CDK modulation coordinates G 1 events after S phase.
Editorials: Cell Cycle Features
Editorials: Cell Cycle Features
Cell Cycle 13:5, 683–684; March 1, 2014; © 2014 Landes Bioscience
CDK modulation coordinates G1 events
after S phase
Soni Lacefield
Department of Biology; Indiana University; Bloomington, IN USA
To maintain genome stability during
fluctuating environmental conditions,
cells have adapted mechanisms to regulate
cell cycle events. For unicellular organisms, such as budding yeast, this response
is essential for the survival of the organism. For example, under conditions of
nutrient limitation, diploid budding yeast
cells enter meiosis and package the meiotic
products into spores.1 The spores are able
to survive adverse conditions. Once nutrients return, spores germinate and proliferate mitotically. Interestingly, if nutrients
become available prior to the cell reaching
an established commitment point in meiosis, the cell exits meiosis and returns to
mitosis.2 This developmental switch from
meiosis to mitosis allows the cells to abort
the energy-consuming processes of meiosis and sporulation with the restoration of
favorable conditions.
The remarkable capability of budding
yeast to switch from meiosis to mitosis
raises the question of how cell cycle events
are regulated to maintain genome stability. This question is especially intriguing
for cells that return to mitosis from meiotic prophase I, the stage in which homologous chromosomes pair and initiate
recombination. The coordination of cell
cycle events in cells that return to mitosis
from prophase I is different than that of a
normal mitosis (Fig. 1). In a normal mitosis, cells form a bud in G1, replicate their
DNA in S-phase, and then divide their
nucleus in M-phase. Cells that return to
mitosis from prophase I have already replicated their DNA in pre-meiotic S phase;
the cells then form a bud and divide their
nucleus without an intervening DNA
replication.2,3
In a recent study, we asked how CDK
activity is modulated to coordinate cell
cycle events during the return to mitosis
from prophase I.4 In budding yeast, a single CDK, Cdk1, is regulated by 9 different
cyclins, each restricted to the appropriate
cell cycle stage (G1-CDK, S-CDK, and
M-CDK) and important for events in that
stage.5 Cells in prophase I have S-CDK
activity; therefore, we hypothesized that
cells that return to mitosis utilize S-CDK
activity for budding instead of G1-CDK
activity, as utilized in a normal mitosis.
To investigate this hypothesis, we developed a microfluidics assay to monitor
individual cells first exposed to nutrientlimiting medium to initiate meiosis and
then nutrient-rich medium to induce
the return to mitosis.4 We deleted the G1
cyclins singularly and in combinations
and did not observe a delay in budding
during the return to mitosis from prophase I. However, depletion of an S-phase
cyclin resulted in a loss of budding or a
lengthy delay in budding. These results
suggest that the S-phase cyclins, not the
G1 cyclins, are utilized for budding during
the return to mitosis from prophase I. The
persistance of S-CDK activity from prophase I to mitosis provides a mechanistic
rationale for why cells do not re-replicate
their DNA between bud formation and
nuclear division during the return to mitosis; the cells do not return to a stage with
low CDK activity, which is required for
origin licensing and DNA replication.4,5
Morever, we found that the G2 /M
checkpoint kinase Swe1 (Wee1 homolog) is essential for coordinating cell cycle
events during the return to mitosis from
prophase I.4 In a normal mitosis, Swe1
phosphorylates and inhibits Cdk to prevent cells from entering M phase if they
are too small, or if a bud has not formed.6
We found that swe1Δ cells that exit prophase I undergo a mitotic nuclear division without first forming a bud.4 This
aberrant division creates a multi-nucleate
cell. Furthermore, deletion of the mitotic
cyclin Clb2 rescues this aberrant division.
Our results suggest the following model:
cells that return to mitosis from prophase I
require Swe1 to inhibit M-CDK and block
nuclear division. The cell utilizes S-CDK
for budding, and once a bud forms, the
inhibitory phosphorylation on M-CDK
is removed, and cells undergo a nuclear
division.
There is currently a long-standing
debate in the field about the coordination of cell cycle events. The two competing models are the quantitative model
for CDK control of the cell cycle and the
cyclin specificity model.7 In the quantitative model for CDK control, the increasing activity of CDK results in an orderly
progression of the cell cycle, with low
CDK activity driving S phase and high
CDK activity driving M phase. In the
cyclin specificity model, different cyclin–
CDK complexes recognize specific substrates to coordinate cell cycle transitions.
Cells that return to mitosis from meiotic
prophase seem to coordinate mitotic
events utilizing both the quantitative
control of CDK and cyclin specificity.
Our work shows that M-CDK activity
must be downregulated by Swe1 to allow
budding prior to a nuclear division.4
These results support the quantitative
model of CDK control of the cell cycle,
in that cells modulate the levels of CDK
Correspondence to: Soni Lacefield; Email:
Submitted: 10/22/2013; Accepted: 10/28/2013; Published Online: 01/21/2014
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cc.27856
Comment on: Tsuchiya D, et al. Curr Biol 2013; 23:1505-13; PMID:23871241; http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2013.06.031
www.landesbioscience.com
Cell Cycle
683
are specified by S-CDK and quantitative
lowering of M-CDK alone will not permit budding. Therefore, to accommodate
cell cycle changes in response to fluctuating environmental conditions, the cell
has evolved mechanisms to quantitatively modulate CDK levels and specify
substrates.
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
Figure 1. The order of cell cycle events of a normal mitosis compared with the return to mitosis
from prophase I.
5.
6.
to accommodate the different order of
cell cycle events. However, budding likely
requires a specificity of cyclins. Although
the specification of budding by CDK
684
is somewhat promiscuous in that both
S-CDK and G1-CDK can fulfill this role,
M-CDK blocks polarized bud growth.6
This suggests that budding substrates
Cell Cycle
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