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Molecular and Cellular Biology, August 2001, p. 5644-5657, Vol. 21, No. 16
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.16.5644-5657.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Akt-Dependent Phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 Regulates PCNA Binding and Proliferation of
Endothelial Cells
Lothar
Rössig,
Amir
S.
Jadidi,
Carmen
Urbich,
Cornel
Badorff,
Andreas M.
Zeiher, and
Stefanie
Dimmeler*
Molecular Cardiology, Department of Internal
Medicine IV, University of Frankfurt, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany
Received 2 March 2001/Returned for modification 13 April
2001/Accepted 24 May 2001
 |
ABSTRACT |
The protein kinase Akt is activated by growth factors and promotes
cell survival and cell cycle progression. Here, we demonstrate that Akt
phosphorylates the cell cycle inhibitory protein p21Cip1 at
Thr 145 in vitro and in intact cells as shown by in vitro kinase
assays, site-directed mutagenesis, and phospho-peptide analysis.
Akt-dependent phosphorylation of p21Cip1 at Thr 145 prevents the complex formation of p21Cip1 with PCNA, which
inhibits DNA replication. In addition, phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 at Thr 145 decreases the binding of the
cyclin-dependent kinases Cdk2 and Cdk4 to p21Cip1 and
attenuates the Cdk2 inhibitory activity of p21Cip1.
Immunohistochemistry and biochemical fractionation reveal that the
decrease of PCNA binding and regulation of Cdk activity by p21Cip1 phosphorylation is not caused by altered
intracellular localization of p21Cip1. As a functional
consequence, phospho-mimetic mutagenesis of Thr 145 reverses the cell
cycle-inhibitory properties of p21Cip1, whereas the
nonphosphorylatable p21Cip1 T145A construct arrests cells
in G0 phase. These data suggest that the modulation of
p21Cip1 cell cycle functions by Akt-mediated
phosphorylation regulates endothelial cell proliferation in response to
stimuli that activate Akt.
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INTRODUCTION |
The serine/threonine protein kinase
Akt signals in response to insulin and a variety of growth factors.
These include platelet-derived growth factor, basic fibroblast growth
factor (4, 20), and, in endothelial cells, the angiogenic
growth factors vascular endothelial growth factor and
angiopoietin 1 (16, 17, 22, 27). Phospho-inositide 3-kinase (PI3K) mediates Akt activation following receptor stimulation (4, 20, 32). Thus, binding of PI3K-derived
3'-phosphorylated phosphoinositides to the pleckstrin
homology domain of Akt renders the activation sites Thr 308 and Ser 473 accessible for phosphorylation (for a review, see reference
12). Akt targets a number of established substrates for
phosphorylation. These proteins mostly conform to the consensus motif
RXRXXS/T (the phospho-acceptor amino acids are underlined)
required for efficient phosphorylation by Akt kinase
(1). Among the phosphorylation substrates of Akt
are glycogen synthase kinase 3 (11), as well as Bad
(13, 14), caspase 9 (5), I
B kinase
(37), the endothelial NO synthase (16, 22),
and Forkhead transcription factors (28). Akt plays a
critical role in the regulation of cell survival (12),
consistent with the known apoptosis-regulating functions of the
identified target proteins. Akt also regulates cell proliferation
(15, 24, 33, 34); however, the underlying mechanism(s) for
Akt-dependent cell cycle control is less well defined.
p21Cip1 is an inhibitor of cell cycle progression
leading to G1 phase arrest.
p21Cip1 inhibits cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk)
activity with a certain selectivity for G1/S
phase Cdk-cyclin complexes (26). However, by
promoting cyclin D-Cdk assembly, p21Cip1 can also
function as an activator of D-type Cdks (Cdk4 and Cdk6) (for a review,
see reference 43). Besides Cdk regulation,
p21Cip1 directly binds to PCNA (19).
It thus interferes with the requirement of PCNA for DNA polymerase
function and inhibits DNA replication (45). The dual
effect of p21Cip1 on cell cycle regulatory
proteins is mediated via distinct interaction sites for cyclin-Cdk
complexes (7) and PCNA (46) that partially overlap. Besides the well-established transcriptional regulation of
p21Cip1 (18), recent studies provide
evidence that p21Cip1 function is additionally
regulated on a posttranscriptional level (8, 21, 38).
PKC-dependent phosphorylation of p21Cip1 at Ser
146 was shown to modulate PCNA binding by p21Cip1
in insect cells (40). However, the functional implications of p21Cip1 phosphorylation for its interaction
with cell cycle regulatory elements and for the proliferative response
in mammalian cells have not been elucidated.
We have investigated the interaction between Akt and
p21Cip1 in human endothelial cells. Our results
demonstrate that Akt phosphorylates p21Cip1 at
Thr 145, which abrogates PCNA binding to p21Cip1,
and attenuates the complex formation of p21Cip1
with Cdk2 and Cdk4, which results in endothelial cell proliferation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Cell culture, immunoprecipitation, and immunoblotting.
Human
umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were purchased from Cell
Systems/Clonetics, Solingen, Germany, and were cultured as previously
described (16). HUVEC homogenates were obtained, separated
by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride
membranes. Membranes were incubated with antibodies to
c-myc, DNA topoisomerase I, Cdk2, and Cdk4 (Santa
Cruz Biotechnology); actin (Chemicon, Temecula, Calif.); phospho-Akt
substrate and Akt (Cell Signaling, Beverly, Mass.); cyclins
D1, D2, and
D3 and p21 (BD PharMingen); and PCNA
(Transduction Laboratories). Immunoprecipitation was performed
using either protein A/G-agarose beads (Santa Cruz) or
agarose-conjugated antibodies (Aminolink; Pierce). Bound antibodies were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham).
Plasmids and transfection.
A plasmid encoding the human
p21Cip1 was cloned by PCR into the
pcDNA3.1-Myc-His vector (Invitrogen). The putative Akt site (Thr 145 or
Ser 146) was changed by site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene). The
plasmids encoding the bovine Akt and the truncated dominant negative
Akt construct were kindly donated by J. Downward and were subcloned
into the pcDNA3.1 vector as previously described (16).
Clones with verified sequences were used to transfect HUVEC (3.5 × 105cells/6-cm well; 3 µg of plasmid DNA and
25 µl of Superfect) or COS-7 cells (3.8 × 105 cells/6-cm plate; 8 µg of plasmid DNA and
30 µl of Superfect) as previously described (16). For
combined oligonucleotide and plasmid transfection, HUVEC were incubated
with 1.5 µg of sense p21Cip1
(5'-GAGCCGCGACTGTGATGCGCT-3') or antisense
p21Cip1 (5'-AGCGCATCACAGTCGCGGCTC-3')
oligonucleotide in the presence of 2.5 µg of vector (pcDNA3.1.) or
active Akt (pcDNA3.1.-Akt T308D/S473D) with Lipofectamine (Life Technologies).
p21Cip1 phosphorylation, phospho-site mapping, and
kinase assay.
After serum starvation for 90 min in phosphate-free
medium, COS cells were loaded with
[32P]H3PO4
(250 µCi) in the presence of 10% serum for 3 h. Endogenous p21
was immunoprecipitated with agarose-coupled (Aminolink; Pierce) anti-p21 antibody (PharMingen). Following elution, p21 was digested with tosyl phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (TPCK)-treated
trypsin-agarose (Sigma). The supernatant was loaded onto a Source 5RPC
column (Amersham), and peptides were eluted with acetonitrile with an Äkta explorer high-performance liquid chromatography
system (Amersham). Radioactivity of the fractions collected was
determined using an EasiCount system (Scotlab).
For detection of Akt phosphorylation of p21Cip1
in vitro, COS cells were transfected with myc-tagged
p21Cip1 constructs, and whole-cell lysates (1 mg/sample) were immunoprecipitated with anti-myc antibodies.
Active Akt kinase was obtained by immunoprecipitation of overexpressed
myc-tagged constitutively active Akt (T308D/S473D). p70 S6
kinase was also obtained by overexpression and immunopurification, whereas the recombinant catalytic subunits of protein kinase A (PKA)
and serum-glucocorticoid-stimulated kinase (SGK) were delivered from
Calbiochem and Upstate, respectively. p21Cip1
immunoprecipitates (substrates) and the respective kinases were incubated at 30°C in 30 µl of a kinase reaction mixture containing 25 mM Tris (pH 7.5), 5 mM
-glycerophosphate, 0.1 mM
Na3VO4, 2 mM
dithiothreitol, 10 mM MgCl2, 10 mM
MnCl2, 50 µM ATP, and 5 µCi of
[
-32P]ATP for 30 min. The reaction was
terminated by the addition of SDS sample buffer, and samples were
subjected to SDS-12% PAGE and analyzed by phosphorimaging. For
assessment of Cdk2 or Cdk4 kinase activity, endogenous Cdk2 or Cdk4 was
immunoprecipitated, and kinase activity was detected after incubation
of the immunoprecipitates with histone H1 or retinoblastoma protein
(pRb) and the kinase assay reaction mixture as described above.
Immunostaining.
Endothelial cells were fixed with 4%
paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) for 10 min before
incubation of the cells with anti-myc antibody (1:70 in
PBS-5% fetal calf serum [FCS]) and anti-mouse fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC)-linked secondary antibody (Dako) (1:20 in
PBS-5% FCS) followed by nuclear counterstaining with DAPI
(4',6'-diamidino2-phenylindole).
Cell cycle analysis.
Thirty-six hours after transfection,
HUVEC were washed with PBS, trypsinized, and fixed in 70% ice-cold
ethanol, followed by incubation with RNase (100 µg/ml) and propidium
iodide (4 µg/ml) in PBS. Cell cycle phases were detected with
a flow cytometer (FACSCalibur; Perkin-Elmer) with CELLQuest and Modfit
LT software. For detection of proliferation, cells were incubated with
10 µM bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) for 1 h, and incorporated BrdU
was detected by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay according the
instructions of the manufacturer (Roche). To analyze the effect of
transfected protein on endothelial cell proliferation, HUVEC were
cotransfected with green fluorescent protein (GFP) (1 µg) and the
respective pcDNA3.1. constructs (2 µg). GFP-positive cells were
isolated by a fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS), air dried on
cover slides, and fixed in 100% methanol for 10 min at 4°C, which
destroys the fluorescence of the GFP. Immunostaining was performed
using anti-Ki67 antibodies (1:50 in PBS-5% FCS;
Dianova, Hamburg, Germany) and FITC-linked secondary antibodies. Nuclei
were counterstained with DAPI. Alternatively, HUVEC were incubated with
BrdU for 1 h before FACS sorting and labeled by FITC-labeled
anti-BrdU antibodies.
Statistics.
Data are expressed as the mean ± the
standard error of the mean (SEM) from at least three independent
experiments. Statistical analysis was performed with analysis of
variance, followed by a modified least significant difference
test (SPSS Software).
 |
RESULTS |
Akt phosphorylates p21Cip1.
The C-terminal amino
acid sequence of human p21Cip1 from arginine 140 to threonine 145 matches the reported consensus motif for Akt-mediated
phosphorylation (1). The sequence at this site of
p21Cip1 is highly conserved between various
species (Fig. 1). We therefore examined
whether p21Cip1 is a substrate for Akt kinase
activity in vitro. Transfected Akt was immunoprecipitated, and a kinase
assay with isolated p21Cip1 as a substrate was
performed. Active Akt kinase stimulates the phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 in vitro (Fig.
2A). To identify the phosphate acceptor
amino acid, the putative Akt site Thr 145 of
p21Cip1 was replaced by alanine (p21 T145A).
Inactivation of Thr 145 markedly reduced the Akt-dependent
phosphorylation of p21Cip1 (Fig. 2A). This
suggests that Thr 145 serves as the Akt phosphorylation acceptor amino
acid. Control experiments confirmed that kinase inactive Akt (K179 M or
T308A/S473A) did not induce p21Cip1
phosphorylation (Fig. 2A and data not shown). Previously, PKA has been
shown to specifically phosphorylate p21Cip1 at
Thr 145 (40). In vitro kinase assay analysis confirms that Akt and PKA both phosphorylate p21Cip1 at the
same site (Thr 145) (Fig. 2B). In contrast, other PI3K-dependent protein kinases, such as SGK (35) and p70 S6 kinase
(10) did not display p21Cip1
phosphorylation activity in vitro (Fig. 2C and D).

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FIG. 1.
Akt phosphorylation site of p21Cip1:
sequence homology and localization. Cy1 (amino acids [aa] 17 to 24)
and Cy2 (aa 152 to 158), cyclin-binding motifs (6, 7);
Cdk, Cdk-binding motif (7); PCNA binding, PCNA binding
site (aa 144 to 151) (23, 46).
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FIG. 2.
In vitro phosphorylation of p21Cip1. (A)
myc-tagged p21Cip1 (p21 wt or the
nonphosphorylatable T145A construct), active Akt (T308D/S473D), or
inactive Akt (K179 M) was overexpressed in COS-7 cells and
immunoprecipitated with an anti-myc antibody. The
immunoprecipitates were combined, and kinase activity towards
p21Cip1 was assayed as described in Materials and Methods.
Phosphorylated proteins were resolved by SDS-PAGE. The lower panels
demonstrate the equal expression of the proteins by Western blot
analysis (WB) with anti-myc antibodies. (B) Comparison of
Akt and PKA in vitro kinase activities towards p21 wt and Thr 145 constructs. (C) Lack of an effect of SGK in phosphorylating
p21Cip1 in vitro. As a positive control, histone
phosphorylation by SGK is shown. (D) Lack of p21Cip1 in vitro
phosphorylation activity by p70 S6 kinase. Histone phosphorylation is
shown as a positive control. Immunoblot analysis demonstrates
p21Cip1 expression (top) and p70 S6 kinase
immunopurification (IP) (right). Representative autoradiographs
out of at least three different experiments are shown (A through D).
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To characterize p21
Cip1 phosphorylation in vivo,
we employed an antibody that binds to peptide sequences containing
phosphorylated
Thr/Ser residues preceded by Lys/Arg at positions

5
and

3, thus
specifically recognizing phosphorylation at the Akt
phosphorylation
consensus motif. By immunoblot analysis of endothelial
cell lysates
using this antibody, we were able to detect a distinct
band at
21 kDa that corresponded to endogenous p21 identified by
reprobing
of the membrane (Fig.
3A).
Treatment of the cells with Ly294002
markedly reduced this band,
suggesting that a PI3K-sensitive mechanism
phosphorylates
p21
Cip1 in endothelial cells (Fig.
3A). Similar
results were obtained
using a phospho-specific
p21
Cip1 antibody raised against a peptide
containing the phosphorylated
Akt consensus region of
p21
Cip1,
NH
2-CDSQGRKRRQpTSMT-CONH
2
(data not shown).

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FIG. 3.
In vivo phosphorylation of p21Cip1. (A)
Detection of phosphorylated p21Cip1 by immunoblot analysis
of HUVEC extracts using a phospho-specific antibody against the Akt
phosphorylation consensus motif. Right lane, effect of Ly294002 (10 µM) for 1 h before lysis. The lower panel shows total endogenous
p21Cip1 for comparison. (B) In vivo phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 by a serum-induced, PI3K-sensitive mechanism. HUVEC
were labeled with 32P and starved for 1 h in FCS-free
medium before the addition of 10% phosphate-free FCS and Ly294002 (10 µM) for 30 min as indicated. Endogenous p21Cip1 was
immunoprecipitated (IP) with anti-p21Cip1 antibodies. (C).
In vivo phosphorylation of p21Cip1 by Akt. COS-7 cells
overexpressing myc-tagged p21Cip1 constructs and
vector (pcDNA3.1) or Akt constructs were labeled with 32P
for 3 h, and p21Cip1 was immunoprecipitated with
anti-myc antibodies. In panels B and C, representative
autoradiographs are shown: lower panels, expression of
p21Cip1 as a loading control. (D) Phospho-peptide analysis.
(Top) Elution of the synthetic peptide QTSMTDFYHSK
(where T is the phospho-acceptor amino acid) corresponding
to amino acids 144 to 154 of p21 from the reverse phase column. This
peptide contains the putative Akt phosphorylation site
(145Thr) in p21 and would result from tryptic
digestion of p21. (Middle) Endogenous p21 was immunoprecipitated from
COS cells, and tryptic p21 peptides were separated by reverse-phase
chromatography. Note the peak corresponding to the peptide
QTSMTDFYHSK. (Bottom) Following serum starvation, COS
cells were serum treated in the presence of 32P with or
without Ly294002 (10 µM). Tryptic p21 peptides were seperated as
above, and fractions surrounding peptide
QTSMTDFYHSK were collected for determination of
radioactivity. A representative result is shown. WB, Western
blotting.
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To confirm that phosphorylation of p21
Cip1 at Thr
145 occurs in vivo, we labeled intact cells with
[
32P]orthophosphate. Stimulation with serum
induced the incorporation
of
32P into endogenous
p21
Cip1 (Fig.
3B). Inhibition of the PI3K pathway
with Ly294002 reduced
radioactive labeling by about 90% (Fig.
3B). The
phosphorylation
of p21
Cip1 was mainly due to
incorporation of
32P into Thr 145, since
inactivation of Thr 145 markedly reduced
serum-dependent
p21
Cip1 phosphorylation (85% inhibition; data
not shown). Transfection
of Akt stimulated the incorporation of
32P in cells overexpressing the
p21
Cip1 wild type (p21 wt), whereas
radioactive labeling of the T145A
construct in response to Akt
overexpression was markedly lower
(Fig.
3C). The basal phosphorylation
of p21
Cip1 in vivo is most likely due to
phosphorylation of p21
Cip1 by another
kinase(s).
To further establish Thr 145 as the phospho-acceptor amino acid
by PI3K-dependent phosphorylation of p21
Cip1 in
intact cells, we performed a phospho-site-mapping analysis.
Following
in vivo radioactive labeling, p21
Cip1 was
immunoprecipitated from cell lysates as described in Materials
and
Methods (Fig.
3D, insert). Immunopurified p21
Cip1
was then subjected to trypsin digestion, and the resulting peptides
were separated by reverse-phase chromatography. Fraction 2 (Fig.
3D) corresponded to the eluate of a synthetic peptide according
to the predicted peptide resulting from trypsin digestion containing
Thr 145 (
144QTSMTDFYHSK
154)
(Fig.
3D). In contrast to the adjacent fractions, fraction 2
contained
radioactivity when cells were stimulated with serum.
Coincubation with
the PI3K inhibitor Ly294002 abolished incorporation
of radioactivity in
this specific peptide (Fig.
3D). These results
indicate that serum
induces phosphorylation of the peptide
144QTSMTDFYHSK
154, which
contains the Akt site Thr 145, in a PI3K-dependent manner.
Taken
together, the present data demonstrate that Akt interacts
with and
phosphorylates p21
Cip1 in vitro and in vivo at
Thr
145.
Thr 145 phosphorylation inhibits PCNA binding to
p21Cip1.
The PCNA binding site of
p21Cip1 overlaps with the Akt phosphorylation
site (Fig. 1) (6, 25, 46). Therefore, we analyzed whether
p21Cip1 phosphorylation at Thr 145 affects PCNA
binding. p21 wt binds to PCNA as shown by coimmunoprecipitation studies
with anti-myc antibodies for immunoprecipitation of
myc-tagged p21 wt followed by Western blotting against
endogenous PCNA (Fig. 4A), as well as by
immunoblot analysis of p21 bound to immunoprecipitates of endogenous
PCNA (Fig. 4B). Cotransfection of Akt substantially reduced PCNA
binding to p21 wt, whereas overexpression of kinase-inactive Akt (Akt
K179 M) did not interfere with the p21Cip1-PCNA
interaction (Fig. 4C), clearly demonstrating that Akt regulates the
complex formation between PCNA and p21Cip1.

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FIG. 4.
Regulation of PCNA binding by Akt-dependent
phosphorylation of p21Cip1. (A) Coimmunoprecipitation of
p21Cip1-PCNA complexes. myc-tagged
p21Cip1 constructs were expressed in COS-7 cells and
immunoprecipitated (IP) with an anti-myc antibody followed
by Western blotting (WB) against PCNA (n = 4 different experiments). (B) Endogenous PCNA was immunoprecipitated from
COS-7 cells overexpressing the various myc-tagged
p21Cip1 constructs followed by Western blot analysis using
an anti-myc antibody (n = 3). (C) COS-7
cells were cotransfected with myc-tagged p21Cip1
and vector, active Akt (T308D/S473D), or kinase-inactive Akt (K179 M).
Then, PCNA was detected by immunoblot analysis of anti-myc
immunoprecipitates (n = 3). (D) COS-7 cells were
transfected with p21Cip1 constructs mutated at Thr 145 and/or Ser 146. Again, endogenous PCNA was detected from
anti-myc immunoprecipitates. Right lane, anti-myc antibody
without cell lysate. Expression of p21Cip1 constructs and
endogenous PCNA is shown in the lower panels (A through D). Similar
results were obtained using HUVEC.
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To characterize the role of Thr 145 phosphorylation for
p21
Cip1-PCNA complex formation, we used a
phospho-mimetic p21
Cip1 construct, where Thr 145 was replaced by aspartic acid (p21 T145D).
Simulated
p21
Cip1 phosphorylation at Thr 145 completely
prevented p21
Cip1-PCNA binding, whereas the
nonphosphorylatable p21 T145A construct
displayed no change in PCNA
binding compared to p21 wt (Fig.
4A
and B). In contrast to p21 wt,
active Akt did not affect PCNA
binding to the
phospho-acceptor-deficient T145A construct (Fig.
4C). Reversible
phosphorylation of an amino acid residue in the
vicinity close to Thr
145, Ser 146, has previously been shown
to regulate PCNA binding to
p21
Cip1 in Sf9 insect cells (
40).
Therefore, we designed additional
p21
Cip1
constructs carrying a mutation to an unphosphorylatable (S146A)
or to a
phosphomimetic amino acid (S146D) at position 146. Coimmunoprecipitation
experiments confirmed that in mammalian cells
stimulation of p21
Cip1 phosphorylation at serine
146 indeed decreases PCNA binding (Fig.
4D). However, phosphorylation
of p21
Cip1 at the Akt phosphorylation site Thr
145 exerts a more pronounced
inhibition of complex formation with PCNA
than Ser 146 phosphorylation
(Fig.
4D). Taken together, Akt regulates
p21
Cip1-PCNA binding via specific phosphorylation
of the Thr 145
residue.
Effect of Akt-dependent p21Cip1 phosphorylation on
Cdks.
Besides its interaction with PCNA,
p21Cip1 forms complexes with cyclins and Cdks and
can inhibit Cdk activity (26). In close proximity to the
Akt-dependent phosphorylation site Thr 145, p21Cip1 contains a cyclin-binding motif (Cy2),
which has been reported to play an important role in the Cdk inhibitory
function of p21Cip1 (7). To explore
the potential regulation of p21Cip1-Cdk complex
formation by Akt-mediated p21Cip1
phosphorylation, we characterized Cdk2 and Cdk4 binding to various p21Cip1 constructs by coimmunoprecipitation
studies. Simulation of p21Cip1 phosphorylation at
Thr 145 (T145D) reduced Cdk2 binding in endothelial cells by 59% ± 15% (Fig. 5A) and affected complex
formation with Cdk4 to a minor degree (Fig. 5B), whereas both p21 wt
and the T145A construct complexed with Cdk2 and Cdk4 to similar extents (Fig. 5).

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FIG. 5.
Effect of p21Cip1 phosphorylation at Thr 145 on Cdk binding. COS-7 cells were transfected with p21Cip1
constructs, and endogenous Cdk2 (A) or Cdk4 (B) was detected from
anti-myc immunoprecipitates (IP) by immunoblot analysis
(n = 4 experiments). The expression of the
constructs is shown in the lower panel.
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In addition to direct binding of Cdks by complex formation,
p21
Cip1 affects Cdk function by promoting the
assembly of D-type cyclins
with Cdk4 (
30), thereby
activating these Cdks (
8). We therefore
analyzed the
effect of Thr 145 phosphorylation of p21
Cip1 on
the regulation of cyclin D-Cdk4 assembly. Interestingly, overexpression
of p21 wt leads to an increase in cyclin D protein levels (Fig.
6A). Accordingly, in cells overexpressing
p21
Cip1 the amount of cyclin D complexed with
Cdk4 was increased, as
assessed by immunoblot analysis of
Cdk4-immunoprecipitates with
an antibody against cyclin D (Fig.
6A and
B). The Akt-phospho-mimetic
p21
Cip1 T145D
construct induced no further increase in cyclin D-Cdk4
assembly.
However, prevention of p21
Cip1 phosphorylation by
Akt in cells transfected with the p21
Cip1 T145A
construct resulted in a significant decrease in cyclin
D-Cdk complex
formation (Fig.
6A and B). Overexpression of the
p21
Cip1 T145D and T145A constructs had no effect
on cyclin E-Cdk2 assembly
(data not shown).

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FIG. 6.
Regulation of Cdk function by p21Cip1
phosphorylation at Thr 145. (A) Effect of p21Cip1
phosphorylation at Thr 145 on cyclin D-Cdk4 assembly. Endogenous cyclin
D was detected in Cdk4 immunoprecipitates (IP) from HUVEC
overexpressing the various Thr 145 constructs of p21Cip1
(n = 4). The lower panel shows endogenous cyclin D
expression in HUVEC transfected with vector or p21Cip1
constructs. (B) Densitometric analysis of cyclin D expression and
binding to Cdk4 in p21Cip1-transfected HUVEC. Data are
mean ± SEM, n = 4, *P < 0.05. (C and D) Cdk2 kinase activity. Immunoprecipitated Cdk2 from
HUVEC overexpressing p21Cip1 constructs was incubated with
histone H1 as an in vitro substrate. A representative autoradiograph is
shown in panel C. The quantitative analysis is shown in panel D
(n = 4, *, P < 0.05 versus the
wild type). WB, Western blotting.
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We then examined whether the observed modulation of Cdk2 binding and
cyclin D-Cdk4 complex formation by Akt-dependent phosphorylation
of
p21
Cip1 does indeed change Cdk activity.
Overexpression of p21
Cip1 significantly reduced
the kinase activity of Cdk2 (35% ± 6% of
vector-transfected cells;
P < 0.001). However, cells transfected
with the
Akt-phospho-mimetic p21
Cip1 T145D construct
displayed reduced inhibition of Cdk2 activity
compared to cells
overexpressing either p21 wt or the p21
Cip1 T145A
construct (Fig.
6C). p21
Cip1 overexpression also
inhibited the kinase activity of Cdk4, though
to a lesser extent than
Cdk2 (data not shown). However, no difference
in Cdk4 activity was
determined by comparing the different p21
contructs (data not shown).
Taken together, Akt-dependent phosphorylation
of
p21
Cip1 ameliorates the Cdk2 inhibitory function
of p21
Cip1, presumably by interfering with
p21
Cip1-Cdk2 complex formation, whereas Cdk4
activity remained
unchanged.
Thr 145 phosphorylation and subcellular localization of
p21Cip1.
Since the nuclear translocation sequence of
p21Cip1 is localized within the PCNA binding
site, we tested whether the functional effects of Akt-dependent
p21Cip1 phosphorylation on PCNA and Cdk binding
may be caused by an effect on the subcellular localization of
p21Cip1. Immunocytochemical staining of
endothelial cells demonstrates that p21 wt, the nonphosphorylatable
T145A, and the phospho-mimetic T145D construct localize to both the
nucleus and the cytoplasm (Fig.
7A).
About one-third of the cells revealed strong cytoplasmic staining of
p21Cip1, whereas a predominant nuclear
localization was detected in 70% of the endothelial cells (Fig. 7A).
The numbers of cells with cytoplasmic staining were similar in cells
expressing p21 wt, T145A, and T145D (Fig. 7A and data not shown).
Immunoblot analysis of subcellular fractions confirms that
p21Cip1 is indeed located in the cytoplasm as
well as in the nucleus (Fig. 7B). Interestingly, protein levels of the
phosphomimetic p21Cip1 T145D construct appeared
even slightly higher in the nuclear fraction than p21 wt and the T145A
construct, such that both localize in almost equal amounts to the
nuclear and cytoplasmic fractions (Fig. 7C). Consistently, the PI3K
inhibitor Ly294002 decreases the protein amount of endogenous
p21Cip1 in the nuclear fraction, whereas
cytoplasmic p21Cip1 levels remain largely
preserved (data not shown). Active Akt mainly localizes to the nucleus
of endothelial cells under serum-containing conditions, thus confirming
data that were obtained with another cell type (2), with
no difference between cells overexpressing the various
p21Cip1 constructs (Fig. 7D). These data suggest
that, in endothelial cells, Akt-mediated phosphorylation modulates the
cell cycle regulatory functions of p21Cip1 not
via promoting nuclear export and/or interfering with the nuclear
translocation of p21Cip1, but rather via inducing
a conformational change of the C terminus of
p21Cip1 following Thr 145 phosphorylation.


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FIG. 7.
Subcellular distribution of p21Cip1 in
dependency on Thr 145 phosphorylation. (A) Immunostaining of human
endothelial cells transfected with p21 wt or the Thr 145 constructs.
Immunocytochemistry was performed using anti-myc antibody
and counterstained with DAPI (n = 4). Due to the
limited transfection efficiency, not all cells reveal FITC staining.
(B) Immunoblot analysis of p21Cip1 protein levels in the
nuclear versus cytoplasmic fraction of HUVEC overexpressing p21 wt and
Thr 145 constructs. (C) Densitometric analysis of four individual
experiments as in panel B. Data are mean ± SEM; *,
P < 0.05 versus the wild type and T145A. (D)
Relative subcellular distribution of Akt in nucleus and cytosol of
HUVEC transfected with p21Cip1 constructs or vector. A
representative result of three individual experiments is shown. In the
results shown in panels B and D, immunoblots were reprobed with
anti-topoisomerase antibody to verify separation of the nuclear
fraction and as a loading control. WB, Western blotting.
|
|
PI3K-Akt-dependent regulation of endothelial cell cycle
progression.
Since Akt-dependent phosphorylation interferes with
the cell cycle regulatory functions of p21Cip1,
we explored the functional consequences of
p21Cip1 phosphorylation by Akt on cell cycle
progression of endothelial cells. In the presence of serum, about 13%
of endothelial cells are in S phase (Fig.
8A and B). The PI3K inhibitor Ly294002
significantly reduced the percentage of cells in S phase to about 5%
(Fig. 8A and B), which is similar to the effect of serum starvation
(Fig. 8B). Thus, PI3K-dependent mechanisms are involved in the
regulation of endothelial cell proliferation. To assess the
contribution of Akt kinase to cell cycle progression, endothelial cells
were cotransfected with GFP and various Akt constructs, GFP-positive cells were isolated by FACS, and proliferating cells were identified by
immunostaining against the proliferation-associated antigen Ki67,
which is only expressed in active phases of the cell cycle, but not in
G0 phase (39). Overexpression of
active Akt increased endothelial cell proliferation and, importantly,
almost entirely compensated for serum depletion-induced cell cycle
arrest (Fig. 8D). Consistently, the dominant negative Akt construct
markedly suppressed endothelial cell proliferation (Fig. 8D).
Proliferation assessment by the BrdU incorporation assay revealed
similar results (active Akt, 187% ± 0.5%, and dominant negative Akt,
59% ± 0.6%, compared to vector-transfected cells). These data
demonstrate that the PI3K/Akt pathway plays an important role in the
regulation of endothelial cell cycle progression.

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FIG. 8.
Regulation of endothelial cell proliferation by the
PI3K/Akt pathway. (A and B) Serum-stimulated HUVEC were incubated with
the PI3K inhibitor Ly294002 (10 µM) or starved for 24 h in
serum-free medium plus 1% bovine serum albumin. Cell
cycle phases were detected by FACS (data are mean ± SEM;
n = 4). (C) HUVEC were incubated with Ly294002 (10 µM) for 24 h, and cell proliferation was assessed by measuring
BrdU incorporation via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (data are
mean ± SEM; n = 4). (D) HUVEC were
cotransfected with GFP (1 µg) and the respective pcDNA3.1 constructs
(2 µg) and incubated for 20 h. During the last 12 h, cells
were starved in FCS-free medium plus 1% bovine serum albumin.
GFP-positive cells were isolated, and proliferating endothelial cells
were identified by immunostaining against the proliferative marker
protein Ki67. Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI. Ki67-positive cells
were counted, and values were calculated as the number of Ki67-positive
cells/the number of DAPI-stained nuclei × 100 (data are mean ± SEM; n = 3).
|
|
Effect of p21Cip1 Thr 145 phosphorylation on
endothelial cell proliferation.
To examine the specific
contribution of p21Cip1 phosphorylation, we
cotransfected endothelial cells with GFP and either p21 wt or the
mutated constructs and analyzed endothelial cell proliferation in
GFP-positive cells. Overexpression of p21 wt led to a minor reduction
of cell proliferation (Fig. 9A). In
contrast, the Akt-phospho-mimetic p21Cip1
construct (T145D) induced an increase in the number of proliferating cells, whereas the nonphosphorylatable p21Cip1
construct (T145A) further reduced endothelial cell proliferation to
levels similar to those caused by serum withdrawal or the effect of the
dominant negative Akt construct (Fig. 9A). Similarly, inhibition of
PI3K with Ly294002 inhibited proliferation in cells transfected with
p21 wt but not in cells that were overexpressing
p21Cip1 T145D. In accordance with the cell cycle
effects, cells overexpressing the T145D construct showed no significant
decrease in Cdk2 kinase activity in response to Ly294002 treatment, and
these cells were largely resistant to pRb dephosphorylation when
compared to p21 wt (Fig. 9B). Then, we analyzed whether Akt-dependent
phosphorylation of p21Cip1 mediates the
proliferative effects of PI3K. In p21 wt-transfected cells, Ly294002
treatment markedly reduced the number of Ki67-positive endothelial
cells, whereas cells transfected with the phospho-mimetic p21Cip1 T145D construct are partially resistant
to the cell cycle arrest induced by Ly294002 or serum depletion (Fig.
9A and data not shown). Similar results were obtained when
proliferation was assessed by BrdU incorporation. To examine whether
the proliferative effect of Akt indeed depends on
p21Cip1, endothelial cells were transfected with
p21Cip1 antisense oligonucleotides to inhibit
endogenous p21Cip1 expression (Fig. 9C).
p21Cip1-depleted cells displayed significantly
increased proliferation, as detected by BrdU incorporation (Fig. 9D),
consistent with a recent report of a similar effect in
p21Cip1-null hematopoietic stem cells
(9). To assess the dependency of Akt-induced cell
proliferation on the availability of p21Cip1,
cells were simultaneously transfected with sense or antisense oligonucleotides to p21Cip1, GFP, and Akt or mock
transfected, and transfected cells were isolated by fluorescence
sorting. Cotransfection of Akt stimulated the proliferation of
p21Cip1 sense-transfected endothelial cells,
whereas p21Cip1-deficient cells were not
responsive to Akt-induced cell proliferation but showed even decreased
proliferation when Akt was overexpressed (Fig. 9D).

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FIG. 9.
Effect of p21Cip1 Thr 145 phosphorylation on
endothelial cell proliferation. (A) HUVEC were cotransfected with GFP
(1 µg) and the respective pcDNA3.1 constructs (2 µg) and incubated
for 20 h. Then, cells were treated with Ly294002 (10 µM) for
12 h. GFP-positive cells were isolated by FACS, and proliferative
endothelial cells were identified by immunostaining against the
proliferative marker protein Ki67 (data are mean ± SEM;
n = 3 to 4). (B) (Top) Western blot analysis (WB)
of pRb phosphorylation in intact cells; the upper band corresponds to
hyperphosphorylated pRb and the lower band corresponds to
hypophosphorylated pRb in HUVEC overexpressing p21 wt or T145D in the
absence or presence of Ly294002. In the second panel from the top,
expression of p21Cip1 constructs is shown; in the third
panel, an autoradiograph of in vitro-phosphorylated pRb in a Cdk2
kinase assay is shown. The bottom panel shows a Western blot of Cdk2
immunoprecipitates from the respective lysates. (C) HUVEC were
transfected with p21Cip1 antisense or sense
oligonucleotides, and p21Cip1 protein expression was
detected by Western blot analysis using an antibody against endogenous
p21Cip1. A representative blot of three individual
experiments is shown. (D) Effect of Akt in p21Cip1
antisense-transfected HUVEC that were cotransfected with
p21Cip1 antisense or sense oligonucleotides, GFP, and
active Akt (T308D/S473D) or vector. Eighteen hours after transfection,
the proliferation of GFP-positive cells was assessed by BrdU staining,
followed by counterstaining with DAPI. Representative photomicrographs
are shown (data are mean ± SEM, n = 3;
P < 0.05 versus p21 sense plus vector).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
We have shown that Akt phosphorylates
p21Cip1 specifically at Thr 145 in vitro and in
vivo, which results in the release of PCNA from
p21Cip1 and regulates the mode of Cdk inhibition
by p21Cip1. As a functional consequence,
phosphorylation of p21Cip1 abrogates the
inhibitory effect of p21Cip1 on cell cycle
progression, thereby mediating the proliferative effect of Akt
signaling in endothelial cells.
The data of the present study provide evidence that Akt specifically
phosphorylates p21Cip1 at Thr 145 in vitro and in
intact cells. Akt overexpression leads to the incorporation of
32P into p21 wt, but not into the phosphorylation
site-deficient T145A construct. Moreover, serum-induced phosphorylation
of endogenous p21Cip1 was reduced by a PI3K
inhibitor. These data indicate that Akt can stimulate p21
phosphorylation at Thr 145. However, a recent study by Scott et al.
identified Thr 145 within p21Cip1 as a PKA
phosphorylation site in an insect cell line (40). Consistent with these data, Akt and PKA displayed equal kinase activities towards Thr 145 in our in vitro experiments. However, PKA
inhibitors affected serum-induced cell cycle progression in endothelial
cells much less than the PI3K inhibitor Ly294002 or overexpression of
dominant negative Akt (S. Dimmeler, unpublished data).This suggests
that, in endothelial cells, Akt phosphorylation of Thr 145 of
p21Cip1 represents a proliferation signal of
potential physiological and/or pathophysiological importance, whereas
the functional implications of PKA-dependent
p21Cip1 phosphorylation remain to be defined.
PI3K-derived 3'-phosphorylated phospholipids are capable of activating
a number of cellular signaling pathways, including tyrosine kinases,
GTPase-activating proteins for small G proteins, and a variety of
serine/threonine protein kinases such as SGK and the p70 S6 kinase
(36). Therefore, a PI3K-coupled mechanism beyond Akt could
account for the observed effects of the PI3K inhibitor in endothelial
cells. Although we demonstrate that the PI3K-dependent kinases SGK and
p70 S6 kinase display no kinase activity towards
p21Cip1 in vitro, we cannot formally rule out
that other kinases downstream of Akt mediate the phosphorylation as
well as the biological effect of p21Cip1 in
response to PI3K-Akt-coupled stimuli in vivo.
Recognizing p21Cip1 as a phosphorylated protein
implies the possible existence of posttranslation mechanisms regulating
p21Cip1, the functional control of which was so
far merely attributed to the regulation at the transcriptional level.
Posttranslational regulation has previously been reported to regulate
protein stability of p21Cip1 and for another cell
cycle inhibitor, p27Kip1 (21, 41,
42). Here we demonstrate that phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 at Thr 145 provides a novel regulatory
mechanism to modulate p21Cip1 function by
inducing the release of PCNA from complexes with p21Cip1 and by regulating Cdk2 and Cdk4 complex
formation and activity. A previous study has shown that binding of the
human papillomavirus type 16 E7 oncoprotein to a sequence
overlapping with the PCNA binding site of p21Cip1
interferes with the inhibition of PCNA-dependent DNA replication by
p21Cip1 (23). This suggests that the
release of PCNA from p21Cip1 enables PCNA to
exert its essential function for the process of DNA replication
(44). In addition, a broader spectrum of functions is
mediated by PCNA beyond DNA replication (for a review, see reference
44). Taking into consideration that
p21Cip1 competes with the endonucleases Fen1 and
XPG as well as with the DNA methyl transferase Dnmt1 for PCNA binding,
these effects could potentially also be regulated by Akt-dependent
phosphorylation of p21Cip1 and warrant future
investigations on this topic.
In contrast to the complete reversal of PCNA binding,
p21Cip1 phosphorylation at Thr 145 only partially
inhibited complex formation with Cdk2 and Cdk4 (Fig. 5). This is
consistent with previous findings showing that both the cyclin
inhibitory sites Cy1 and Cy2, which are located at the N- and
C-terminal parts of p21Cip1, respectively (Fig.
1), are necessary for the complete inhibition of Cdk binding
(7). Still, the phospho-mimetic mutation of Thr 145 markedly ameliorated the Cdk2 inhibitory activity of
p21Cip1. Also, overexpression of the
p21Cip1 Thr 145 construct in endothelial cells is
associated with a less-compromised phosphorylation of the in vivo Cdk2
substrate, pRb, compared to p21 wt. This suggests that Thr 145 phosphorylation of p21Cip1 has a dual effect on
the cell cycle: liberation of PCNA to fulfill its task for DNA
replication plus reduction of the amount of inactivated Cdks to manage
G0/G1/S-phase transition
processes. As the underlying molecular mechanism, growth factor-induced
Akt-dependent phosphorylation of p21Cip1 at Thr
145 may induce a conformational change of the PCNA and cyclin-binding
domain to modulate the cell cycle inhibitory effects of
p21Cip1. Alternatively, Thr 145 phosphorylation
of p21Cip1 may create binding sites for other
proteins competing with PCNA and/or Cdk binding.
The inhibition of serum-induced endothelial cell cycle progression by
overexpression of a dominant negative Akt construct demonstrates a key
role for Akt in the regulation of human endothelial cell proliferation.
Consistently, stimulation of the PI3K/Akt pathway was previously shown
to promote cell cycle progression in other cell types (15, 24,
33, 34). Interestingly, simulation of phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 at Thr 145 not only reduces its cell
cycle inhibitory effect but even slightly stimulates cell cycle
progression. This observation could help to explain the surprising
finding that platelet-derived growth factor, a potent activator of the
PI3K/Akt pathway, does require the presence of
p21Cip1 to stimulate vascular smooth muscle cell
proliferation (47) as well as seemingly paradoxical
pro-proliferative effects of p21Cip1 revealed by
knockout studies, in which cytokine treatment reduced rather than
stimulated the proliferation of p21Cip1-null
cells (9, 31). Our findings that Akt did not additionally stimulate proliferation of p21Cip1
antisense-transfected cells confirm these data. Previous studies of the
mechanisms by which the PI3K/Akt pathway controls proliferation have
focused on cell cycle regulators other than
p21Cip1. As illustrated in Fig.
10, Akt was shown to transcriptionally down-regulate p27Kip1 expression by inhibition of
Forkhead transcription factors and to stabilize cyclin D protein levels
via glycogen synthase kinase 3
inhibition (15, 24, 33,
34). Therefore, Akt appears to affect additional signaling
pathways, which in concert regulate cell cycle progression (Fig. 10).
The importance of the individual signaling pathway may depend on the
specific cell type examined and the stimulus used for induction of
proliferation. In addition, the cellular differentiation status
importantly determines the differential activation of downstream
signaling pathways (49).

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FIG. 10.
Proposed Akt effector pathways regulating cell cycle
progression. The scheme illustrates the data reported in this study in
the context of previous publications demonstrating p27 and cyclin D
regulation in response to Akt (15, 24, 33, 34). FKH,
Forkhead transcription factors; GSK-3, glycogen synthase kinase 3.
|
|
Accumulating evidence indicates that Akt plays a key role in
angiogenesis regulation both in vitro and in vivo (17,
29). Given that p21Cip1-null mice do not
have an obvious endothelial phenotype, the specific contribution of
p21Cip1 phosphorylation in mediating
Akt-dependent endothelial cell proliferation in vivo has yet to be
proven. However, the lack of an overt endothelial phenotype in the
absence of p21Cip1 under basal conditions does
not negate the potential importance of Akt-dependent
p21Cip1 phosphorylation in a disease model.
Indeed, recent studies of p21Cip1-null mice
showed that p21Cip1 is essential for the
regulation of stem cell cycling (9) as well as for the
maintenance of progenitor cells (31). Since bone
marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells importantly contribute to
neovascularization of ischemic tissue (3), Akt-mediated p21Cip1 phosphorylation and functional modulation
could contribute to the mobilization and maintenance of endothelial
progenitor cells to warrant timely stem cell cycling. Indeed,
preliminary findings indicate that the PI3K/Akt pathway regulates
endothelial progenitor cell number and is essential for endothelial
progenitor cell function (S. Dimmeler, unpublished). However, further
studies are required to investigate whether
p21Cip1-null mice are defective in the
Akt-mediated angiogenic response to ischemia.
During the preparation of the present manuscript, we noticed the
electronic prepublication of Zhou and coworkers that characterizes the
interaction of Akt and p21Cip1 in cancer cells
(48). To a large proportion, the results of Zhou et al.
are in consistence with our data on the specific phosphorylation of
p21Cip1 Thr 145 by Akt as well as the functional
importance of p21Cip1 phosphorylation for the
proliferative effect of Akt kinase. However, in contrast to fibroblasts
and cancer cells used in that study, in endothelial cells Akt-mediated
phosphorylation does not induce cytoplasmic relocalization of
p21Cip1, which Zhou et al. postulated as the
underlying mechanism for Akt-mediated proliferation.
In summary, we show that the PI3K/Akt pathway is in addition to the
established survival function also involved in the regulation of
endothelial cell cycle progression. Phosphorylation of
p21Cip1, therefore, mediates at least in part the
proliferative effect of Akt. We provide evidence that the functional
modulation of p21Cip1 by Akt-dependent
phosphorylation involves major alterations in PCNA binding and Cdk
complex assembly. These findings characterize a novel pathway by which
Akt regulates endothelial cell proliferation.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Christiane Mildner-Rihm, Rebeca Salguero-Palacios,
Susanne Ficus, and Meike Stahmer for expert technical assistance.
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
(Di600/2-3 and Ba1668/3-1) and the Heinrich und Erna
Schaufler-Stiftung. L.R. received a Young Investigator's grant from
the University of Frankfurt.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Molecular
Cardiology, Department of Internal Medicine IV, University of
Frankfurt, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt, Germany. Phone:
49-69-6301-7440 or -5789. Fax: 49-69-6301-7113 or -6374. E-mail:
Dimmeler{at}em.uni-frankfurt.de.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, August 2001, p. 5644-5657, Vol. 21, No. 16
0270-7306/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.21.16.5644-5657.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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