1. Academic Validation
  2. Oxaline, a fungal alkaloid, arrests the cell cycle in M phase by inhibition of tubulin polymerization

Oxaline, a fungal alkaloid, arrests the cell cycle in M phase by inhibition of tubulin polymerization

  • Biochim Biophys Acta. 2004 Jul 23;1693(1):47-55. doi: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2004.04.013.
Yukio Koizumi 1 Masayoshi Arai Hiroshi Tomoda Satoshi Omura
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Kitasato Institute for Life Sciences and Graduate School of Infection Control Sciences, Kitasato University and The Kitasato Institute, 5-9-1 Shirokane, Minato, Tokyo 108-8641, Japan.
Abstract

Oxaline and neoxaline, fungal Alkaloids, were found to inhibit cell proliferation and to induce cell cycle arrest at the G(2)/M phase in Jurkat cells. CBP501 (a peptide corresponding to Amino acids 211-221 of Cdc25C Phosphatase), which inhibits the G(2) checkpoint, did not affect the G(2)/M arrest caused by oxaline, suggesting that oxaline causes M phase arrest but not G(2) phase arrest. The Cdc2 phosphorylation level of oxaline-treated cell lysate was lower than that of the control cells, indicating that oxaline arrests the M phase. Oxaline disrupted cytoplasmic microtubule assembly in 3T3 cells. Furthermore, oxaline inhibited polymerization of microtubule protein and purified tubulin dose-dependently in vitro. In a binding competition assay, oxaline inhibited the binding of [(3)H]colchicine to tubulin, but not that of [(3)H]vinblastine. These results indicate that oxaline inhibits tubulin polymerization, resulting in cell cycle arrest at the M phase.

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