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CDC7-independent G1/S transition revealed by targeted protein degradation.

Authors :
Suski, Jan M.
Ratnayeke, Nalin
Braun, Marcin
Zhang, Tian
Strmiska, Vladislav
Michowski, Wojciech
Can, Geylani
Simoneau, Antoine
Snioch, Konrad
Cup, Mikolaj
Sullivan, Caitlin M.
Wu, Xiaoji
Nowacka, Joanna
Branigan, Timothy B.
Pack, Lindsey R.
DeCaprio, James A.
Geng, Yan
Zou, Lee
Gygi, Steven P.
Walter, Johannes C.
Source :
Nature; May2022, Vol. 605 Issue 7909, p357-365, 9p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The entry of mammalian cells into the DNA synthesis phase (S phase) represents a key event in cell division1. According to current models of the cell cycle, the kinase CDC7 constitutes an essential and rate-limiting trigger of DNA replication, acting together with the cyclin-dependent kinase CDK2. Here we show that CDC7 is dispensable for cell division of many different cell types, as determined using chemical genetic systems that enable acute shutdown of CDC7 in cultured cells and in live mice. We demonstrate that another cell cycle kinase, CDK1, is also active during G1/S transition both in cycling cells and in cells exiting quiescence. We show that CDC7 and CDK1 perform functionally redundant roles during G1/S transition, and at least one of these kinases must be present to allow S-phase entry. These observations revise our understanding of cell cycle progression by demonstrating that CDK1 physiologically regulates two distinct transitions during cell division cycle, whereas CDC7 has a redundant function in DNA replication.In addition to CDC7, the cell cycle kinase CDK1 has a pivotal role in the G1/S transition of cells, a finding that revises our current understanding of cell cycle progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
605
Issue :
7909
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156819601
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-04698-x