Cannabis Sativa

Authors
Randall W King, M Glotzer, MW Kirschner
Publication date
1996/9
Journal
Molecular biology of the cell
Volume
7
Issue
9
Pages
1343-1357
Description
Mitotic cyclins are abruptly degraded at the end of mitosis by a cell-cycle-regulated ubiquitin-dependent proteolytic system. To understand how cyclin is recognized for ubiquitin conjugation, we have performed a mutagenic analysis of the destruction signal of mitotic cyclins. We demonstrate that an N-terminal cyclin B segment as short as 27 residues, containing the 9-amino-acid destruction box, is sufficient to destabilize a heterologous protein in mitotic Xenopus extracts. Each of the three highly conserved residues of the cyclin B destruction box is essential for ubiquitination and subsequent degradation. Although an intact destruction box is essential for the degradation of both A- and B-type cyclins, we find that the Xenopus cyclin A1 destruction box cannot functionally substitute for its B-type counterpart, because it does not contain the highly conserved asparagine necessary for cyclin B proteolysis. Physical analysis …
Total citations
1996199719981999200020012002200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202419282018222816113115241416121219171310956877441

Leave a Reply