strategic cell-cycle regulatory features that provide mammalian cells with tunable g1 length and reversible g1 arrest战略g1细胞循环监管功能,为哺乳动物细胞提供可调长度和可逆的g1被捕.pdf
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Strategic Cell-Cycle Regulatory Features That Provide
Mammalian Cells with Tunable G1 Length and Reversible
G1 Arrest
Benjamin Pfeuty*
´ ´
Laboratoire de Physique des Lasers, Atomes, et Molecules, CNRS, UMR8523, Universite Lille 1 Sciences et Technologies, Villeneuve d’Ascq, France
Abstract
Transitions between consecutive phases of the eukaryotic cell cycle are driven by the catalytic activity of selected sets of
cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). Yet, their occurrence and precise timing is tightly scheduled by a variety of means
including Cdk association with inhibitory/adaptor proteins (CKIs). Here we focus on the regulation of G1-phase duration by
the end of which cells of multicelled organisms must decide whether to enter S phase or halt, and eventually then,
differentiate, senesce or die to obey the homeostatic rules of their host. In mammalian cells, entry in and progression
through G1 phase involve sequential phosphorylation and inactivation of the retinoblastoma Rb proteins, first, by cyclin D-
Cdk4,6 with the help of CKIs of the Cip/Kip family and, next, by the cyclin E-Cdk2 complexes that are negatively regulated by
Cip/Kip proteins. Using a dynamical modeling approach, we show that the very way how the Rb and Cip/Kip regulatory
modules interact differentially with cyclin D-Cdk4,6 and cyclin E-Cdk2 provides to mammalian cells a powerful means to
achieve an exquisitely-sensitive control of G1-phase duration and fully reversible G1 arrests. Consistently, corruption of
either one of these two modules precludes G1 phase elongation and is able to convert G1 arrests from reversible to
irreversible. This study unveils fundamental design principles of mammalian G1-phase regulation that are likely to confer to
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