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  2. Revisiting the multisite phosphorylation that produces the M-phase supershift of key mitotic regulators

Revisiting the multisite phosphorylation that produces the M-phase supershift of key mitotic regulators

  • Mol Biol Cell. 2022 Oct 1;33(12):ar115. doi: 10.1091/mbc.E22-04-0118.
Tan Tan 1 2 Chuanfen Wu 1 Boye Liu 3 Bih-Fang Pan 4 David H Hawke 4 Zehao Su 5 Shuaishuai Liu 5 Wei Zhang 5 Ruoning Wang 1 Sue-Hwa Lin 6 Jian Kuang 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Experimental Therapeutics, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030.
  • 2 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Hengyang Medical School, The University of South China, Hengyang, Hunan 421001, China.
  • 3 Key Laboratory for Biodiversity and Ecological Engineering of Ministry of Education.
  • 4 Department of Systems Biology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030.
  • 5 Key Laboratory of Cell Proliferation and Regulation Biology of Ministry of Education, College of Life Sciences, Beijing Normal University, Beijing 100875, China.
  • 6 Department of Translational Molecular Pathology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030.
Abstract

The term M-phase supershift denotes the phosphorylation-dependent substantial increase in the apparent molecular weight of numerous proteins of varied biological functions during M-phase induction. Although the M-phase supershift of multiple key mitotic regulators has been attributed to the multisite phosphorylation catalyzed by the CDK1/cyclin B/Cks complex, this view is challenged by multiple lines of paradoxical observations. To solve this problem, we reconstituted the M-phase supershift of Xenopus Cdc25C, Myt1, Wee1A, APC3, and Greatwall in Xenopus egg extracts and characterized the supershift-producing phosphorylations. Our results demonstrate that their M-phase supershifts are each due to simultaneous phosphorylation of a considerable portion of S/T/Y residues in a long intrinsically disordered region that is enriched in both S/T residues and S/TP motifs. Although the major mitotic kinases in Xenopus egg extracts, CDK1, MAPK, Plx1, and RSK2, are able to phosphorylate the five mitotic regulators, they are neither sufficient nor required to produce the M-phase supershift. Accordingly, inhibition of the four major mitotic kinase activities in Xenopus oocytes did not inhibit the M-phase supershift in okadaic acid-induced oocyte maturation. These findings indicate that the M-phase supershift is produced by a previously unrecognized category of mitotic phosphorylation that likely plays important roles in M-phase induction.

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