BMC Biochemistry Volume 6
|
Viewing options:Associated material:Related literature:- Articles citing this article
- Other articles by authors
- Related articles/pages
Tools:Post to:
|
 Research articleMultiple phosphorylation events control mitotic degradation of the muscle transcription factor Myf5Christine Doucet1 , Gustavo J Gutierrez1,2 , Catherine Lindon3 , Thierry Lorca1 , Gwendaline Lledo1 , Christian Pinset4 and Olivier Coux1  1Centre de Recherches de Biochimie Macromoléculaire (CRBM), CNRS FRE 2593, Montpellier, France 2Present address: Burnham Institute for Medical Research, La Jolla, CA, USA 3Wellcome Trust/Cancer Research UK, Gurdon Institute, Cambridge, UK 4Celogos/Institut Pasteur, Paris, France author email corresponding author email
BMC Biochemistry 2005,
6:27doi:10.1186/1471-2091-6-27
|
|
| Published: |
1 December 2005 |
Abstract
Background
The two myogenic regulatory factors Myf5 and MyoD are basic helix-loop-helix muscle transcription factors undergoing differential cell cycle dependent proteolysis in proliferating myoblasts. This regulated degradation results in the striking expression of these two factors at distinct phases of the cell cycle, and suggests that their precise and alternated disappearance is an important feature of myoblasts, maybe connected to the maintenance of the proliferative status and/or commitment to the myogenic lineage of these cells. One way to understand the biological function(s) of the cyclic expression of these proteins is to specifically alter their degradation, and to analyze the effects of their stabilization on cells. To this aim, we undertook the biochemical analysis of the mechanisms governing Myf5 mitotic degradation, using heterologous systems.
Results
We show here that mitotic degradation of Myf5 is conserved in non-myogenic cells, and is thus strictly under the control of the cell cycle apparatus. Using Xenopus egg extracts as an in vitro system to dissect the main steps of Myf5 mitotic proteolysis, we show that (1) Myf5 stability is regulated by a complex interplay of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, probably involving various kinases and phosphatases, (2) Myf5 is ubiquitylated in mitotic extracts, and this is a prerequisite to its degradation by the proteasome and (3) at least in the Xenopus system, the E3 responsible for its mitotic degradation is not the APC/C (the major E3 during mitosis).
Conclusion
Altogether, our data strongly suggest that the mitotic degradation of Myf5 by the ubiquitin-proteasome system is precisely controlled by multiple phosphorylation of the protein, and that the APC/C is not involved in this process. |