期刊论文详细信息
BMC Biology
Quantitative framework for ordered degradation of APC/C substrates
Research Article
Weihan Li1  Arda Mizrak1  Dan Lu1  Juliet R. Girard1  David O. Morgan1 
[1] Departments of Physiology and Biochemistry & Biophysics, University of California, 94158, San Francisco, CA, USA;
关键词: Cell cycle;    Anaphase;    APC/C;    Cdc20;    Model;    Clb5;    Securin;    Ubiquitin;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s12915-015-0205-6
 received in 2015-07-14, accepted in 2015-10-23,  发布年份 2015
来源: Springer
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【 摘 要 】

BackgroundDuring cell-cycle progression, substrates of a single master regulatory enzyme can be modified in a specific order. Here, we used experimental and computational approaches to dissect the quantitative mechanisms underlying the ordered degradation of the substrates of the ubiquitin ligase APC/CCdc20, a key regulator of chromosome segregation in mitosis.ResultsWe show experimentally that the rate of catalysis varies with different substrates of APC/CCdc20. Using a computational model based on multi-step ubiquitination, we then show how changes in the interaction between a single substrate and APC/CCdc20 can alter the timing of degradation onset relative to APC/CCdc20 activation, while ensuring a fast degradation rate. Degradation timing and dynamics depend on substrate affinity for the enzyme as well as the catalytic rate at which the substrate is modified. When two substrates share the same pool of APC/CCdc20, their relative enzyme affinities and rates of catalysis influence the partitioning of APC/CCdc20 among substrates, resulting in substrate competition. Depending on how APC/CCdc20 is partitioned among its substrates, competition can have minor or major effects on the degradation of certain substrates. We show experimentally that increased expression of the early APC/CCdc20 substrate Clb5 does not delay the degradation of the later substrate securin, arguing against a role for competition with Clb5 in establishing securin degradation timing.ConclusionsThe degradation timing of APC/CCdc20 substrates depends on the multi-step nature of ubiquitination, differences in substrate-APC/CCdc20 interactions, and competition among substrates. Our studies provide a conceptual framework for understanding how ordered modification can be established among substrates of the same regulatory enzyme, and facilitate our understanding of how precise temporal control is achieved by a small number of master regulators to ensure a successful cell division cycle.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© Lu et al. 2015

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