Mad2-Independent inhibition of APCCdc20 by the mitotic checkpoint protein BubR1
Abstract
The mitotic checkpoint blocks the activation of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) until all sister chromatids have achieved bipolar attachment to the spindle. A checkpoint complex containing BubR1 and Bub3 has been purified from mitotic human cells. Upon checkpoint activation, the BubR1-Bub3 complex interacts with Cdc20. In the absence of Mad2, BubR1 inhibits the activity of APC by blocking the binding of Cdc20 to APC. Surprisingly, the kinase activity of BubR1 is not required for the inhibition of APCCdc20. BubR1 also prevents the activation of APCCdc20 in Xenopus egg extracts, and restores the mitotic arrest in Cdc20-overexpressing cells treated with nocodazole. Because BubR1 also interacts with the mitotic motor CENP-E, the ability of BubR1 to inhibit APC may be regulated by kinetochore tension or occupancy.
References
Kinetochore chemistry is sensitive to tension and may link mitotic forces to a cell cycle checkpoint
Human T cell leukemia virus type 1 oncoprotein Tax targets the human mitotic checkpoint protein MAD1
Citations
BUBR1 and closed MAD2 (C-MAD2) interact directly to assemble a functional mitotic checkpoint complex
Dual roles of human BubR1, a mitotic checkpoint kinase, in the monitoring of chromosomal instability
Pellino 1 inactivates mitotic spindle checkpoint by targeting BubR1 for ubiquitinational degradation
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Cell cycle checkpoints are a series of complex checkpoint mechanisms that detect DNA abnormalities and ensure that DNA replication and repair are complete before cell division. They are primarily regulated by cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases, and the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome. Here is the latest research.