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Original Article |
Correspondence to: Beate H. Peters, A-1030 Vienna, Austria. Tel:43-1-797-30-886; Fax: 43-1-798-7153; E-mail: peters@nt.imp.univie.ac.at
| Abstract |
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In eukaryotes, sister chromatids remain connected from the time of their synthesis until they are separated in anaphase. This cohesion depends on a complex of proteins called cohesins. In budding yeast, the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) pathway initiates anaphase by removing cohesins from chromosomes. In vertebrates, cohesins dissociate from chromosomes already in prophase. To study their mitotic regulation we have purified two 14S cohesin complexes from human cells. Both complexes contain SMC1, SMC3, SCC1, and either one of the yeast Scc3p orthologs SA1 and SA2. SA1 is also a subunit of 14S cohesin in Xenopus. These complexes interact with PDS5, a protein whose fungal orthologs have been implicated in chromosome cohesion, condensation, and recombination. The bulk of SA1- and SA2-containing complexes and PDS5 are chromatin-associated until they become soluble from prophase to telophase. Reconstitution of this process in mitotic Xenopus extracts shows that cohesin dissociation does neither depend on cyclin B proteolysis nor on the presence of the APC. Cohesins can also dissociate from chromatin in the absence of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 activity. These results suggest that vertebrate cohesins are regulated by a novel prophase pathway which is distinct from the APC pathway that controls cohesins in yeast.
Key Words: anaphase-promoting complex, cell cycle, chromosome, mitosis, sister chromatid cohesion
| Introduction |
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In eukaryotic cells, duplicated DNA molecules ("sisters") remain physically connected by cohesion from the time of their synthesis in S phase until they are separated in anaphase. Cohesion is a prerequisite for the bipolar attachment of chromatid pairs to the spindle apparatus in mitosis. Sister chromatid cohesion therefore enables the equal segregation of the duplicated genome to forming daughter cells long after DNA replication has occurred.
To initiate anaphase, sister chromatid cohesion has to be dissolved. In presumably all eukaryotes, this event depends on activation of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC),1 a cell cycleregulated ubiquitinprotein ligase that targets proteins for destruction by the 26S proteasome (reviewed by ![]()
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In budding yeast and Xenopus, four or five cohesin proteins form a 14S cohesin complex (![]()
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A number of additional proteins have been shown to have a role in cohesion, some possibly by interacting with 14S cohesin. Experiments in budding yeast indicate that the binding of 14S cohesin to DNA in S phase requires Scc2p and Scc4p (![]()
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An essential role of 14S cohesin subunits in sister chromatid cohesion was first suggested by experiments that showed that budding yeast smc1, smc3, scc1/mcd1, and scc3 mutants are able to separate sister chromatids in the absence of APC activity (![]()
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Several observations indicate that the APCseparase pathway is not only essential for anaphase in yeast but also in other eukaryotes. For example, the separins Cut1p and BIMB are required for anaphase in fission yeast and Aspergillus (![]()
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To address these questions we have further characterized cohesin complexes in Xenopus and humans and begun to study their mitotic regulation. We show that two distinct 14S cohesin complexes exist in human somatic cells, each containing SMC1, SMC3, SCC1, and either one of two Scc3p homologues, called SA1 and SA2. SA1 is also a subunit of 14S cohesin in Xenopus. Both human and Xenopus cohesin complexes bind to PDS5, an ortholog of Aspergillus BIMD, Sordaria Spo76p, and budding yeast Pds5p. The bulk of both SA1- and SA2-containing complexes and PDS5 dissociates from condensing chromatin in late prophase and rebind in telophase. In Xenopus extracts, the mitosis-specific dissociation of cohesin complexes from chromatin does neither depend on cyclin B proteolysis nor on the presence of the APC, suggesting that activation of the APCseparase pathway is not required for this event. Also cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) activity is not essential for the mitotic solubilization of cohesin complexes. We therefore propose that a novel prophase pathway regulates the dissociation of 14S cohesin from chromatin in vertebrates which is distinct from the APCseparase pathway that regulates cohesins in yeast.
| Materials and Methods |
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cDNA Clones
cDNAs were provided by: Dov Zipori (The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel) (human SA1 and SA2; ![]()
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Antibodies
SA1, SA2, and PDS5 peptide antibodies were raised in rabbits. To allow covalent coupling to keyhole limpet hemocyanin a Cys residue was added to the NH2 terminus of all peptides. The following peptides were used: human SA1, C-KRKRGRPGRPPSTNKKPRKS (antibody 444) and C-SSSSKTSS- VRNKKGRPPLHKKR (antibody 445); human SA2, C-SSRGSTVRSKKSKPSTGKRKVV (antibody 446) and C-DLPPSKNRRERTELKPDFFD (antibody 447); human PDS5, C-PRRGRRPKSESQGNATKND; Xenopus PDS5, C-NATGRRPYSRSTGSEISNNVSINSES (antibody 647) and C-GAQEAANAKVPKQDSTAKKTAQRPIDLHR (antibody 648). All rabbit antibodies were affinity purified. Polyclonal mouse antibodies were raised against peptides corresponding to sequences of Xenopus XCAP-E/SMC2 (C-SKTKERRNRMEVDK), XCAP-C/SMC4 (C-AAKGLAEMQSVGCA), Xenopus SMC1 (C-DLTKYPDANPNPND), human SMC3 (C-EMAKDFVEDDTTHG), Xenopus SMC3 (C-EQAKDFVEDDTTHG), and the human PDS5 peptide described above. Additional antibodies were kindly provided by Rolf Jessberger (Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY; anti-SMC1 and SMC3), Christine Michaelis and Irene Waizenegger (Research Institute of Molecular Pathology, Vienna, Austria; anti-SCC1), Laura Lederer and Peter Jackson (Stanford Medical School, Stanford, CA; anti-Xenopus MCM3), Tim Hunt (Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Herts, UK; anti-Xenopus CDK1, cyclin A and B), and Ulrich Laemmli (University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland) and Daniel Bogenhagen (State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY; anti-Xenopus topoisomerase II). Antibodies to human topoisomerase II were from Boehringer, antibodies to human CDK1 from Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc., and antibodies specific for histone H3 phosphorylated on serine 10 were from Upstate Biotechnology. Proteasome antibodies (![]()
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Protein Fractionation, Immunoprecipitation, and Immunoblotting
Crude Xenopus interphase egg extracts were prepared as described (![]()
For immunoprecipitation experiments, affinity-purified antibodies were coupled to Affiprep protein A beads (Bio-Rad Laboratories) in a ratio of 1 mg antibodies to 1 ml beads. The antibody beads were rotated over-end in HeLa or Xenopus extracts for 90 min at 4°C. A ratio of 10 µl beads to 12 mg of protein in the extract was used. Subsequently, the beads were washed four times with immunoprecipitation buffer and bound proteins were eluted with 100 mM glycine-HCl, pH 2.0. Xenopus PDS5 immunoprecipitates were washed with XB (100 µm KCl, 1 µM MgCl2, 0.1 µM CaCl2, 20 µM Hepes, pH 7.7) plus 150 mM KCl and 0.2% NP-40 (![]()
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Immunofluorescense Microscopy
Cultured cells grown on coverslips were fixed for 10 min at room temperature with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS and then incubated for 5 min with 50 mM NH4Cl. Specimens were subsequently washed with PBS, permeabilized for 10 min with PBS plus 0.1% Triton X-100, and incubated for 20 min with antibodies diluted in PBS plus 1% BSA. Secondary antibodies were labeled with FITC or Cy3 (Sigma-Aldrich). Specimens were embedded in Moviol 4-88 (Hoechst Pharmaceuticals) supplemented with 1 µg/ml 4', 6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI).
Cohesin Chromatin Binding and Dissociation Assays
To monitor the dissociation of cohesins from HeLa chromatin in Xenopus egg extracts, 10 µl of crude HeLa lysate corresponding to 100 µg protein was centrifuged for 20 min at 4°C at 13,000 rpm in a microcentrifuge and the supernatant was removed. 35 or 40 µl of interphase Xenopus egg extract was added to the chromatin-enriched pellet, gently mixed, and incubated at room temperature for various periods of time. For kinetic experiments, either larger reaction mixtures were used or multiple reactions were started in parallel and stopped after different incubation periods. To monitor the cell cycle state of the extracts, in vitro translation mixtures containing 35S-labeled cyclin B and CDC25 were each added in a 1:20 dilution. 10 ng/µl recombinant purified sea urchin cyclin B
90 was added to drive extracts into mitosis. In some experiments the extracts were stimulated to enter a mitotic state by cyclin B
90 and stabilized in this state by addition of 1 µM okadaic acid (Calbiochem-Novabiochem">Calbiochem-Novabiochem) dissolved in DMSO before they were incubated with chromatin. The reactions were terminated by dilution of the sample in 160 µl of ice-cold XB buffer and 50 µM sucrose containing 0.25% Triton X-100 (XB2 buffer). To reisolate chromatin the samples were centrifuged in 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tubes through 1 ml density cushions (1 M sucrose in XB2) for 30 min at 4°C and 12,500 rpm (8,000 g) in a HB-6 rotor (Beckman Coulter). In some experiments samples were centrifuged for 30 min at 4 °C and 30,000 rpm in ultra-clear 5 x 41 mm centrifuge tubes filled with 400 µl sucrose buffer, using a SW50.1 rotor (Beckman Coulter). The supernatant was removed and the chromatin pellets were mixed with SDS sample buffer and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting.
To generate Xenopus fractions defective in cyclin B proteolysis, interphase extracts were centrifuged for 1 h at 100,000 g and 4°C. Chromatin was assembled by addition of 3,200 demembranated sperm nuclei (![]()
To inhibit CDK1, 0.8 mM roscovitine (Calbiochem-Novabiochem">Calbiochem-Novabiochem) dissolved in DMSO was added to mitotic extracts and total histone H1 kinase activity was measured as described (![]()
To generate cultured cells devoid of mitotic cyclins human diploid fibroblasts were grown to confluency. Cells were then treated simultaneously with 10 µg/ml cycloheximide and either with 1 µM okadaic acid or DMSO. After 2.5 h cells were harvested and homogenized as described for HeLa cells above. Chromatin fractions were isolated by spinning 40 µl crude lysate through 1 M sucrose cushions.
| Results |
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Identification of the Scc3 Homologues SA1 and SA2 as Subunits of Two Distinct Human 14S Cohesin Complexes
The Scc3p subunit of budding yeast cohesin complexes is homologous to a family of closely related mammalian nuclear proteins called stromal antigens (![]()
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When we separated HeLa cell extracts by anion exchange and gel filtration chromatography, both SA1 and SA2 cofractionated with the known subunits of 14S cohesin, SMC1, SMC3, and SCC1 (data not shown). In density gradient centrifugation experiments, SMC1 and SMC3 sedimented as 9S and 14S cohesin complexes, as previously shown for their Xenopus orthologs (![]()
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The association of SA1 and SA2 with human cohesin subunits was further confirmed by analyzing the protein composition of SA1/SA2 immunoprecipitates by silver staining. Extracts from logarithmically growing HeLa cells were immunoprecipitated with the antibody 447, which recognizes both SA1 and SA2. After elution of bound proteins with either buffers of low pH (Fig 3 A) or the antigenic peptide (Fig 3 C) we observed protein bands corresponding to 160, 140150, 120, and 85 kD, with the 140150-kD band often appearing as a doublet (Fig 3 A). Immunoblot experiments suggested that the 160-kD band contained SMC1, the 140150-kD doublet SMC3 and SA2 in the lower band and SA1 in the upper band, and the 120-kD band contained SCC1 (Fig 3 B). None of these proteins could be precipitated with antibodies to other protein complexes such as the APC (Fig 3 A) or with control immunoglobulins, suggesting that their coprecipitation with SA1 and SA2 is specific.
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When immunopurified cohesin complexes were fractionated by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and analyzed by immunoblotting (Fig 3 B) and silver staining (Fig 3 C) SA1, SA2, SCC1, SMC1, and SMC3 were found to cofractionate with a sedimentation coefficient of 14S, whereas the 85-kD protein (p85) sedimented less far with a sedimentation coefficient of 13S. Further immunoprecipitation experiments suggested that p85 is not a constitutive subunit of 14S cohesin and that its sedimenatation coefficient of 13S is not due to physical association with cohesin subunits. Instead, this protein may form homo-oligomeric complexes itself (Sumara, I., C. Gieffers, and J.-M. Peters, unpublished results). It therefore remains to be determined if the presence of p85 in SA1/SA2 immunoprecipitates reflects a transient association of this protein with 14S cohesin or is due to nonspecific interactions of p85 with the 447 antibodies.
Density gradient centrifugation (Fig 1 C) and immunoprecipitation experiments (Fig 2 A, right) using extracts from Xenopus eggs showed that Xenopus SA1 (see immunoblot in Fig 1 A) is also associated with SCC1, SMC1, and SMC3. Similar data were obtained when extracts from somatic Xenopus cells were analyzed (data not shown). These results suggest that the p155 subunit previously identified in Xenopus 14S cohesin (![]()
Human and Xenopus Orthologs of BIMD/Spo76p/Pds5p Are Associated with 14S Cohesin Complexes
In fungi, BIMD/Spo76p/Pds5p has been implicated in chromosome cohesion and condensation. To test if BIMD/Spo76p/Pds5p fulfills these functions as a subunit of 14S cohesin we raised antibodies against KIAA0648, a partial human amino acid sequence identified by random cDNA sequencing (![]()
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When HeLa cell extracts were immunoprecipitated with PDS5 antibodies all known cohesin subunits, including SA1 and SA2, could be detected in the precipitates by immunoblotting, whereas no cohesins could be detected in control precipitates obtained with preimmune immunoglobulins (Fig 4 A). Conversely, SA1 and SA2 antibodies were able to coprecipitate PDS5 (Fig 4 B). PDS5 antibodies were not able, however, to deplete cohesin subunits from HeLa extracts, although the majority of PDS5 was removed under these conditions (Fig 4 A). Likewise, PDS5 could not be immunodepleted with SA1 and SA2 antibodies (Fig 4 B), suggesting that only small portions of 14S cohesin and PDS5 are bound to each other. Consistent with this possibility, we found in sucrose gradient centrifugation experiments that only small amounts of PDS5 could be detected in 14S cohesin fractions in long immunoblot exposures (data not shown), whereas the majority of PDS5 sedimented at 9S, i.e., less far than 14S cohesin subunits (Fig 1 B). PDS5 did not coimmunoprecipitate with SMC1/3 from the 9S fraction (data not shown).
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Our finding that only small amounts of PDS5 and 14S cohesin are associated with each other could indicate that PDS5 and 14S cohesin are not stably bound to each other, at least in vitro. Alternatively, the coimmunoprecipitation of PDS5 and 14S cohesin could be due to the presence of residual amounts of chromatin in the HeLa cell lysates to which both cohesins and PDS5 are bound. To test these possibilities we first subjected SA2 immunoprecipitates to different salt conditions and analyzed the behavior of PDS5 and cohesin subunits by immunoblotting (Fig 4 C). The amount of PDS5 associated with the SA2-containing 14S cohesin complex decreased strongly when the immunoprecipitates were washed with buffers of increased ionic strength and was almost completely abolished in the presence of 500 mM NaCl, whereas the other cohesin subunits remained bound to each other under these conditions (Fig 4 C). Similar results were obtained for the SA1-cohesin complex (data not shown). PDS5 is therefore easily lost from cohesin immunoprecipitates under stringent washing conditions. In contrast, we found that pretreatment of HeLa extracts with DNAse did not decrease the amounts of PDS5 in cohesin immunoprecipitates (data not shown). We further isolated a partial cDNA for Xenopus PDS5 (Vorlaufer, E., and J.-M. Peters, unpublished results) and raised antibodies against this protein. Similar to its human ortholog, Xenopus PDS5 sedimented corresponding to 89S (Fig 1 C) but specifically coprecipitated with 14S cohesin (Fig 4 D). Because Xenopus egg extracts contain hardly any chromatin due to the unusually low ratio of DNA to ooplasm in these cells, these results suggest that the association of PDS5 with 14S cohesin is not indirectly caused by independent association of these proteins with chromatin. Our data therefore suggest that PDS5 binds directly and specifically to 14S cohesin complexes but that this association is less stable than the one observed between the cohesin subunits SMC1, SMC3, SCC1, and SA1/2.
SA1- and SA2-containing 14S Cohesin Complexes Dissociate from Chromatin in Prophase and Rebind in Telophase
Yeast cohesin dissociates from chromatin at the onset of anaphase, whereas Xenopus 14S cohesin dissociates from chromatin already in prophase. Our observation that human cells contain two distinct 14S cohesin complexes containing either SA1 or SA2 therefore raised the possibility that in vertebrates different cohesin complexes may dissociate from chromatin at different times in mitosis. To test this hypothesis we analyzed the chromatin association of SA1 and SA2 in Xenopus egg extracts in vitro (Fig 5) and in cultured cells by immunofluorescence microscopy in vivo (Fig 6).
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To study the behavior of SA1 and SA2 biochemically, we incubated chromatin from logarithmically growing cultured HeLa cells in Xenopus interphase extracts and then stimulated the extracts to enter a mitotic state by adding nondegradable cyclin B
90 (Fig 5). Entry into mitosis was monitored by analyzing the appearance of a mitosis-specific phosphoepitope on histone H3 and by measuring the phosphorylation-dependent electrophoretic mobility shift of the phosphatase CDC25. The chromatin was reisolated at various time points and analyzed for the presence of cohesins and other chromatin proteins by immunoblotting. We used chromatin from human HeLa cells in these experiments because we were unable to detect a Xenopus homologue of SA2 with our antibodies (Fig 1 A) and could therefore not compare the behavior of SA1 and SA2 in a homologous Xenopus system. When we compared reactions containing either HeLa chromatin or Xenopus sperm nuclei as the chromatin source, both human and Xenopus SA1 dissociated with similar kinetics from the chromatin (data not shown), suggesting that physiologically relevant data can be obtained using human chromatin in this assay.
Both SA1 and SA2 dissociated from HeLa chromatin in a mitosis-specific manner (Fig 5 A and data not shown). SA1 and the majority of the cohesin subunits SMC1, SMC3, and SCC1 dissociated from chromatin shortly after the extract had entered a mitotic state. Binding of the condensin subunits SMC2/XCAP-E and SMC4/XCAP-C to chromatin and degradation of cyclin B occurred around the same time (proteolysis was monitored by adding a radiolabeled degradable version of cyclin B as a tracer). SA2 dissociated slightly earlier than the other cohesin subunits, being undetectable on chromatin already at the time when CDC25 and H3 were fully phosphorylated.
The dissociation of SA1 and SA2 from chromatin in mitosis could also be visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy using human cells, but these experiments did not reveal significant differences in the behavior of SA1 and SA2 (Fig 6A and Fig C, and data not shown). All SA1 and SA2 antibodies, including the ones that reacted specifically with only SA1 or SA2 in immunoblots, yielded a fine-granular nuclear staining in epithelial human colon carcinoma (Caco) cells in interphase with less staining in nucleolar regions. SA1 and SA2 could also be detected in chromatin regions in early prophase, but no or only little staining was found on chromosomes in late prophase, metaphase, and anaphase, although a halo around separating chromatids was often observed in anaphase. In telophase, both SA1 and SA2 colocalization with chromatin was seen as soon as chromosome decondensation could be observed. Similar data were obtained when cultured human HeLa, mouse EpH4, and rat kangaroo Ptk2 cells were analyzed (data not shown). These results suggest that the bulk of both the SA1- and SA2-containing 14S cohesin complexes dissociates from chromatin in prophase and rebinds in telophase, consistent with earlier observations on SMC1 and SMC3 in Xenopus and mouse cells (![]()
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We also analyzed the behavior of PDS5 during the cell cycle by immunofluorescence microscopy (Fig 6 B). PDS5 was nuclear in Caco cells in interphase, colocalized with condensing chromatin in early prophase but was absent from chromosomes in late prophase, metaphase, and anaphase. As with SA1 and SA2 antibodies, a halo could often be seen surrounding anaphase chromosomes. PDS5 staining reappeared on chromosomes in late telophase. When HeLa chromatin was incubated in Xenopus egg extracts, PDS5 dissociated from the chromatin specifically in mitotic extracts (Fig 5 B). These results suggest that PDS5 is removed from chromatin in prophase and rebinds in telophase. PDS5 therefore behaves like 14S cohesin complexes in this respect, further supporting the notion that PDS5 and cohesin subunits interact.
The Dissociation of Vertebrate Cohesin Complexes from Chromatin in Prophase Does Not Depend on the APC
Our biochemical experiments suggested that the dissociation of SA2 from chromatin was initiated before the onset of cyclin B proteolysis, i.e., presumably before the APC is activated, but no clear kinetic difference could be revealed between the dissociation of other cohesin subunits and cyclin B degradation (Fig 5 A). We therefore tested whether APC activation has a role in cohesin dissociation, as it does in yeast. We first used a partially fractionated extract that is able to enter a mitotic state but unable to activate the cyclin B degradation system. This system uses supernatant fractions obtained by high speed centrifugation of Xenopus interphase extract (![]()
90 this fraction was able to induce the condensation of Xenopus sperm chromatin (Fig 7 B) and to phosphorylate CDC25 but it failed to degrade cyclin B (Fig 7 A). Importantly, cohesin subunits dissociated from chromatin under these conditions (Fig 7 A). Similar observations were made in extracts prepared from Xenopus eggs which are arrested in meiosis II by cytostatic factor activity. Although the APC is inhibited in these extracts (![]()
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To further test this hypothesis we immunodepleted the APC from Xenopus interphase extracts using antibodies to its subunit CDC27. Immunoblotting experiments indicated that at least 95% of the APC was removed from the extracts by these antibodies (Fig 8 A). APC could also not be detected in protein extracts from demembranated sperm nuclei that were added as a chromatin source (data not shown), ruling out that the extract was supplemented with APC via this source. Upon mitotic activation, the depleted extracts were still able to phosphorylate CDC25 but could not degrade cyclin B, whereas cyclin B proteolysis occurred in extracts depleted with nonspecific control antibodies (Fig 8 B). Importantly, the dissociation of cohesin subunits from chromatin occurred normally in the APC-depleted extracts (Fig 8 B), demonstrating that the APC pathway is not required for this event.
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Mitotic CDK1 Activity Is Not Essential for the Dissociation of 14S Cohesin Complexes from Chromatin
Because the dissociation of vertebrate cohesins from chromatin occurs during prophase an obvious candidate for regulating this event is CDK1 whose activation is believed to initiate prophase. We were therefore surprised to see that even high doses of the CDK1 inhibitor roscovitine (up to 0.8 mM) were unable to prevent the mitosis-specific solubilization of cohesins in Xenopus egg extracts (Fig 5 B), although no histone H1 kinase activity could be detected in the extracts under these conditions (data not shown). To further test whether CDK1 activity is required for cohesin dissociation we prepared extracts from cycloheximide-treated Xenopus eggs. In these eggs, endogenous B- and A-type cyclins are degraded during exit from meiosis II but new cyclin synthesis is inhibited, resulting in complete inactivation of CDK1. Immunoblot experiments confirmed that neither cyclin A nor cyclin B are detectable in extracts from cycloheximide-treated eggs (Fig 9 A). Cohesins bound normally to interphase chromatin that was assembled by adding Xenopus sperm nuclei to these extracts. By immunoblotting no mitotic cyclins could be detected in sperm nuclei, ruling out that they could serve as a source for CDK1 activity. When the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid was added, the extract entered a pseudo-mitotic state in which a subset of mitotic events such as CDC25 activation and histone H3 phosphorylation still occurred (Fig 9 A). Importantly, cohesins still dissociated from chromatin under these conditions, suggesting that CDK1 activity is not essential for this event. The same result was obtained when HeLa chromatin was used as a chromatin source instead of Xenopus sperm nuclei (data not shown).
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To rule out that these results are specific to the in vitro situation in Xenopus extracts, we performed an analogous experiment in human diploid fibroblasts. The fibroblasts were arrested in a quiescent G0-like state by growth to confluency. Under these conditions APC activity is high (![]()
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| Discussion |
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A substantial body of genetic and biochemical evidence indicates that sister chromatid cohesion depends on a complex of chromosomal proteins, called 14S cohesin. It is less clear if this complex directly connects sisters or enables other proteins to do so, and if the function of 14S cohesin is restricted to sister chromatid cohesion. Despite these uncertainties work in budding yeast suggests that the removal of this complex from chromatin is a prerequisite for anaphase and may in fact be sufficient to allow the separation of sisters. These events depend on activation of the APCseparase pathway which removes cohesin complexes from chromatin by cleaving their Scc1p/Mcd1p subunit (reviewed in ![]()
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Human Cells Contain Several Distinct Cohesin Complexes
Our results show that somatic human and presumably many other vertebrate cells contain at least two distinct 14S cohesin complexes. Both of these are composed of the previously identified subunits SMC1, SMC3, SCC1, and in addition either one of two yeast Scc3p homologues, called SA1 and SA2 (Fig 2, Table 1). Our immunoblot data suggest that SA1 is identical with the p155 subunit observed in Xenopus 14S cohesin (![]()
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Our work suggests that 14S cohesin complexes interact with at least one other protein, the previously unidentified KIAA0648 ortholog of Aspergillus BIMD, Sordaria Spo76p, and budding yeast Pds5p, which we call PDS5. We found that some human PDS5 is bound to both SA1- and SA2-containing 14S cohesin complexes (Fig 4A and Fig B), and a similar association between PDS5 and cohesin was seen in Xenopus (Fig 4 D). Like 14S cohesin, PDS5 dissociates from condensing chromatin in prophase and rebinds in telophase (Fig 5 B and 6 B). This behavior is similar to the one of Spo76p which also leaves chromosomes during prophase (![]()
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How and Why Are Cohesins Removed from Condensing Chromosomes in Prophase?
The observation that vertebrate cohesins dissociate from chromatin long before the APCseparase pathway is believed to initiate sister separation (![]()
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These results raise several important questions: how and why are vertebrate cohesins removed from chromatin already in prophase, and how are sisters held together between prophase and the onset of anaphase in the apparent absence of cohesins? A possible answer to the latter question is provided by the recent observation that a very small amount of SCC1 remains associated with centromeric regions of human chromosomes until metaphase and that a similarly small amount of SCC1 is cleaved in anaphase, at the same time as SCC1 disappears from centromeres (![]()
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Likewise, it will be important to understand why cohesins are removed from chromatin already at this early stage of mitosis. An attractive possibility is that cohesins would otherwise topologically interfere with the process of chromosome condensation. This possibility seems plausible since the binding of vertebrate cohesins to unreplicated chromatin in telophase and G1 suggests that these proteins may have a general function in organizing the structure of interphase chromatin. This hypothesis could also explain why the prophase chromatin dissociation pathway has so far not been detected in yeast where only little mitotic chromosome condensation occurs (![]()
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| Footnotes |
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1 Abbreviations used in this paper: APC, anaphase-promoting complex; CDK1, cyclin-dependent kinase 1; DAPI, 4', 6'-diamidino-2-phenylindole. ![]()
| Acknowledgements |
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We are particularly grateful to E. Kramer for initiating the SA1 and SA2 antibody programs and help with cDNA cloning. We also would like to thank V. Guacci, D. Koshland, M. Mann, K. Nasmyth, S. Panniza, A.V. Podtelejnikov, A. Schleiffer, and A. Toth for communicating unpublished results, D. Bogenhagen, T. Hunt, P. Jackson, R. Jessberger, U. Laemmli, L. Lederer, C. Michaelis, K. Nasmyth, and I. Waizenegger for antibodies, T. Nagase, Y. Takai and D. Zipori for cDNAs, I. Botto, K. Mechtler, and G. Schaffner for technical help, R. Ciosk and members of the Peters and Nasmyth labs for many helpful discussions, and F. Uhlmann for comments on the manuscript.
This research was supported by Boehringer Ingelheim and by grants from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF P13865-BIO) and the Austrian Industrial Research Promotion Fund (FFF 802569) to J.-M. Peters.
Submitted: 28 June 2000
Revised: 8 September 2000
Accepted: 14 September 2000
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