1. Academic Validation
  2. Complementation by a cloned human ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1 of the S-phase-arrested mouse FM3A cell mutant with thermolabile E1

Complementation by a cloned human ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1 of the S-phase-arrested mouse FM3A cell mutant with thermolabile E1

  • Cell Struct Funct. 1992 Apr;17(2):113-22. doi: 10.1247/csf.17.113.
D Ayusawa 1 S Kaneda Y Itoh H Yasuda Y Murakami K Sugasawa F Hanaoka T Seno
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Laboratory of Mutagenesis, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan.
Abstract

A temperature-sensitive growth mutant tsFS20 isolated from mouse FM3A cells was identified as a mutant with thermolabile ubiquitin-activating Enzyme E1 by transfection with a full-length cDNA encoding the human E1 Enzyme and cell-cell hybridization with an authentic E1 mutant ts85 previously isolated from FM3A cells. The resulting transformants produced thermoresistant E1 activity. Upon shift-up of temperature, asynchronously growing tsFS20 cells showed multiple points of cell-cycle arrest. At the nonpermissive temperature, tsFS20 cells that had been synchronized at the G1-S-phase progressed and accumulated in the mid-S-phase, as evidenced by the absence of G2-specific cdc2 kinase activity, while ts85 mutant cells, the widely used E1 mutant, reached the G2-phase and were arrested. Thus, the E1 mutation seemed to be involved in progression in the S-phase as well as in the G2-phase in the cell cycle. Degradation of short-lived abnormal proteins in tsFS20 cells was decreased to about 50% at the nonpermissive temperature, while the block was fully restored to the wild-type level in the transformant cells. Relevance of the unusually high incidence of the temperature-sensitive E1 mutation was discussed in terms of the E1 as a determinant of heat tolerance of cells.

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