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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3497-3509, Vol. 20, No. 10
0270-7306/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Involvement of Myc Activity in a
G1/S-Promoting Mechanism Parallel to the pRb/E2F
Pathway
Eric
Santoni-Rugiu,
Jacob
Falck,
Niels
Mailand,
Jiri
Bartek,* and
Jiri
Lukas
Institute of Cancer Biology, Danish Cancer
Society, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø., Denmark
Received 18 October 1999/Returned for modification 22 November
1999/Accepted 22 February 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
The retinoblastoma protein (pRb)/E2F pathway regulates commitment
of mammalian cells to replicate DNA. On the other hand, mitogen-stimulated cells deprived of E2F activity can still maintain physiologically relevant levels of cyclin E-dependent kinase activity and gradually enter S phase, suggesting the existence of a DNA synthesis-inducing mechanism parallel to the pRb/E2F axis. Here we show
that regulatable ectopic expression of cyclin E or transcriptionally active Myc can rapidly induce DNA synthesis in U2OS-derived cell lines
whose E2F activity is blocked by a constitutively active pRb
(pRb
cdk) mutant. The effect of Myc is associated with Cdc25A phosphatase and cyclin E-CDK2 kinase activation and abolished by
antagonizing Myc activity with the dominant-negative (dn) MadMyc chimera. Moreover, while abrogation of either endogenous E2F or Myc
activity only delays and lowers DNA synthesis in synchronized U2OS
cells or rat diploid fibroblasts, concomitant neutralization of both
abolishes it. Whereas ectopic Myc and E2F1 rescue the G1/S
delay caused by pRb
cdk (or dnDP1) and MadMyc, respectively, cyclin E
or Cdc25A can restore DNA replication even in cells concomitantly exposed to pRb
cdk and MadMyc. However, coexpression of dnCDK2 neutralizes all of these rescuing effects. Finally, proper
transcription of cyclin E and Cdc25A at the G1/S transition
requires both Myc and E2F activities, and subthreshold levels of
ectopic cyclin E and Cdc25A synergistically restore DNA synthesis in
cells with silenced Myc and E2F activities. These results suggest that
Myc controls a G1/S-promoting mechanism regulating cyclin
E-CDK2 in parallel to the "classical" pRb/E2F pathway.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The "retinoblastoma (Rb)
pathway," comprising Rb protein (pRb) and its immediate upstream
regulators, D-cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases 4 and 6 (CDK4 and -6, respectively), INK4 CDK inhibitors (CKIs), and pRb-regulated E2F
transcription factors, appears instrumental in regulating homeostatic
tissue renewal and preventing neoplastic growth (4, 68).
However, it remains to be elucidated whether this pathway represents
the only physiological way to commit mammalian somatic cells to DNA
replication. In particular, it is unclear whether cyclin E, a powerful
inducer of cell cycle progression and DNA synthesis (31, 35, 37,
55), is solely a primary target of the pRb/E2F axis (8, 16,
21, 54), or whether it may also be under the control of a
parallel G1/S-regulatory pathway. Compelling evidence
exists in Drosophila and mammals for cyclin E being a
pivotal downstream mediator of the Rb pathway (15, 22).
However, cyclin E is required and rate-limiting for G1/S
progression in both Rb-positive and -negative cells (55). Moreover, unlike D-type cyclins, this cyclin can induce S-phase entry
and DNA synthesis in mammalian cells deprived of E2F activity by
expression of a constitutively active pRb mutant (pRb
cdk) or of a
dominant-negative DP1 mutant, dnDP1 (44). These and other
recent reports (29, 39) suggest that cyclin E may play multiple roles in promoting S-phase entry and that at least one of its
critical functions is either downstream of or parallel to pRb
phosphorylation and independent of E2F activation.
These features render cyclin E a candidate target for a hypothetical
G1/S-promoting mechanism different from the Rb pathway. A
tissue-specific E2F-independent transcription of cyclin E
(16) and the occurrence of S-phase entry despite elimination
of E2F-dependent transcriptional activity by dE2F and
dDP mutations (62) were detected in
Drosophila, raising the possibility that this mechanism may
actually exist. Observations that Rb-null fibroblasts or
cells functionally deprived of active transrepression mediated by
pRb-E2F complexes are still sensitive to serum deprivation (27,
76) are compatible with its presence as well in mammalian cells.
More direct evidence comes from our recent work with human U2OS
osteosarcoma cells conditionally expressing pRb
cdk and in diploid
rat fibroblasts microinjected with this mutant (47). Indeed,
when observed over an extended period of several days, these cells
arrest only transiently in G1 despite pRb
cdk's
capability of quantitatively repressing all endogenous E2Fs (44,
47). Although abruptly and severely deprived of cyclin A
expression and associated kinase activity, such cells are able to
maintain physiologically significant levels of cyclin E mRNA, protein,
and associated kinase activity, thereby allowing S-phase entry and DNA
replication within 2 days (43, 47). These results,
consistent with observations by others in transient experiments
(11, 36), suggest the existence of a mitogen-stimulated,
G1/S-promoting mechanism capable of inducing DNA synthesis
by regulating cyclin E function in parallel to the pRb/E2F pathway.
Yet, cells devoid of E2F activity, although able to rereplicate DNA
over several days, do not proliferate (47), indicating that
the E2F-dependent and -independent pathways triggering DNA synthesis
must mutually cooperate to ensure proper progression through somatic
cell cycles.
Previous work prompted us to investigate the possibility that c-Myc, as
a paradigmatic non-E2F, cell-cycle-related transcription factor
(3, 24, 53), is potentially involved in the regulation of
this G1/S-promoting pathway parallel to the classical
pRb/E2F axis. Myc is promptly induced by mitogens and continuously
expressed in cycling cells (3, 24, 26), and its ectopic
expression, like that of E2F (34, 46, 72) or cyclin E-CDK2
(13), is able to induce S-phase entry in quiescent cells
(reviewed in references 3, 26, 53). Moreover, forced
expression of c-Myc is reportedly able to activate cyclin E-CDK2
complexes in quiescent or exponentially growing cells by as-yet-debated
mechanisms involving modulation of levels and function of the CKI p27
or increased expression of cyclin E or Cdc25A phosphatase (3, 9,
20, 40, 53, 57, 58). Importantly, the activity of cyclin E-CDK2
is necessary for cell cycle progression induced by conditional Myc
alleles (63), is reduced in cells arrested in G1
by a dnMyc allele (5), and is delayed and reduced during the
G0/S transition in c-Myc
/
cells
(49). Finally, further supporting the idea of c-Myc as an
upstream regulator of cyclin E, both c-Myc and cyclin E may overcome a
p16-induced cell cycle arrest (1, 44) and uncouple DNA
replication from cell cycle progression, leading to genomic instability
(18, 41, 52, 69).
However, despite all this work pointing to Myc as an upstream regulator
of cyclin E function, the potential involvement of Myc transcriptional
activity in the control of a mechanism that may promote
G1/S transition and DNA replication independently of E2F
activity remains untested. In this respect, given the reported ability
of Myc to induce E2F-1 gene expression and activate E2F-2 promoter
(40, 67), one may query whether the control of
G1/S transition and cyclin E function by Myc
transcriptional activity is direct or is mediated by increased E2F
activity (3, 53, 72).
To directly address the potential existence of a "parallel" pathway
that could commit mammalian cells to DNA replication via cyclin E
function and to test whether Myc requires E2F activity for inducing DNA
replication and S phase, we have now generated novel inducible U2OS
cell lines expressing pRb
cdk together with cyclin E or with c-Myc.
We have also employed functional E2F- and Myc-knockout analyses with
U2OS cells and diploid fibroblasts to assess in more detail the
independent control of S-phase entry by the activities of these two
transcription factors. Our data indicate that Myc plays a critical role
in sustaining an E2F-independent, G1/S-promoting mechanism
by regulating cyclin E-CDK2 function, which therefore represents a
common rate-limiting target of both E2F-dependent and -independent
pathways for S-phase entry. We also show that both E2F and Myc
activities are required to ensure timely and proper levels of DNA
replication and orderly completion of cell cycles.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids.
Hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged,
phosphorylation-deficient murine pRb mutant pRb
cdk (44)
was contained in the pBI vector (47), which allows
expression of two genes from a bidirectional, tetracycline (TET)-repressible promoter (Clontech). Eleven CDK phosphorylation sites, regulating pRb binding to E2F, c-Abl, and LXCXE-containing proteins, have been mutated to alanine in pRb
cdk, and the remaining ones do not affect stable inhibition of all E2Fs by this mutant (44, 47). Human cyclin E and c-Myc cDNAs were subcloned into the SalI site of pBI's second polylinker to generate the
pBI-HA-Rb
cdk/CycE and pBI-HA-Rb
cdk/Myc vectors, respectively,
while the subcloning of c-Myc cDNA into the EcoRV site
yielded the pBI-Myc vector. The plasmids pBabePuro, pCMV-CD20, pBI-p16,
pCMV-HA-dnDP1 (
103-126), and pECE-pRb
B/X for expression of
murine wild-type pRb, and the 6xE2F-luciferase (6xE2F-Luc) reporter,
containing six E2F-responsive elements in front of the TATA box, are
described elsewhere (44, 45, 47). The Cdc25A cDNA, the kind
gift of B. Ducommun, was linked in frame at its N terminus with the HA
tag and subcloned into the pBI plasmid by PCR, generating
pBI-HA-Cdc25A. The expression vectors pCMV-dnCDK2 (dnK2)
(71) and pCMVMadMyc (5) (kindly donated by R. Bernards) and the reporter ODC
Luc, containing the Myc-responsive
region of murine ODC promoter, and its mutant ODC
LucS-5A (56) (kindly provided by J. L. Cleveland) were used as
reported. The reporter M4-Luc, a kind gift of R. N. Eisenman,
contains four Myc-responsive E boxes cloned into pGL2-Promoter vector (Promega).
Cell culture and gene transfer.
U2OS-TA, a U2OS human
osteosarcoma cell line with stably integrated TET-regulated
transcriptional activator (tet-VP16) and a neomycin resistance gene
(47), was transfected with the pBI vectors for pRb
cdk,
pRb
cdk/CycE, pRb
cdk/c-Myc, or c-Myc along with pBabePuro at a
10:1 ratio. Puromycin-resistant clones were cultured in Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) containing 10% fetal calf serum, G418
(400 µg/ml), puromycin (1 µg/ml), and TET (2 µg/ml). Derepression
of clones by TET removal was performed according to procedures
previously published (47). The R12 embryonic diploid
fibroblasts expressing tet-VP16 and derived from Rat-1 fibroblasts
(44, 47) were maintained in DMEM containing G418.
Calcium-phosphate transfection, electroporation, and microinjection of
plasmids were performed as reported previously (44-46).
Flow cytometry and BrdU incorporation.
The procedures for
propidium iodide staining of cellular DNA, for immunostaining and
sorting of CD20-positive cells, and for DNA analysis were as published
previously (47). Stained cells were acquired by the
FACSCalibur flow cytometer (Becton Dickinson) by using CellQuest
software, and the DNA distribution (FL2-A parameter) was analyzed by
ModFit software.
For analysis of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, 10
6
U2OS-TA or R12 cells were seeded onto 10-cm-diameter dishes. The
next
day, cells were cotransfected with 1 µg of pCMV-CD20 and
the
indicated combinations of plasmids and concomitantly synchronized
by
addition of nocodazole (50 ng/ml) to TET-free medium. Fifteen
hours
later, nocodazole and transfection precipitate were washed
off, and
arrested cells were reseeded on coverslips in TET-free
medium
containing 10% serum and 100 µM BrdU. At the indicated
time points
after release from nocodazole, cells were immunoreacted
with anti-CD20
monoclonal antibody (MAb), fixed, and eventually
at least 300 CD20-positive cells were assayed for BrdU incorporation
by double
immunostaining as reported previously (
45,
46).
The counts
were highly comparable to those obtained by double
labeling with
antibodies for BrdU and for the ectopic proteins
(not
shown).
Immunochemical techniques and kinase and phosphatase assays.
The MAbs used in this study were anti-pRb 245 (Pharmingen) and anti-Myc
9E10 (a kind gift from G. Evan) for immunoblots; anti-HA 12CA5
(44), anti-CD20 (Becton Dickinson), anti-cyclin E HE12 (kindly provided by S. I. Reed), and anti-p16 DCS-50
(45) for immunostaining; anti-cyclin E HE172 (provided by
S. I. Reed), anti-cyclin B1 (Transduction Laboratories), and
anti-Cdc25A DCS-124 (N. Mailand, J. Falck, C. Lukas, R. Syljuåsen, J. Bartek, and J. Lukas, submitted for publication) for
immunoprecipitation; fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled anti-CD20 and
anti-BrdU (Becton Dickinson) for fluorescence-activated cell sorter
analysis and BrdU detection, respectively. Rabbit antisera to the c-Myc
C terminus (SC-788) for immunostaining of c-Myc and the chimeric
protein MadMyc (MM), and to CDK2 (SC-163) for immunostaining of dnK2, were from Santa Cruz. Immunostaining of cells grown on coverslips and
immunoblotting procedures, unless otherwise stated, were as described
previously (45, 46). Equal loading of immunoblots was
verified by Ponceau-S staining.
Cyclin E-associated kinase activity was assessed as described
previously (
44) with some modifications. Briefly, cells were
harvested at the indicated times after TET removal, pelleted,
and
incubated for 30-min in 3 to 5 volumes of ice-cold lysis buffer
(50 mM
HEPES [pH 7.5], 250 mM NaCl, 5 mM EDTA, 1 mM dithiothreitol
[DTT],
0.1% NP-40, 1 mM NaF, 0.1 mM Na
3VO
4, 10 mM
sodium PP
i,
10 mM

-glycerophosphate, 10 µg of
leupeptin per ml, 10 µg of
aprotinin per ml, 10 µg of pepstatin per
ml, 0.1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl
fluoride) with periodical vigorous
vortexing. Cell lysates were
centrifuged at 14,000 ×
g
for 10 min to remove insoluble debris,
and the supernatants were
incubated for 1 h at 4°C with protein
G-Sepharose beads
(Pharmacia Biotech.) previously equilibrated
with lysis buffer. Protein
concentrations in the precleared extracts
were measured with the
Bio-Rad Protein Assay kit. Twenty microliters
of preequilibrated beads
was then precoated with the HE172 MAb
for 90 min at 4°C, washed, and
reacted with 200 µg of precleared
lysates for 2 h at 4°C in 1 ml of lysis buffer. The resulting
immunoprecipitates were washed three
times in lysis buffer and
twice in kinase buffer (50 mM HEPES [pH
7.5], 10 mM MgCl
2, 1 mM
DTT, 10 mM

-glycerophosphate, 1 mM NaF, 0.1 mM Na
3VO
4) and then
resuspended in
25 µl of kinase buffer containing 2.5 µg of histone
H1, 50 µM
ATP, and 5 µCi of [

-
32P]ATP (Amersham Life Science)
and incubated for 30 min at 30°C.
After stopping the kinase reactions
by adding 10 µl of 4× Laemmli
sample buffer, the reaction products
were separated by sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis (12% polyacrylamide).
The gel was Coomassie stained to
verify equal loading and dried,
and the specific phosphate
incorporation into the substrate was
quantified by PhosphorImager
scanning and ImageQuant software
(Molecular Dynamics). The histone H1
kinase activity from U2OS
cells incubated with the
nonimmunoprecipitating HE12 MAb was used
as negative
control.
Cdc25A phosphatase activity was indirectly quantified as the capability
to activate cyclin B1-CDC2. To generate inactive,
Thr14- and
Tyr15-phosphorylated cyclin B1-CDC2 complexes, wild-type
U2OS cells
were cultured in presence of 0.2 µg of adriamycin per
ml (Calbiochem)
for 24 h (
59). Two-hundred micrograms of protein
extracts from these cells was used to immunoprecipitate inactivated
cyclin B1-CDC2 complexes with anti-cyclin B1 MAb, while Cdc25A
was
immunoprecipitated in parallel from 1 mg of U2OS-Myc and
U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc
cell lysates by using the DCS-124 MAb. After three
washes in lysis
buffer containing protease and phosphatase inhibitors
and three
washes in cold phosphatase buffer (20 mM Tris [pH 8.3], 150 mM
NaCl, 2 mM EDTA, 0.1% Triton X-100, 5 mM DTT), the beads from
the
cyclin B1-CDC2 and Cdc25A immunoprecipitates were mixed in
a final
volume of 50 µl of phosphatase buffer and coincubated
for 1 h at
30°C. The reaction was stopped by adding kinase assay
buffer and the
cyclin B1-CDC2 kinase activity was assayed with
histone H1 as a
substrate followed by PhosphorImager quantification
as described above.
The histone H1 kinase activity associated
with cyclin B1-CDC2
immunoprecipitates non-coincubated with Cdc25A
immunoprecipitates was
used as a negative
control.
Reporter assays.
The noninvasive in vivo photon emission
assay to monitor E2F-dependent transcription was performed and
quantified essentially as reported previously (44). Briefly,
the synthetic 6xE2F-Luc reporter, which is effectively activated by
E2F-1 to -5 and significantly more sensitive than natural
E2F-responsive reporters (44), was microinjected
(100-µg/ml needle concentration) with an automatic Zeiss AIS
micromanipulator system and an Eppendorf microinjector into the nuclei
of cells cultured in TET-containing or -free medium. Twenty-four hours
later, 1 mM beetle luciferin (Promega) was added to the medium, the
injected fields were recovered by grid coordinates, and the emitted
photoelectrons were acquired by using a cooled (
30°C) ICCD-567-S/RB
EM detector and an ST-138S controller (Princeton Instruments, Inc.)
attached to a Zeiss Axiovert 135M microscope with a Fluar ×10
objective. The total acquisition time was 10 min/field. During
acquisition, cells were kept in the dark on a 37°C-heated stage in a
chamber with a 5% CO2 atmosphere.
To evaluate Myc activity, 1.5 × 10
6 U2OS-Myc or
U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc TET-repressed cells were electroporated with 2 µg
of the indicated
reporter, 0.5 µg of the internal control pCMV-LacZ,
and 5 µg of
pCMVMadMyc or empty pCMV and harvested after a 48-h
culture in
TET-containing or -free medium as indicated. The resulting
luciferase
and

-galactosidase activities were assayed with a Lumat
LB 9501
luminometer (Berthold) and an UltroSpec 2000 spectrophotometer
(Pharmacia Biotech.), respectively, following the instructions
of the
Promega Luciferase Assay
System.
RT-PCR.
U2OS-TA cells were synchronized and transfected with
CD20, pEGFP-C1 (1 µg; Clontech), and the indicated plasmids according to the procedure described above. CD20-positive cells were isolated with anti-CD20 MAb-coated Dynabeads and a DYNAL Magnetic Particle Concentrator according to the manufacturer's protocol (Dynal A.S.). At
least 95% of the cells isolated displayed green fluorescent protein
fluorescence. One microgram of RNA, obtained from the CD20-positive
cells with a Trizol Reagent kit (Gibco, BRL, Gaithersburg, Md.) was
pretreated with DNase and reverse transcribed with Moloney murine
leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (RT) following the supplier's
suggestions (Stratagene). For amplification, 1 µl of the RT reactant
was mixed in a final volume of 20 µl together with 8 pmol of primer
pairs, 0.5 µCi of [
-32P]dCTP (Amersham Life
Science), and 25 µM each deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) and
amplified with 0.5 U of HotStar Taq DNA polymerase (Qiagen,
Inc.) for 20 cycles (denaturation at 94°C for 30 s, annealing at
58°C for 30 s, and extension at 72°C for 60 s). This
number of cycles had been previously estimated to be the optimal one
for detecting the signal in the linear range. The primer sequences were
as follows: cyclin E, 5'-GTTTACCCAAACTCAAC GTGC-3'
(forward) and 5'-CGCAAACTGGTGCAACTTTGG-3' (reverse);
Cdc25A, 5'-CAGCTCATCGACCCAGATGAG-3' (forward) and
5'-AGCTTGCATCGGTTGTCAAGG-3' (reverse); and the
porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) housekeeping gene (12),
5'-CATGTCTGGTAACGGCAATG-3' (forward) and
5'-AGGGCATGTTCAAGCTCCTT-3' (reverse). As a control, PCR was
performed on RNA samples that had not been reverse transcribed.
Amplification products were visualized by PhosphorImager scanning of
acrylamide gels and quantified by ImageQuant software.
 |
RESULTS |
Characterization of U2OS clones conditionally coexpressing
constitutively active pRb and cyclin E.
It was shown that cyclin E
activity can induce DNA replication without activation of the pRb/E2F
pathway (1, 38, 44) and that its persistence at
physiologically relevant levels may allow Drosophila or
mammalian cells deprived of E2F activity to gradually overcome
G1 arrest (47, 62). To extend these findings, we
generated U2OS clones coexpressing pRb
cdk and cyclin E in a
TET-repressible manner and compared them with U2OS cells expressing pRb
cdk alone recently described (43, 47). Basic
characterization of a representative U2OS-Rb
cdk/CycE clone is
documented in Fig. 1. Immunoblotting and
immunofluorescence time course analyses showed no expression of the
transgenes in the repressed state and rapid, uniform, and sustained
induction of these proteins in more than 90% of cells after TET
removal (Fig. 1A and data not shown).

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FIG. 1.
Characterization of a representative U2OS clone
conditionally coexpressing Rb cdk with cyclin E (clone B3B4). (A)
Protein extracts from cells grown in presence (day 0) or absence of TET
for the indicated days were analyzed by immunoblotting with MAbs to pRb
and cyclin E. endo, endogenous proteins; pRb cdk,
phosphorylation-deficient pRb mutant; ecto CycE, ectopic cyclin E. (B)
Sustained suppression of endogenous E2F activity by pRb cdk. Cells
grown with (day 0) or without (day 4) TET were microinjected with the
6xE2F-Luc reporter plasmid and examined 24 h later for reporter
activity measured as in vivo photon emission from productively injected
cells. The average emission per cell during a 10-min acquisition period
was (25 ± 13) × 103 light counts at day 0, whereas no cell luminescence above background was detected at day 4, indicating the complete suppression of endogenous E2F activity. (C)
Representative flow-cytometric DNA histograms of U2OS-Rb cdk/CycE
cells grown with (day 0) or without TET for the indicated times. The
cell cycle distribution at each time point is indicated above the
histograms, and for comparison, the corresponding values of cells
carrying pRb cdk alone (U2OS-Rb cdk clone A5) are indicated in
parentheses. The asterisk indicates that, at day 4, S and
G2/M are represented together because the algorithm was
unable to clearly distinguish these two phases. Note the presence of
some endoreplication in U2OS-Rb cdk/CycE after transgene induction.
The time course was repeated at least three times with similar results
and reproduced in independent clones.
|
|
To confirm that the induced proteins were functional, cyclin
E-associated kinase activity and the ability of the constitutively
active pRb

cdk mutant to inhibit endogenous E2F activity were
examined. Four days after TET removal, cyclin E-associated kinase
activity was increased up to sixfold the value in TET-repressed
cells,
thereby verifying the expected function of this cyclin
(data not
shown). A quantitative luciferase reporter assay to
monitor
E2F-dependent transactivation in live cells (
44) revealed
high luminescence in U2OS-Rb

cdk/CycE cells cultured in
TET-containing
medium, in sharp contrast to no detectable luciferase
activity
after induction of the transgenes (Fig.
1B). Similar results
were
obtained with other independent U2OS-Rb

cdk/CycE clones. Thus,
despite the coexistence of increased cyclin E activity, pRb

cdk
was
able to prevent any E2F-dependent promoter activation for
several days
after induction. These data were consistent with
those obtained in
transient experiments in which luciferase expression,
in addition to
the artificial 6xE2F, was controlled by the natural,
E2F-responsive
regions of dihydrofolate reductase, B-Myb, or E2F-1
promoters
(
44; E. Santoni-Rugiu, J. Lukas, and J. Bartek,
unpublished
data).
We next analyzed the cell cycle profile of U2OS-Rb

cdk/CycE cells and
correlated it with that of U2OS-Rb

cdk cells. The latter,
as
previously observed (
47), displayed a G
1 arrest
during the
first 2 days of induction, followed thereafter by entry and
accumulation
in S phase (Fig.
1C). In contrast, coinduction of
pRb

cdk and
cyclin E completely abolished the transient
G
1 arrest observed
when pRb

cdk was expressed alone and
induced rapid entry into
and progression through S phase (Fig.
1C).
This effect was essentially
confirmed upon microinjection of
synchronized or exponentially
growing R12 cells with Rb

cdk and
cyclin E (
44; data not shown).
Taken together, our
results indicate that cyclin E-associated
kinase can induce S phase
even in cells deprived of E2F function
long term. This implies that a
cyclin E-targeting mechanism independent
of the pRb/E2F pathway may
have G
1/S-promoting properties. Cyclin
E, however, appeared
to be unable to restore productive cell division
over an extended
period of time, since U2OS-Rb

cdk/cycE cells
displayed only limited
reappearance of a G
1 peak, with the initial
ploidy at day 4 remaining largely locked in late S phase with
appreciable levels of DNA
endoreplication (Fig.
1C). This conclusion
was further supported by the
lack of mitotic figures or chromatin
condensation when these cells were
observed by phase-contrast
or fluorescence microscopy (not shown).
Thus, although transient
coexpression of pRb

cdk and ectopic cyclin E
was able to promote
completion of one division cycle in U2OS or R12
cells (
44),
additional critical events controlled by the
pRb/E2F pathway (
39,
43,
51) are required to ensure orderly
progression into G
2/M
over the long
term.
U2OS clones with inducible expression of constitutively active pRb
and c-Myc.
To assess whether c-Myc could mimic the cell cycle
effects of cyclin E in cells deprived of E2F activity long term, U2OS
clones conditionally coexpressing c-Myc with pRb
cdk were generated. Expression of the transgenes in U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc clones was strongly induced in a homogenous and sustained manner in more than 90% of the
cells after removal of TET (Fig. 2A and
data not shown). Since Myc can reportedly induce E2F-1 gene expression
and activate the E2F-2 promoter (40, 67) and it is still
debated whether certain effects of Myc on the cell cycle, (i.e.,
induction of cyclin E and Cdc25A) are in fact indirect via increased
E2F activity (3, 53, 72), we tested whether Myc was able to
regenerate E2F activity in U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc cells. These cells
displayed a high level of activity of the 6xE2F-Luc reporter when
transgene expression was repressed as opposed to the absence of photon
emission above the background after induction (Fig. 2B). Hence, these
cells expressed a fully functional pRb
cdk able to repress E2F
activity even in presence of increased levels of active c-Myc (see Fig. 2A and below). This was independently confirmed by the remarkable transcriptional down-regulation of a known E2F target, cyclin A,
observed after TET removal (E. Santoni Rugiu, J. Lukas, and J. Bartek,
unpublished data).

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FIG. 2.
Characterization of U2OS cells conditionally
coexpressing c-Myc and pRb cdk. (A) Immunoblotting with MAbs to pRb
and c-Myc. Expression of the ectopic proteins is tightly repressed in a
representative U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc clone (clone A4C7) exposed to TET (day
0), as opposed to the high levels observed during the induction time.
endo pRb, endogenous pRb. Endogenous c-Myc migrates as a faint band
just below the ectopic one. (B) Endogenous E2F activity examined by in
vivo photon emission imaging in cells injected with 6xE2F-Luc reporter
before (day 0) or after (day 4) coinduction of transgenes. The average
emission per cell during the acquisition period (10 min) was (24 ± 15) × 103 and (0.5 ± 0.3) × 103 light counts at days 0 and 4, respectively. The
background value was (0.4 ± 0.2) × 103 light
counts. (C) Myc stimulates S-phase entry in cells deprived of E2F
activity. Representative flow-cytometric DNA histograms of propidium
iodide-stained U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc cells grown with (day 0) or without
TET for the indicated times. The cell cycle distribution at each time
point is indicated above the histograms. As in Fig. 1C, the numbers in
parentheses represent the corresponding distribution of U2OS-Rb cdk
cells at the same time points. The asterisk is as defined in the legend
to Fig. 1C. Note the presence of pre-G1 (apoptotic) cells
and endoreplication after transgene induction in U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc
cells. The time course was reproduced at least three times in this
clone and in other independent clones.
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|
Myc can promote S-phase entry and activate cyclin E-associated
kinase in the absence of E2F activity.
Having established the
model cell line, we investigated whether ectopic Myc expression in
cells stably deprived of E2F activity would have effects resembling
those caused by exogenous cyclin E. Flow-cytometric analysis of DNA
content showed that U2OS-Rb
cdk/CycE and U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc cells
behaved very similarly upon long-term induction of the transgenes.
Indeed, coinduction of pRb
cdk and c-Myc rapidly stimulated S-phase
entry and persistent DNA replication without, however, being able to
significantly restore productive cell division (Fig. 2C). In
comparison, induction of c-Myc transgene alone (U2OS-Myc cells)
stimulated progression through all phases of the cell cycle (Table
1 and data not shown), in agreement with
the idea that Myc plays a role in both G1 and
G2 (48, 53) and with the requirement of intact
E2F activity for completion of cell division (described above). In
U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc cells, we also observed endoreplication and apoptosis
after 2 to 3 days of induction (Fig. 2C), consistent with similar
effects of Myc in other systems in which cell cycle progression is
perturbed (41, 60). The molecular basis underlying the
delayed apoptosis is currently under investigation in our laboratory.
The absence of apoptosis in U2OS-Rb
cdk, U2OS-Rb
cdk/CycE, and
U2OS-Myc cells (reference 47 and this work) suggests
that the effect is specific to coexpression of Myc and pRb
cdk and is
unlikely to be caused by activation of CDK2, in line with previous
observations (63).
Collectively, our results suggested that c-Myc can promote
G
1/S transition and DNA replication in the absence of E2F
activity,
possibly by stimulating cyclin E-CDK2. Validating this
assumption,
cyclin E-associated kinase activity increased up to
approximately
fivefold after coinduction of pRb

cdk and Myc for 4 days (Fig.
3A). Concomitantly, we
observed a significant increment of Cdc25A
phosphatase activity
reaching almost fivefold at day 4 (Fig.
3B).
Preliminary experiments
demonstrated the absence of intrinsic
histone H1 kinase activity in
Cdc25A immunoprecipitates throughout
the time course of the observation
(data not shown), thus confirming
the specificity of our findings.
Given that Cdc25A is thought
to be a downstream target of Myc, capable
of activating cyclin
E-CDK2 (
6,
20), our observations
suggest that the stimulation
of cyclin E-dependent kinase in
U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc cells may be partly
mediated by induction of Cdc25A
activity. They also indicate that
forced Myc expression can
significantly induce both enzymatic
activities in the absence of E2F
activity. In this respect, similar
induction levels of cyclin
E-associated kinase and Cdc25A phosphatase
activities were observed in
derepressed U2OS-Myc cells (Fig.
3).

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FIG. 3.
Ectopic Myc can induce both cyclin E-associated kinase
and Cdc25A phosphatase activities in cells deprived of E2F activity
long term. (A) Histone H1 kinase activity coimmunoprecipitated with
cyclin E from U2OS-Myc (left) and U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc (right) cell
samples isolated at the indicated times after transgene induction. The
kinase activity of wild-type, nonclonal U2OS cells is also shown (U2OS
lane) for comparison with that of TET-repressed clones (days 0). C,
negative control lane. (B) Cdc25A phosphatase activity in U2OS-Myc
(left) and U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc (right) cells harvested at the indicated
times after transgene induction. The phosphatase activity was
indirectly assessed as cyclin B1-CDC2 kinase activity induced by Cdc25A
immunoprecipitates as described in Materials and Methods. Cdc25A
activity in TET-repressed clones (days 0) is comparable to that in
wild-type U2OS cells (U2OS lane). No detectable histone H1 kinase
activity was found associated with Cdc25A immunoprecipitated from
either induced or uninduced cells when coincubation with cyclin B1-CDC2
immunocomplexes was omitted (not shown). After quantification, the
activities were normalized for the negative control ( C lane) and
expressed as percentages relative to those of TET-repressed cells set
at 100%. Each panel is representative of three independent experiments
with similar results.
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|
MM antagonizes Myc activity and inhibits S-phase entry in U2OS-Myc
and U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc clones.
The approach described so far, like
previous ones used by others to study Myc function, presented the
caveat that the effects caused by forced expression of Myc may not
necessarily indicate a faithful transcriptional regulation in vivo. In
fact, nonphysiological levels of Myc might be able to overpower
endogenous promoter-interacting factors (10, 53). The
comparison of parental, Myc-null, and Myc-replaced null Rat-1
fibroblasts recently raised this issue by showing that among several
putative target genes examined, only the expression of endogenous
cad, gadd45, and c-myc was clearly dependent on Myc (10). Moreover, c-MycS, a naturally
occurring c-Myc translational variant lacking ~100 amino-terminal
amino acids of the transactivation domain, can only transrepress and not transactivate Myc targets and yet can elicit proliferation and
apoptosis and rescue the phenotype of Myc-null fibroblasts (74). Thus, though ill-defined, the ability of Myc to
restrain antiproliferative and differentiation-related genes also
appears to be important for Myc biological functions (10, 14, 24, 74). To overcome the problems inherent in Myc overexpression, we
chose to further investigate the E2F-independent G1/S
control mediated by Myc activity by antagonizing the latter with the
chimeric protein MM (5). In this dominant-negative allele,
Myc amino acids aa 1 to 263, comprising the highly conserved N-terminal domains necessary for Myc-dependent transactivation, transrepression, and biological activities (14, 26, 74), are substituted for
by the transcriptional repression domain of Mad (14, 19, 26). Consequently, MM via its intact DNA binding and dimerization domains binds to the genomic sites normally occupied by c-Myc and
actively antagonizes gene regulation by Myc (5).
We first verified the ability of MM to effectively inhibit Myc activity
by using our U2OS clones (Fig.
4). We
observed a seven-
to eightfold induction of the synthetic,
four-E-box-containing,
Myc-responsive reporter M4-Luc (data not shown)
and a three- to
fourfold activation of the natural,
two-E-box-containing, Myc-responsive
reporter ODC

Luc (
56)
in derepressed U2OS-Myc and U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc
cells (Fig.
4). These
results were consistent with previously
reported levels of promoter
transactivation by Myc (
10,
14,
26,
56). Importantly,
proficient expression of MM (as assessed
by immunoblotting of
electroporated cell lysates; data not shown)
not only halved the basal
activity of either reporter in the repressed
clones (likely by
inhibiting endogenous Myc activity), but also
completely abolished
their activation when Myc expression was
induced (Fig.
4 and data not
shown). This indicates that MM can
suppress Myc-responsive promoters
even when levels of active Myc
are increased. In contrast, the mutant
ODC

LucS-5A reporter, in
which the two E-boxes are mutated, or a
reporter without E-boxes,
like Tatab-Luc, showed neither activation in
the clones cultured
without TET nor inhibition by MM (Fig.
4 and data
not shown),
indicating the Myc-specific transrepressive effect of MM.
We next
examined the effects of MM on the cell cycle profiles of our
U2OS
clones by electroporating them with MM and CD20 and analyzing
CD20-positive cells by flow cytometry (Table
1). TET-repressed
U2OS-Myc
and U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc cells were both arrested in G
1 by
expression of MM, consistent with the MM-induced G
1 arrest
observed
in NIH 3T3 cells (
5). More importantly, MM was also
able to
effectively antagonize the accelerated S-phase entry in
derepressed
cells, particularly those from the U2OS-Rb

cdk/Myc clone
in which
it reestablished a profile comparable with that of TET-exposed
cells (Table
1). These data supported the notion that c-Myc
transcriptional
activity is instrumental in controlling a
G
1/S-promoting "parallel"
pathway in cells deprived of
E2F activity.

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FIG. 4.
Myc transcriptional activity and its inhibition by MM in
U2OS-Myc and U2OS-Rb cdk/Myc cells. Cells were electroporated with
the indicated reporters plus either empty vector or MM and analyzed for
luciferase activity after a 48-h culture in medium with or without TET.
For either clone, the basal activity of vector-electroporated,
TET-repressed cells was arbitrarily set at 1. Results are expressed as
mean luciferase activity normalized to -galactosidase activity ± standard deviation of three experiments performed in triplicate.
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|
Independent inhibition of DNA synthesis by blocking of endogenous
E2F or Myc activities is overcome by cyclin E or Cdc25A.
Because
MM proved to be such an effective tool for antagonizing Myc activity
and cell cycle function, we focused our attention on a system in which
we could block either endogenous E2F or Myc activity or both
simultaneously and assess the impact on G1/S transition.
For this purpose, synchronized U2OS-TA or R12 cells transfected with
the plasmids indicated in Fig. 5A were
first monitored for 48 h to assess their pattern of BrdU
incorporation after nocodazole removal. With this analysis, empty
vector-transfected U2OS cells showed evident DNA replication already
between 6 and 12 h after nocodazole removal, followed closely by
cells transfected with wild-type Rb that is effectively inactivated by
endogenous CDKs. Instead, cells productively transfected with Rb
cdk
or with dnDP1 initiated DNA synthesis some 12 h later, in
accordance with our previous findings that a block of the pRb/E2F
pathway can significantly delay but not prevent S-phase entry
(47). Importantly, the abrogation of Myc transcriptional
activity by MM expression caused a similar delay of DNA synthesis and
not permanent arrest, consistent with the prolonged G1
phase of Myc-null cells (48). Also noteworthy is that cells
deprived of E2F or Myc activity never reached the levels of DNA
synthesis observed in control cells during the 48-h time course. The
kinetics of this G1/S delay was entirely reproducible in
diploid R12 rat fibroblasts (Fig. 5A, bottom), ruling out
cancer-associated as well as species- and cell-type-specific effects.
Thus, our results suggested that either activity may suffice for DNA
synthesis, but the intactness of both is necessary for timely
initiation and proper levels of DNA replication in mammalian cells. In
contrast, cells exposed to p16, which imposes a sustained
G1 arrest by inhibiting both cyclin D-CDKs and cyclin
E-CDK2 (32, 47, 50), virtually never initiated DNA synthesis
for the entire time course (Fig. 5A, top). Equivalent prevention of DNA
synthesis was observed upon ectopic expression of a dominant-negative
CDK2 allele (dnK2), concordant with the idea that cyclin E-CDK2
activity is required for proper initiation of DNA replication (31,
37, 39).

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FIG. 5.
E2F and Myc activities cooperate in regulating timing
and levels of DNA synthesis by targeting cyclin E-CDK2 activity. (A)
The blocking of either E2F or Myc activity delays and lowers but does
not prevent DNA synthesis. CD20-positive U2OS or R12 cells expressing
the indicated plasmids (wild-type [wt] Rb, Rb cdk, dnDP1, and p16
at 5 µg; MM and dnK2 at 15 µg), were assayed for BrdU incorporation
over 48 h after release from nocodazole arrest. Empty vector was
added to a total of 25 µg of DNA/100-mm-diameter dish. A
representative example of three comparable experiments is shown. (B and
C) Cyclin E and Cdc25A are downstream targets of the E2F- and
Myc-dependent pathways for S-phase entry. (B) Cyclin E-induced (top
panel) or Cdc25A-induced (bottom panel) rescue of DNA synthesis in U2OS
cells deprived of E2F and Myc activities is inhibited by dnK2.
CD20-positive cells exposed to the indicated combinations of plasmids
(Myc, cyclin E, and Cdc25A at 5 µg; the others as in panel A) were
assayed for BrdU labeling 20 h after nocodazole removal. Data,
expressed as a percentage of the control, are means ± standard
deviations of five experiments. (C) Rescue effect of cyclin E in R12
cells analyzed as in panel B. Experiments with dnDP1 and with Cdc25A
are omitted for simplicity. (D) Rescue effect of ectopic E2F1 (5 µg)
in U2OS cells devoid of Myc activity is abolished by dnK2. Assay
performed as in panel B.
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|
To better judge the importance of each pathway in the initiation of DNA
synthesis we examined BrdU incorporation 20 h after
nocodazole
removal, a time point allowing detection of significant
levels of DNA
synthesis in control cells and also in those with
a block of either
transcriptional function. In line with what
was seen during the time
course, BrdU incorporation was reduced
by about 50% in cells exposed
to either Rb

cdk, dnDP1, or MM and
was minimal in p16- and
dnK2-expressing cells, compared to that
of vector-transfected cells
(Fig.
5B, top panel, and C). Interestingly,
BrdU labeling was almost
completely abolished by the combined
expression of MM with Rb

cdk or
dnDP1, arguing for an independent
control of DNA synthesis by E2F and
Myc activities. Next, we tested
the rescue capacity of molecules we had
postulated to be involved
in the "parallel" pathway's function,
with the intent to determine
whether cyclin E-CDK2 may be a downstream
target. Coexpression
of c-Myc with Rb

cdk essentially restored the
levels of DNA synthesis
exhibited by control cells. This rescue effect
of Myc was totally
abrogated by dnK2, confirming that Myc-stimulated
S-phase entry
in cells deprived of E2F activity relies on activation of
cyclin
E-CDK2 activity (Fig.
3). Consistent with that, cyclin E
dramatically
rescued the Rb

cdk- or dnDP1-mediated reduction of DNA
synthesis,
inducing a massive acceleration of S-phase entry that,
again,
could be entirely inhibited by quenching CDK2 activity with dnK2
(Fig.
5B, top panel). Strikingly, the dramatic rescue by cyclin
E was
absolutely unaffected by the concomitant blocking of both
pathways via
MM plus Rb

cdk or dnDP1, meaning that cyclin E-CDK2
is a common
downstream target. These conclusions were further
corroborated by
comparable results in R12 cells (Fig.
5C). It
is worth noting that
cyclin E overexpression did not affect the
stability of pRb

cdk,
dnDP1, or MM or their combination (Fig.
1A and data not shown), ruling
out the possibility that the rescue
properties of cyclin E were due to
artifactual degradation of
these mutants. Given our observations that
Myc can enhance Cdc25A-associated
phosphatase activity in cells devoid
of E2F activity (Fig.
3),
we also ascertained whether Cdc25A, a
potential transcriptional
target of both Myc and E2F (
20,
72) shown to be required for
S-phase entry (
28,
33),
may have rescue capabilities similar
to those of cyclin E. This was the
case, because ectopic Cdc25A
stimulated massive DNA replication not
only in cells deprived
of E2F activity by Rb

cdk or dnDP1, but also
in those with a concomitant
abrogation of Myc activity by MM (Fig.
5B,
bottom panel, and data
not shown). Furthermore, the rescue properties
of Cdc25A were
completely neutralized by coexpression of dnK2,
suggesting that
they depended on CDK2 activity. Finally, ectopic E2F-1
potently
rescued the S phase in MM-treated cells (Fig.
5D) and, again,
this effect was abolished by coexpression of dnK2, further supporting
the notion of a parallel Myc and E2F pathway converging on cyclin
E-CDK2.
Both E2F and Myc activities are required for proper cyclin E and
Cdc25A gene expression.
To address the issue of whether E2F and
Myc transcriptional activities may affect cyclin E-CDK2 activity by
regulating cyclin E and/or Cdc25A gene expression, we quantified by
RT-PCR the levels of the corresponding mRNAs in synchronized and
magnetically isolated cells productively transfected with Rb
cdk, MM,
or both. By this technique, we observed that cyclin E RNA levels were
decreased by ~50% in cells expressing either Rb
cdk or MM when
compared with control vector-transfected cells, further reduced to less than 20% of control value in cells coexpressing both mutants (Fig. 6A). To rule out that the effect of MM
was indirectly due to reduction of E2F activity and/or cell cycle
position, we tested the activity of the 6xE2F-Luc reporter in
MM-expressing cells. We found no significant change over cells
transfected with empty vector, whereas as expected, pRb
cdk was able
to inhibit this reporter and MM repressed ODC
Luc activity (Fig. 6B).
By the same token, pRb
cdk, but not MM, was able to inhibit the
luciferase activity of a reporter containing the E2F-responsive region
of the E2F-1 promoter (E. Santoni-Rugiu, J. Lukas, and J. Bartek,
unpublished data). These data suggested that E2F and Myc
transcriptional activities regulate expression of endogenous cyclin E,
at least in part, independently and synergistically. In addition, both
Rb
cdk and MM caused a more than 60% reduction of Cdc25A RNA levels,
but no further decrease was observed when Rb
cdk and MM were combined
(Fig. 6A), implying that other factors may also play a significant role
in sustaining Cdc25A transcription. Finally, ectopic expression of
c-Myc yielded an approximately twofold induction of either cyclin E or
Cdc25A RNA (Fig. 6A) and completely rescued their transcription in
cells exposed to pRb
cdk, increasing almost threefold the levels of these RNAs (Fig. 6A, Rb
cdk versus Rb
cdk+Myc). This confirms that
changes in Myc activity may result in modulation of these two genes as
well in an E2F-independent manner. All together, our findings indicate
that Myc and E2F activities are both required for proper cyclin E and
Cdc25A expression during G1/S transition.

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FIG. 6.
E2F and Myc activities are both required for proper
cyclin E and Cdc25A transcription during G1/S. (A) RNA
expression levels in magnetically sorted U2OS cells expressing the
indicated plasmids were assessed by RT-PCR 20 h after nocodazole
removal. PhosphorImager scans of PCR products were normalized to the
PBGD housekeeping gene and quantified by ImageQuant software. Values,
expressed as a percentage of the control, are means ± standard
deviations of three experiments. (B) MM does not significantly affect
endogenous E2F activity in synchronized cells. Cells were synchronized
and transfected with 2 µg of 6xE2F-Luc or ODC Luc reporter and 0.5 µg of pCMV-LacZ plus the indicated plasmids as in Fig. 5 (except for
cyclin E and Cdc25A, used at minimal doses as in Fig. 7). Note that
cyclin E and Cdc25A do not reactivate reporter activities in cells
coexpressing Rb cdk and MM. Reporter activities were assayed 20 h after nocodazole removal, normalized for -galactosidase activity,
and expressed as a percentage of the control (vector transfected)
cells. Shown are means of two independent experiments in triplicate.
|
|
Transcriptional regulation of cyclin E and Cdc25A gene expression
is one of the mechanisms by which E2F and Myc activities control
G1/S transition.
To further emphasize the importance
of this issue for DNA replication, we entertained the possibility that
even subtle changes in cyclin E and Cdc25A gene expression may have a
strong impact on the corresponding CDK2-activating activities. Indeed,
endogenous cyclin E and Cdc25A are expressed and their associated
enzymatic activities are activated at the same time during the cell
cycle (6, 33, 35). Moreover, Cdc25A activity appears to be
required for E2F1-induced S phase, and coexpression of cyclin E and
Cdc25A, like that of active cyclin E-CDK2, is sufficient to induce S
phase in quiescent fibroblasts (13, 72). Thus, we postulated
that Myc and E2F activities may govern the mechanism described by
Hoffman et al. (28) in which cyclin E or CDK2 phosphorylates
and activates Cdc25A, resulting in a positive feedback loop that
amplifies the kinase's activity and ensures S-phase entry. We wished
to test this cooperative mechanism in our system as well to clarify the powerful induction of DNA synthesis by ectopic cyclin E or Cdc25A in
cells deprived of both E2F and Myc activities. To this end, we first
determined with pilot titration experiments the minimum amount of
cyclin E or Cdc25A cDNA able to restore significant levels of DNA
synthesis in synchronized cells cotransfected with Rb
cdk and MM and
the subminimal dose unable to do so (not shown). We next demonstrated
that cells coexpressing Rb
cdk and MM were able to restore DNA
synthesis at levels comparable to those of control cells, when
subthreshold amounts of cyclin E (0.1 µg) and Cdc25A (0.5 µg)
expression vectors were combined (Fig.
7). Consistent with that, the combination
of minimal cyclin E (0.25 µg) and Cdc25A (1 µg) doses produced
levels of DNA replication more than twice those observed in cells
exposed to either dose alone. Nonetheless, neither this latter
combination nor the maximal doses (5 µg) of cyclin E or Cdc25A shown
on Fig. 5 were capable of reactivating E2F or Myc reporter activity
(Fig. 6B and data not shown). This suggests that the S-phase rescue by
these ectopic proteins is independent of E2F or Myc transcriptional
activities. Hence, cyclin E and Cdc25A are downstream targets of both
pathways, and even relatively small adjustments in their expression
orchestrated by either Myc or E2F may well result in amplification of
critical G1/S-promoting activities.

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FIG. 7.
Synergistic rescue of DNA synthesis by subminimal (gray
bars) and minimal (black bars) doses (indicated in micrograms) of
Cdc25A and cyclin E expression vectors in U2OS cells deprived of both
E2F and Myc activities by coexpression of Rb cdk and MM.
CD20-positive cells were assayed for BrdU labeling 20 h after
nocodazole removal. Results, expressed as a percentage of the control
(empty vector-transfected cells), are means ± standard deviations
of three experiments.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our current data strongly point to Myc transcriptional activity
regulating a cyclin E-targeting mechanism capable of promoting the
G1/S transition in parallel with the pRb/E2F pathway in
mammalian cells (Fig. 8). By employing
novel U2OS-inducible cell lines, we show that ectopic expression of
Myc, like that of cyclin E, can rapidly induce S-phase entry and
persistent DNA replication in cells deprived of E2F function long term
by constitutively active pRb. This effect was not connected with
restoration of E2F activity, but was associated with increased Myc
activity and abolished by antagonizing the latter with the dnMM mutant.
Hence Myc, like the putative downstream target cyclin E, can perform G1/S-promoting functions independent of E2F activity. This
property was associated with induction of cyclin E-dependent
kinase and Cdc25A phosphatase activities, implying that control
of cyclin E and Cdc25A by Myc is not necessarily consequential to
increased E2F activity (3, 53). Cyclin E- and cyclin A-CDK2
complexes are likely targets for Cdc25A activity in vivo
(6; Mailand et al., submitted). However cyclin A is
not expressed, and cyclin A-associated kinase is silenced in cells
deprived of E2F activity (43, 47), even when Myc is induced
(Santoni-Rugiu et al., unpublished data). Thus, the similar temporal
induction patterns of Cdc25A phosphatase and cyclin E-CDK2 activities
in derepressed U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc cells suggest that, in this context,
Cdc25A may contribute to cyclin E-CDK2 activation.

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FIG. 8.
Schematic model of cyclin E-associated kinase activity
as an integrative convergence point for the regulation of
G1/S transition by the "classic" pRb/E2F and the
"parallel" Myc-dependent pathways in mammalian cells (thick
arrows). Mitogenic signals lead to inactivation of pRb and release of
E2F and to activation of Myc. The resulting transcriptional activities
may independently contribute to cyclin E and Cdc25A expression, thereby
inducing cyclin E-CDK2 activity, which stimulates DNA synthesis (see
text for details). This model appears to be part of a more complex
setting in which E2F may further control the S phase by inducing other
downstream targets involved in DNA replication (Cdc6, MCM1 to MCM7,
cyclin A, etc.), whereas Myc may control cyclin E-CDK2 activity also
indirectly through functional inactivation of CKIs (thin arrows). The
role played by Myc downstream targets other than cyclin E and Cdc25A in
S-phase induction remains to be defined (dotted arrow). Also, the
possibility that E2F and Myc stimulate each other's expression and
activity cannot be ruled out.
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|
Although the impact of the G1/S "parallel" pathway with
respect to other stages of cell cycle remains to be further explored, we found that coinduction of either Myc or cyclin E with pRb
cdk was
unable to restore productive cell division over an extended period of
time. Thus, even in presence of activated cyclin E-associated kinase,
the intactness of E2F activity appears essential for the orderly
completion of mammalian cell cycle, in accord with a role for the
pRb/E2F pathway extending beyond the control of G1/S
transition (see, for instance, references 11, 39,
43, and 51).
To elucidate in more detail the existence of parallel Myc and E2F
pathways for S-phase entry, we developed a system to block endogenous
E2F and/or Myc activity and assess the impact on G1/S transition in synchronized cells. By this approach, we have shown in
different cell types that blocking either of these activities significantly delays and lowers, but does not prevent, DNA replication, while the concurrent blocking of both activities virtually abolishes it. These findings support the concept of an independent role of Myc
and E2F activities in controlling the G1/S transition and suggest that they are both necessary to cooperatively allow timely and
proper initiation of DNA synthesis in mammalian cells (Fig. 8). This
independent but apparently synergistic control of S-phase entry depends
on the capacity to activate cyclin E-CDK2 kinase. Indeed, the data from
U2OS-Rb
cdk/CycE (Fig. 1) and U2OS-Rb
cdk/Myc (Fig. 2) cells and
from transiently transfected cells (Fig. 5B and C) indicate that both
cyclin E and Myc can strongly induce DNA replication in cells deprived
of E2F activity. This property of Myc and cyclin E is nullified by the
expression of a dnK2 allele. Moreover, while ectopic E2F-1 potently
rescues S phase in cells deprived of Myc activity, cyclin E and Cdc25A
are able to dramatically overcome the abrogation of DNA synthesis due
to a concomitant block of both Myc- and E2F-dependent pathways. Again,
the rescue capabilities of E2F-1 or Cdc25A are completely neutralized
by dnK2. Collectively, these results indicate that cyclin E-CDK2 activity is a common rate-limiting target of both transcriptional pathways for entry into S phase.
Our findings are supported by the previous observation that activation
of cyclin E-dependent kinase by Myc requires transcription and depends
on dimerization and DNA binding sites of Myc (70). They are
also consistent with Myc's ability to abrogate a G1 arrest induced by wild-type pRb (23) and with the fact that serum
growth factors, potent activators of the pRb/E2F pathway, synergize
with ectopic Myc in activating cyclin E-CDK2 kinase in arrested
fibroblasts (70). By the same token, cyclin D1 and Myc
collaborate in lymphomagenesis of transgenic mice (7, 42).
Finally, ectopic Ras and Myc reportedly cooperate in inducing cyclin
E-CDK2 activity and S-phase entry in quiescent cells (40).
This was ascribed to a combined effect of Rb pathway control by Ras,
Myc-induced E2F-1 gene activation, and modulation of p27 and Cdc25A
levels by Myc and Ras signaling (3, 40). The present work
argues, though, that E2F activity is not strictly necessary for
Myc-induced cyclin E activation and S-phase entry.
Previous experiments suggest that ectopic Myc may stimulate cyclin
E-CDK2 and S-phase entry via direct induction of cyclin E or Cdc25A
gene transcription or via functional inactivation of p27 (see the
introduction). These mechanisms might also be operating in cells
deprived of E2F activity. Indeed, our results indicate that the
independent and synergistic control of S-phase entry by Myc and E2F
activities relies, at least in part, on the transcriptional regulation
of cyclin E and Cdc25A gene expression. In particular, repression of
either E2F or Myc activity approximately halved cyclin E and Cdc25A
transcription levels in synchronized cells. The effect of MM was not
caused indirectly by reduced E2F activity, since MM expression did not
significantly affect the activity of E2F-responsive reporters in these
cells. Furthermore, ectopic Myc increased cyclin E and Cdc25A RNA
levels by more than twofold (Fig. 6A, Myc) and approximately tripled
the levels present in cells deprived of E2F activity (Fig. 6A,
Rb
cdk+Myc). Thus, Myc and E2F activities play, at least in part,
independent roles in regulating cyclin E and Cdc25A expression at the
G1/S transition. In addition, suppression of both
activities by Rb
cdk+MM caused a further, marked decrease of cyclin E
transcription, indicating that such a regulation is synergistic. All
together, our data therefore argue against the possibility that Myc may
induce cyclin E gene expression only indirectly by increasing E2F
activity (3, 53, 58). Cdc25A RNA levels, instead, do not
further decline upon coexpression of MM and pRb
cdk, possibly because
other transcriptional factors may contribute to Cdc25A transcription.
Supporting this hypothesis, binding sites for multiple transcription
factors have been recently identified in a human Cdc25A promoter region
(72). Observations in Myc-null cells have suggested that Myc
makes a contribution of approximately twofold to Cdc25A gene activation and only during early phases of growth factor stimulation
(10). However, the contribution and possible compensation by
E2F or other transcription factors to Cdc25A expression in Myc-null
cells have not been examined, although compensatory increases in
critical Myc targets are considered possible in this experimental model (14). In any case, our data indicate that both Myc and E2F
activities are required for proper cyclin E and Cdc25A expression
during G1/S transition and suggest that this could have a
strong impact on critical G1/S-promoting activities
associated with cyclin E and Cdc25A. Indeed, we show that these two
proteins can effectively cooperate in reestablishing DNA synthesis in
cells devoid of both E2F and Myc activities, even when expressed in
amounts unable to do it on their own. This is presumably due to a
positive feedback loop between cyclin E-CDK2 and its activator Cdc25A
(28). Thus, even relatively small adjustments of cyclin E
and Cdc25A gene expression induced by changes in E2F or Myc activity
may be critical for the decision to enter the S phase.
Further work will elucidate alternative mechanisms of cyclin E-CDK2
control by E2F-dependent and -independent pathways. However, our
current findings may have important implications for cancer treatment,
because they suggest that limiting E2F activity in Myc-overexpressing
cells may not suffice to halt DNA replication and therefore the risk of
genomic instability. In this regard, a potent growth suppressor like
transforming growth factor
(TGF-
) inhibits transcription of both
E2F and Myc (2, 66, 73), and the down-regulation of Myc also
occurs in cells lacking pRb function and yet leads to significant cell
cycle arrest (2, 75). On the other hand, despite the
plethora of TGF-
inhibitory effects on cell cycle progression
(2, 30, 61, 73), overexpression of Myc, like that of E2F
(66), renders cells in culture or in transgenic animals
resistant to this cytokine, even when the expression of CKIs and pRb is
preserved (2, 17, 64, 65, 73). Depending on the cellular
context, this may be achieved through functional inactivation of p27
(3, 9, 53, 57), prevention of p15 induction (73),
or transcriptional control of CDK2 activators (references
20 and 58 and this work). This is
relevant for those human cancers in which increased expression of
TGF-
and increased expression of Myc are frequent and early events
(see references 14 and 25 and
references herein). In these cases, Myc activation may allow neoplastic
cells to initially counteract TGF-
and induce unscheduled DNA
replication, increasing the risk of additional genetic defects
necessary for tumor progression.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank R. Bernards, J. L. Cleveland, B. Ducommun, R. N. Eisenman, G. Evan, A. Fattey, K. Helin, and S. I. Reed for
providing important reagents; C. S. Sørensen for critical reading
of the manuscript; and K. Holm and C. Lindeneg for technical assistance.
This work was supported by grants from the Danish Cancer Society, the
Human Frontier Science Programme, and the Danish Medical Research Council.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Cancer Biology, Danish Cancer Society, Strandboulevarden 49, DK-2100
Copenhagen Ø., Denmark. Phone: 45 35 25 73 57. Fax: 45 35 25 77 21. E-mail: bartek{at}biobase.dk.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 2000, p. 3497-3509, Vol. 20, No. 10
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