prevented degradation of the mutant proteins (data not shown). The
stability of p27 in G1 extracts was not due to inactivation
of proteolytic components during extract preparation, because cyclin
B1 was degraded in these extracts.

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FIG. 1.
Cell cycle phase-specific degradation of p27 can be
recapitulated in a cell-free system. (A) Flow cytometry. Cells were
treated with either nocadazole or hydroxyurea and then released to
enter the G1 or S phase, respectively. The flow-cytometric
profiles from these cultures are shown. DNA content and cell number are
plotted on the ordinate and abscissa, respectively. Below the
flow-cytometric profiles are the histone H1 kinase activities of cyclin
E and cyclin A immunoprecipitates (antibodies are indicated on the
right of each panel; R M represents a rabbit-anti mouse control
nonspecific antibody) from each extract (indicated at the top of each
lane). (B) Cyclin B1 and p27 are stable in RRL supplemented with an
ATP-regenerating system. Portions (0.3 fmol) of in vitro-translated
cyclin B1 and p27 were incubated in reaction mixtures lacking extracts
and containing increasing amounts of RRL (from left to right: 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, and 2.5 µl). Neither protein was degraded under these
conditions. (C) p27 is degraded in an S-phase extract-dependent manner.
Portions (0.3 fmol) of each in vitro-translated cyclin B1 and p27 were
combined with either 200 µg of G1-phase extract or
S-phase extract, as indicated at the top of the panel, with an
ATP-regenerating system at 30°C for the periods indicated above each
lane. The amount of p27 at each point was determined by scanning
densitometry and plotted on a semi-log scale. This experiment was
repeated five times with similar results, and the autoradiogram and
half-life plot are representative. (D) Mutation of threonine 187 to
alanine stabilizes p27 in S-phase extracts. The in vitro-translated
target proteins (indicated on the left of each autoradiogram) were
added to extracts (indicated at the top of each lane), and the reaction
was stopped 2 h later. p27T187A is a mutation of p27 where
threonine-187 was mutated to alanine. This nomenclature is used
throughout the figures.
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The half-life of p27 was approximately 30 min in S phase and more than
2 h in G
1 (Fig.
1C), values which were comparable with
the in vivo half-life of p27 as reported by Hengst and Reed
(
22).
Thus, the S-phase extracts faithfully recapitulate the
stability
and
cis requirements of p27 degradation as
reported in
vivo.
CDK2 activity is necessary for p27 degradation in S-phase
extracts.
Sheaff et al. (51) reported that
threonine-187 of p27 was phosphorylated by the CDK2 kinase in vitro.
Mutation of this residue to alanine resulted in G1 arrest
and prevented p27 degradation when coexpressed with cyclin E
(51). Because the in vitro system recapitulates the
stability of p27T187A, it allows us to directly test, in a biochemical
manner, the contribution of CDK2 associated kinase activity to p27
degradation postulated by the transfection studies (51).
Because of the way the cells were synchronized, both G1 and
S extract contained equivalent amounts of cyclin E- and cyclin
A-associated histone H1 kinase activity (Fig. 1A), suggesting that CDK2
activity could not be sufficient for degradation but might be necessary.
To address the requirement for CDK2 activity, we took many approaches.
First, the CDK inhibitors staurosporine and olomoucine
prevented
degradation of p27 when added to S-phase extracts but
did not affect
cyclin B1 degradation when added to G
1 extracts
(Fig.
2A). At the concentrations used, these
drugs should be inhibiting
CDK2 activity and not protein kinase C,
CDK4, or CDC2 activities
(
38); however, these chemical
inhibitors might be targeting
other pathways that have not yet been
defined. Therefore, we explored
the possibility of inhibiting CDKs by
using a CDK inhibitor protein.
We titrated bacterially produced
p21Waf1/Cip1 into extracts and
measured the effect on CDK2 kinase
activity and p27 degradation.
It was clear that the addition of p21
could prevent both CDK2-associated
H1 kinase activity and p27
degradation (Fig.
2B). However, because
p21 interacts with JNK/SAPK, at
least at high stoichiometries
(
43,
53), we could not exclude
these kinases from playing
a role in degradation of p27.

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FIG. 2.
Degradation of p27 could be prevented by CDK2
inhibitors. (A) Pharamacologic inhibitors of CDK2 activity. Either 10 µM olomoucin or staurosporine, as indicated above each lane, was
added to S-phase extracts (p27) or G1-phase extracts
(cyclin B1). (B) p21. Increasing amounts of p21 (from left to right,
1.65, 3.3, 6.6, and 10.4 pmol) were added to S-phase extracts prior to
addition of in vitro-translated p27. The amounts of p27 at the
beginning and end of the reaction are shown on the left. The CDK2
kinase activity was determined at the end of the reaction by
immunoprecipitation kinase assays as described (32) with a
C-terminus-specific CDK2 antibody. (C) Degradation of p27 correlates
with CDK2 activity. This is the same experiment as described in panel B
but with 788 fmol of recombinant p27 T187A, an amino-terminal fragment
of p27 encompassing residues 1 to 83 (p27N), or a carboxyl-terminal
fragment encompassing amino acids 89 to 197 (p27C). (D) Degradation of
cyclin B1 is resistant to inhibition of CDK2 kinase activity. This is
the same as panel C except that G1 extracts and
35S-cyclin B1 were used.
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We also examined the effect of three mutant versions of p27 on CDK2
activity and degradation: the nondegradable p27 (p27T187A),
the
CDK-inhibitory amino-terminal half of p27, and the carboxyl-terminal
half of p27. We observed that a 2,000-fold molar excess (relative
to
the tracer) of either the bacterially produced amino-terminal
half of
p27 or p27T187A can inhibit immunoprecipitable CDK2 activity
and the
degradation of p27 (Fig.
2C). However, similar amounts
of the
carboxy-terminal half of p27 were unable to inhibit the
CDK2 kinase and
the degradation of p27 (Fig.
2C). Titration of
p27T187A and p27N led to
a sharp transition in immunoprecipitable
CDK2-associated histone H1
kinase and degradation (data not shown).
Additionally, none of these
proteins could prevent G
1 extract-dependent
degradation of
cyclin B1 (Fig.
2D). This established a correlation
between kinase
activity and p27
degradation.
However, it was formally possible that this amount of p27T187A
inhibitor might block degradation activity in a non-CDK-dependent
fashion, i.e., by acting as a competitive substrate. To address
this
and to determine if the inhibitor acted by inhibiting CDK
activity
alone, we added either purified cyclin A-CDK2 (Fig.
3A),
activated by recombinant CAK, or
crude lysates from Sf9 cells
coinfected with cyclin E- and
CDK2-expressing baculovirus (Fig.
3B) to extracts preincubated with
p27T187A for 15 min. This time
is sufficient to inhibit all the CDK2
(data not shown). In either
case, the reconstitution of CDK activity in
the extract restored
the ability of the extract to degrade p27,
suggesting that the
bacterial proteins did not act as suicide
substrates but, rather,
acted through another mechanism, presumably
CDK2 inhibition. Furthermore,
addition of cyclin A-CDK2 directly to
G
1 extracts did not stimulate
degradation (Fig.
4), indicating that kinase is not
sufficient
and that S-phase extracts contain some functions in addition
to
CDK2 (see below).

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FIG. 3.
p27 degradation is dependent on the histone H1 kinase
activity of CDK2. (A) Purified cyclin A-CDK2 restores degradation
activity to an S-phase extract to which p27T187A was added. As
indicated at the top of the figure, S-phase extracts were preincubated
for 15 mins with 788 fmol of p27T187A, and then purified CAK-activated
cyclin A-CDK2 (from left to right, 144.8 and 724.5 fmol) was added. The
amounts of p27 at the beginning and end of the reaction are shown (on
the left). CDK2 kinase was determined at the end of the reaction by
immunoprecipitation kinase assays with a cyclin A-specific antibody.
The panels on the right demonstrate that the CAK-activated cyclin
A-CDK2 was not contaminated with activities capable of degrading p27.
(B) CDK2 catalytic activity is required for p27 degradation. In this
experiment, S-phase extracts to which p27T187A was added were
subsequently incubated with either cyclin E-CDK2 (E/K2) or a
catalytically inactive mutant (E/K2*). The top panel shows titrations
of increasing amounts of the lysate from Sf9 cells infected with the
indicated viruses (from left to right, 0.1, 0.5, and 2 µl). The
middle panel shows the effect of mixing 0.5 µl of the lysates
indicated on the right. AcNPV represents lysates from Sf9 cells
infected with parental baculovirus expressing the polyhedrin protein.
The bottom panel shows the effect of mixing 0.3 fmol of in
vitro-translated p27 with 5 µl of the lysates indicated above each
lane. (C) Kinetic analysis of p27 degradation in reconstituted S-phase
extracts. Aliquots from each reaction (indicated on the right) were
collected at 30-min intervals (indicated at the top).
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FIG. 4.
Supplementation of G1 extracts with cyclin
A-CDK2 does not alter degradation. Extracts and addition of
CAK-activated purified cyclin A-CDK2 are indicated above each lane.
Increasing amounts of cyclin A-CDK2 were added to G1
extracts. At the beginning of the reaction, an aliquot was removed and
the input p27 and immunoprecipitable CDK2 or rabbit anti-mouse (RaM)
kinase activities were determined (left of each panel). At 2 h
later, the reaction was stopped and the products were resolved on
SDS-polyacrylamide gels.
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To confirm that CDK2 activity was required for degradation of p27, we
compared the ability of catalytically active and inactive
cyclin E-CDK2
to restore the degradative ability to the extracts
containing p27T187A
(Fig.
3B and C). The inactivating mutation
does not affect cyclin
E-CDK2 complex assembly, and we normalized
the amounts added by
quantitative immunoblotting against cyclin
E and CDK2 (data not shown).
Furthermore, when we incubated p27
with a 10-fold excess of the
infected Sf9 lysates and an ATP-regenerating
system under identical
conditions, only a modest amount of degradation
could be observed, and
it was specific to lysates that contain
the active form of cyclin
E-CDK2 (Fig.
3B, bottom). Thus, we concluded
that whereas the cell
lysate from cyclin E-CDK2-infected Sf9 cells
might contain some
activities similar to the S-phase cell extract,
they are not sufficient
to explain the loss of p27 when combined
with the S-phase extract. We
observed that the catalytically inactive
mutant could not reconstitute
degradation activity (Fig.
3B).
Furthermore, degradation could be
restored by combining the catalytically
active and inactive complexes,
suggesting that the failure of
the inactive form to restore degradation
was due to the absence
of CDK2 activity (Fig.
3B). Finally, to confirm
that addition
of cyclin E-CDK2 in baculovirus lysates reconstituted the
degradation
pathway, we compared the half-life of p27 in these
experiments
(Fig.
3C). The half-life of p27 in extracts containing
p27T187A
and cyclin E-CDK2 was approximately the same as observed in
S-phase
extracts alone. Together, these data supports the hypothesis
that
CDK2 activity is directly required for degradation and is not
simply as an indirect effector promoting S-phase
entry.
Mechanism of p27 degradation.
Pagano et al. (42)
raised the possibility that p27 was degraded by the ubiquitin-dependent
proteolysis pathway. They reported that RRL supplemented with cdc34
could ubiquitinate p27. In support of this hypothesis, inhibitors of
the proteasome prevented p27 degradation in HL-60 cells (39)
when added to culture medium. However, the HL-60 studies failed to
demonstrate the formation of ubiquitin conjugates of p27, raising the
possibility that degradation in this case was not due to direct
ubiquitination of p27 but, rather, was due to an indirect mechanism
perhaps involving CDK association and the proteasome.
To gain further insight into the mechanism of p27 degradation, we
examined the effects of various protease inhibitors on degradation
in
S-phase extracts. Inclusion of the microbial protease inhibitor
leupeptin, aprotinin, or pepstatin A at 10 µg/µl did not prevent
cyclin B1 or p27 degradation in G
1- or S-phase extracts,
respectively
(Fig.
5A). The degradation
of p27 could be inhibited by sodium
fluoride and sodium orthovanadate
but not by

-glycerolphosphate
(Fig.
5A). Furthermore, degradation of
p27 in S-phase extracts
was dependent on ATP and could be prevented by
either apyrase
treatment (Fig.
5B) or inclusion of the ATP analogue
ATP

S (Fig.
5C). Since both proteasomal degradation and CDK2 activity
are
ATP dependent, we next examined the sensitivity of the reaction
to
the proteasomal and calpain I inhibitors LLnL and MG132.

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FIG. 5.
Degradation of p27 is ATPase dependent. (A) Microbial
peptidase inhibitors. The inhibitors (indicated at the top of each
lane) were added to S-phase extracts with in vitro-translated p27 or to
G1 extracts with in vitro-translated cyclin B1. The numbers
underneath the p27 autoradiogram represent the percentage of input p27
remaining after 2 h. (B) p27 degradation is sensitive to apyrase.
p27 was added to S-phase extracts supplemented with an ATP-regenerating
system and either increasing amounts of apyrase or heat-inactivated
apyrase (0.02, 0.1, and 0.3 U). (C) ATP S prevents p27 degradation.
As in panel B, p27 was added to reaction mixtures containing either no
ATP or an ATP-regenerating system with addition of increasing amounts
of ATP S (0.5, 1, and 1.75 mM).
|
|
Degradation of p27 and cyclin B1 was sensitive to MG132 and LLnL,
inhibitors of both calpain I and the proteasome (Fig.
6A).
To discriminate between these two
proteolytic pathways, we examined
the sensitivity of the degradation
reaction to EGTA and EDTA (Fig.
6B), since calpain I but not the
proteasome is calcium dependent
and thus would be inhibited by EGTA.
The reaction was sensitive
to EDTA but not EGTA, suggesting a
non-calpain I cleavage pathway.
Further evidence for a
proteasome-dependent step in the degradation
of p27 was suggested by
examining proteolysis in crude fractions
of the extract. When S-phase
extracts supplemented with RRL were
subjected to high-speed
centrifugation, neither the pellet nor
the supernatant fraction alone
degraded p27 but when recombined
they did (Fig.
6C). Immunoblotting the
fractions showed that the

and

subunits of the proteasome were
enriched in the pellet
fraction that and CDC34, a putative E2 for
G
1/S control, was enriched
in the supernatant fraction
(Fig.
6C). Additionally, the CDK2-associated
kinase activity largely
fractionated to the pellet. Addition of
CAK-activated and purified
cyclin A-CDK2 to the supernatant fraction
did not restore p27
degradation activity, suggesting that other
factors in the pellet
fraction, in addition to the CDK2 activity,
were required for
degradation (Fig.
6D).

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FIG. 6.
Degradation of p27 is dependent on the proteasome. (A)
Pharmcological inhibitors. LLnL or MG132, as indicated between the
panels, was added to p27 or cyclin B1 degradation reaction mixtures in
either S-phase or G1-phase extracts, respectively, as
indicated below each panel, at the concentrations indicated above each
lane. (B) Divalent cation requirement. EDTA or EGTA was added at the
millimolar concentrations indicated above each lane to p27 or cyclin B1
degradation reaction mixtures in either S-phase or G1-phase
extracts, respectively (indicated to the left of each panel). (C)
High-speed fractionation of the inhibitory activity. S-phase extracts
were subjected to centrifugation and fractionated into a supernatant
(HSS) and pellet (HSP). These fractions, either alone or combined, were
assessed for degradation activity (top). The presence of proteasome
subunits and CDC34 was determined by immunoblot analysis, and the
histone H1 kinase activity of anti-CDK2 or rabbit anti-mouse
immunoprecipitates was determined (indicated to the left of each
panel). (D) The pellet contains a component(s) other than CDK2 activity
that is required for restoration of p27 degradation. The stability of
p27 was determined in the supernatant (HSS) extracts supplemented with
increasing amounts of purified active cyclin A-CDK2 kinase. The
presence of p27 and the amount of kinase activity were determined
2 h after incubation (indicated to the left of each panel).
|
|
Thus, we next asked if p27 degradation was dependent on ubiquitin. To
address this, we titrated a modified ubiquitin, K48R,
into S-phase
extracts and measured its effect on p27 degradation
(Fig.
7A). We observed that this modified
ubiquitin could stabilize
p27 in S-phase extracts in a dose-dependent
manner. Similar results
were obtained with methylated ubiquitin and
ubiquitin-aldehyde
(data not shown). Furthermore, including unmodified
ubiquitin
with K48R could reverse this stabilization, consistent with
the
possibility that a ubiquitin-dependent event is involved in
degradation
of p27 (Fig.
7B). We could also block cyclin B1 degradation
in
G
1 extracts with this mutant ubiquitin, but this
reaction was
reversible by continued incubation, suggesting that
deubiquitinases
are active in these extracts (Fig.
7A, compare the
30-min and
2-h time points).

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FIG. 7.
Degradation of p27 is ubiquitin dependent. (A) A mutant
ubiquitin, K48R, inhibits p27 degradation. The amount of K48R ubiquitin
(in micrograms) added to lysates is indicated at the top of each lane.
Its effect on cyclin B1 was determined in G1-phase
extracts, and its effect on p27 was determined in S-phase extract. The
time for which the reaction was incubated is indicated to the right of
each panel. (B) K48R is a competitive inhibitor of degradation. Either
5 µg of K48R-ubiquitin or 10 µg of ubiquitin was added to reaction
mixtures as indicated at the top of each lane. (C) Slower-migrating
forms of p27 are detected in S-phase extracts supplemented with
K48R-ubiquitin and LLnL. The extract indicated at the top of each lane
was incubated with p27, LLnL, and the ubiquitin species indicated at
the top of the gel. After 30 min, the reaction was stopped and the
products were resolved by SDS-PAGE. The mobility of prestained protein
molecular weight standards is indicated to the right of the gel, in
thousands. (D) High-molecular-weight species cannot form on a T187A
mutant. The experiment is the same as described in panel C. (E). The
high-molecular-weight species forms rapidly in a cell cycle
phase-dependent manner. S-phase ( ) and G1-phase ( )
extracts were combined with K48R-ubiquitin, LLnL, and p27, and samples
were removed at 0, 5, 15, 30, and 60 min. Following resolution on
SDS-polyacrylamide gels and autoradiography, the signal in the regions
marked in panel C on the left side of the gel were quantitated by
scanning densitometry with an alpha-Innotech 1000 gel documentation
system. The total area under the curve was then plotted on the
y axis, and the time is given on the x axis.
|
|
Our ability to block p27 degradation in S-phase extracts with K48R
ubiquitin raised the possibility that we could identify
higher-molecular-weight conjugates of p27, presumably covalent
linkages
of ubiquitin to p27. To examine this, we increased the
amount of target
in the reaction 10-fold and added K48R-ubiquitin
with LLnL.
Importantly, these conditions did not inhibit the CDK2
activity of the
extract (data not shown). After 30 min, we observed
slower-mobility
species of p27 specifically enriched in S-phase
extracts and dependent
on the inclusion of K48R-ubiquitin (Fig.
7C and E). These species did
not form if p27T187A was used as
the target (Fig.
7D). Consequently,
formation of these species
can be correlated with the degradation of
p27, as reported in
the previous experiments. Together, these data
suggest that these
"bands" might represent ubiquitinated precursors
which are ultimately
degraded in the S-phase extract. The cell cycle
phase dependence
of this reaction suggests that we are not simply
observing the
ubiquitination of a fraction of target that is either
unfolded
or misfolded. Therefore, we conclude that the pathway leading
to p27 degradation at the G
1/S boundary is regulated in a
ubiquitin-dependent,
proteasome-dependent manner and that at least some
fraction of
p27 is itself
ubiquitinated.
A p27 binding protein is required for degradation in addition to
cyclin-CDK2 activity.
G1 extracts containing cyclin E-
and cyclin A-associated kinase activity (Fig. 1A) were unable to
promote p27 degradation. In addition, increasing the amount of cyclin
A-CDK2 activity in these extracts by adding purified kinase did not
stimulate degradation in G1 extracts, indicating that the
amount of this kinase was not a limiting factor (Fig. 4). These
observations suggested either that the G1 extracts lack the
activities required for p27 degradation or that there was a molecular
mechanism capable of suppressing these activities. Another possibility
is that the S-phase extracts contain an inhibitor of a G1
inhibitor and such relationships can continue endlessly. To begin to
distinguish between these possibilities, we first mixed variable
amounts of G1- and S-phase extracts and examined the
half-life of p27. We observed that the extent of p27 degradation was
dependent on the proportion of S-phase extract in the reaction (Fig.
8). This suggests that G1
extracts probably do not contain suppressors of p27 degradation but
that if they do, they must be balanced by the activating proteins in S-phase extracts.

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FIG. 8.
G1 extracts lack the activities required for
p27 degradation. To determine if G1 extracts contained
factors that could inhibit S-phase-specific degradation, extracts were
mixed at the percentages indicated and the amount of p27 was determined
by scanning densitometry and plotted as percent input. This experiment
was performed five times with three different sets of extracts. The
data shown is representative of one experiment.
|
|
Thus, we wanted to determine if these S-phase-specific factors could
interact with p27 or its associated proteins. To accomplish
this, we
covalently linked p27T187A or bovine serum albumin (BSA)
to Sepharose
beads and, following incubation with S-phase extracts,
assayed the
supernatants for CDK2 activity and p27 degradation
activity. As
expected, the extracts incubated with BSA retained
CDK2 kinase activity
whereas the extracts incubated with p27T187A
did not (Fig.
9A). Furthermore, p27 degradation
activity correlated
with the presence of CDK2 activity. Extracts
depleted of BSA binding
proteins were capable of degradation, but those
depleted of p27
binding proteins were not (Fig.
9B). We next added
lysates from
infected Sf9 cells expressing cyclin E-CDK2 or noninfected
cells
to the extracts depleted of p27T187A binding proteins and assayed
them for degradation. Addition of the kinase was not capable of
restoring p27 degradation activity to the S-phase extract (Fig.
9B),
although there was clearly an increase in the amount of CDK2
activity
in the extract (Fig.
9A).

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FIG. 9.
A non-cyclin-CDK2 factor is required for p27 degradation
and can be depleted from S-phase extracts. (A) Kinase assay. The
immunoprecipitable cyclin E kinase activity for each condition is shown
above each lane. (B) Degradation reaction. Extracts depleted of either
BSA binding proteins or p27 binding proteins (indicated on the left)
were incubated with 0.3 fmol of in vitro-translated p27 and either
increasing amounts of lysates (from left to right, 0.1, 0.5, and 2 µl) from Sf9 cells infected with cyclin E- and CDK2-expressing
baculoviruses or uninfected (uninf) lysates.
|
|
This data and the results of the experiments in Fig.
3 are consistent
with the following model. When p27T187A is added to
extracts, it binds
both cyclin-CDK complexes and another factor,
SPC (S-phase proteolytic
complex). Depending on the equilibrium
constants of the various
partners, addition of cyclin-CDK complexes
might displace SPC from p27.
It is unlikely that the recombinant
complex can displace the endogenous
complex due to the strong
binding affinity (consistent with our
observation that catalytically
inactive cyclin-CDK complexes could not
restore degradation activity
[Fig.
3B]). On the other hand, when all
p27 binding proteins are
depleted from extracts, addition of active
cyclin-dependent kinases
would not be able to support degradation,
since supernatant is
depleted of SPC. This is consistent with the
interpretation that
degradation of p27 occurs by a multimolecular
process, one event
being directly CDK2 dependent and the other
requiring an S-phase-specific
protein(s) that binds to
p27.
 |
DISCUSSION |
From the phenotypes of mice deficient for each cdk inhibitor and
from studies on p27-deficient oligodendrocytes (7) and luteal cells (60), it appears that p27 plays a major role in the regulation of proliferation in response to environmental signals. Thus, one way to ensure that cells would not be able to respond to
antimitogenic environmental signals following commitment would be to
have the same mechanism promoting S phase and eliminating p27. This
would be enforced if p27 degradation was a direct consequence of
CDK2-mediated phosphorylation and other mitogen-induced factors.
In this report, we demonstrate that p27 is targeted for degradation in
a pathway that involves cyclin-CDK2 activity and S-phase-specific functions. Because depletion of cyclin-CDK2 activity from S-phase extracts prevents p27 degradation, its role in degradation cannot be
attributed solely to its ability to promote S phase. Furthermore, it is
not the presence of this complex but, rather, its activity that is
required for degradation. Because catalytically inactive cyclin-CDK
complexes do not stimulate degradation, it is unlikely that degradation
is due to a "bystander" effect of cyclin E-CDK2 association. The
observation that threonine-187 is phosphorylated by CDK2 in vitro
(51) and the inability of p27T187A to be degraded in S-phase
extract (as reported here) are consistent with a direct role of CDK2 phosphorylation.
How this phosphorylation occurs is not clear
does the binding of p27
to cyclin-CDK unmask the carboxyl terminus of the inhibitor, or does it
increase the concentration of inhibitor around the kinase? p27 binds to
both cyclin D-CDK4,6 and cyclin E-CDK2 complexes (52). In
Rat1 cells, mutants of p27 deficient for cyclin E-CDK2 binding appear
to be less efficiently degraded (64), and we have shown that
the cyclin-CDK binding domain is not efficiently degraded (unpublished
data). These data suggest that if cyclin E-CDK2-p27 complex formation
is an important component of the degradation pathway, it is not
sufficient for degradation in the absence of the carboxyl domains of
the protein and presumably the T187 residue. Whereas T187 is
phosphorylated by cyclin E-CDK2, it is not appreciably phosphorylated
by cyclin D-CDK complexes (51). In addition, p27 can
associate with cyclin D-CDK complexes in both inhibitory
(52) and noninhibitory fashions (5, 56). The
association of p27 with cyclin D1-CDK even stabilizes the protein in S
phase (9). It is possible that this association does not
expose the carboxyl portions of the inhibitor to the appropriate kinase
or that it prevents p27 phosphorylation by cyclin E-CDK2 complexes.
These observations suggest that cells can regulate p27 activity by two
distinct mechanisms at the G1/S transition: they can either
degrade the protein in a cyclin-CDK2-dependent manner or sequester it
in a cyclin D-CDK4-dependent manner. The mechanism that is used may
depend on the cell type or particular environmental signals.
It is also interesting that the G1 extracts we used have
abundant CDK2 kinase activity, due to contaminating G2
cells, but do not promote p27 degradation. We also found that
elutriated G1 and G2 cells lack the p27
degradation activity present in S-phase extracts (unpublished data). It
is not yet clear if S-phase-specific degradation is due to cell cycle
phase-specific alteration in the activity of a constitutively expressed
protein or if proteins which recognize phosphorylated p27 and target it
for degradation are regulated at the level of expression during the
cell cycle. It is formally possible that p27 is not phosphorylated in
G1 extracts, either because of an increased phosphatase
activity, an inability of CDK2 to phosphorylate p27 because of
interactions with other G1-specific proteins (either the
cyclin-CDK2 complex or p27), or the lack of a required activity
(another cell cycle-regulated factor). Our data from mixing experiments
and from the depletion of p27 binding proteins suggests that there is
an S-phase-specific factor that is essential for degradation of p27.
Purification of this factor is required before its nature can be
discussed further.
Degradation of p27 involves the proteasome. The degradation of p27 is
sensitive to proteasomal inhibitors both in vivo and in S-phase
extracts. In vitro, degradation is correlated with the presence of the
proteasome, CDC34, CDK2 activity, and other unidentified
S-phase-specific factors. Our data strongly suggests that the addition
of proteasomal inhibitors to cells directly prevents p27 degradation
and does not act in an indirect manner. Furthermore, we can demonstrate
that the degradation reaction is sensitive to inclusion of an
arginine-substituted mutant ubiquitin, K48R, which prevents side chain
elongation by a subset of ubiquitin ligases (17). This data
is consistent with a role for ubiquitin-dependent proteasomal
degradation in the degradation of p27.
There is some suggestion that p27 might be degraded following
ubiquitination. Ubiquitination of p27 is supported by a number of
observations and analogies. The strongest analogy comes from the
comparison of p27 with the yeast CDK inhibitors
p40sic1 and Far1 and the Xenopus CDK
inhibitor Xic1. p40 and Far1 degradation depends on CLN and CDC34
activity (21, 48, 49, 61, 63). Xic1 degradation requires
CDK2 activity as well as the presence of CDC34 (68). The
strongest evidence that p27 is ubiquitinated comes from the direct
demonstration of ubiquitination in crude whole-cell extract systems
supplemented with additional CDC34 and RRL (42). We have
documented the formation of S-phase- and K48R-ubiquitin-dependent
slower-migrating species of p27, suggesting that ubiquitin-p27
intermediates form in this system in a cell cycle-regulated manner.
However, only a small amount of protein can be demonstrably
ubiquitinated. This may be due to the inefficiency of the reaction, the
presence of deubiquitinating enzymes, or another unidentified process.
Regardless, the correlation between degradation and formation of these
higher-molecular-weight species argues against any model, such as
misfolded substrate, that fails to invoke some aspect of cell cycle dependence.
Ultimately, the fractionation of the S-phase extract and purification
of the factors required for degradation will be the final arbiter of
the relationship between CDK2 activity, proteasome activity, and
ubiquitin in this process.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Joan Massagué (The Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, MSKCC), Robert Fisher (MSKCC), and Ray Deshaies (California Institute of Technology) for providing reagents crucial to these studies. In addition, we thank Jim Roberts for critically evaluating the manuscript.
Work in our laboratory is supported by funds from the NIH (GM52597),
the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center NCI Core Grant (CA08748),
the SPORE program of NCI (CA68425), and the Koch fund of CAPcure. A.K.
is supported by a Pew Scholarship in Biomedical Science and an Irma T. Hirschl Scholarship and is the incumbent of the Frederick R. Adler
Chair for Junior Faculty.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: RRL917D, Box
207, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Ave., New York, NY 10021. Phone: (212) 639-2354. Fax: (212) 639-2861. E-mail: a-koff{at}ski.mskcc.org.
 |
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