Reconstitution of Cyclin D1-Associated Kinase Activity Drives Terminally Differentiated Cells into the Cell Cycle

Author:

Latella Lucia1,Sacco Alessandra1,Pajalunga Deborah1,Tiainen Marianne2,Macera Daniela2,D'Angelo Marco2,Felici Angelina3,Sacchi Ada2,Crescenzi Marco1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Comparative Toxicology and Ecotoxicology, Istituto Superiore di Sanitá,1

2. Laboratory of Molecular Oncogenesis, Regina Elena Cancer Institute, 2 and

3. Laboratory of Vascular Pathology, Istituto Dermopatico dell'Immacolata, 3 Rome, Italy

Abstract

ABSTRACT Terminal cell differentiation entails definitive withdrawal from the cell cycle. Although most of the cells of an adult mammal are terminally differentiated, the molecular mechanisms preserving the postmitotic state are insufficiently understood. Terminally differentiated skeletal muscle cells, or myotubes, are a prototypic terminally differentiated system. We previously identified a mid-G 1 block preventing myotubes from progressing beyond this point in the cell cycle. In this work, we set out to define the molecular basis of such a block. It is shown here that overexpression of highly active cyclin E and cdk2 in myotubes induces phosphorylation of pRb but cannot reactivate DNA synthesis, underscoring the tightness of cell cycle control in postmitotic cells. In contrast, forced expression of cyclin D1 and wild-type or dominant-negative cdk4 in myotubes restores physiological levels of cdk4 kinase activity, allowing progression through the cell cycle. Such reactivation occurs in myotubes derived from primary, as well as established, C2C12 myoblasts and is accompanied by impairment of muscle-specific gene expression. Other terminally differentiated systems as diverse as adipocytes and nerve cells are similarly reactivated. Thus, the present results indicate that the suppression of cyclin D1-associated kinase activity is of crucial importance for the maintenance of the postmitotic state in widely divergent terminally differentiated cell types.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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