Abstract

The maintenance of the correct cellular information goes beyond the simple transmission of an intact genetic code from one generation to the next. Epigenetic changes, topological cues and correct protein-protein interactions need to be re-established after each cell division to allow the next cell cycle to resume in the correct regulated manner. This process begins with mitotic exit and re-sets all the changes that occurred during mitosis thus restoring a functional G1 nucleus in preparation for the next cell cycle. Mitotic exit is triggered by inactivation of mitotic kinases and the reversal of their phosphorylation activities on many cellular components, from nuclear lamina to transcription factors and chromatin itself. To reverse all these phosphorylations, phosphatases act during mitotic exit in a timely and spatially controlled manner directing the events that lead to a functional G1 nucleus. In this review, we will summarise the recent developments on the control of phosphatases and their known substrates during mitotic exit, and the key steps that control the restoration of chromatin status, nuclear envelope reassembly and nuclear body re-organisation. Although pivotal work has been conducted in this area in yeast, due to differences between the mitotic exit network between yeast and vertebrates, we will mainly concentrate on the vertebrate system.

Highlights

  • The maintenance of the correct cellular information goes beyond the simple transmission of an intact genetic code from one generation to the

  • Almost 200 interacting proteins have been identified in this process, and they function as inhibitors of the catalytic activity, substratespecifying subunits, targeting subunits or substrates

  • What reverts the switch during mitotic exit? PP1/Repo-Man complex has been shown to remove H3T3ph (Vagnarelli et al 2011; Qian et al 2011), and we have identified Repo-Man as the phosphatase that removes H3S10ph as well (Vagnarelli et al 2011)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The maintenance of the correct cellular information goes beyond the simple transmission of an intact genetic code from one generation to the next. Dissociation of chromatin from the nuclear envelope occurs through phosphorylation events on lamins (A/C and B) and laminachromatin-associated proteins. The reformation of the nuclear envelope (the reversal of the process described above) requires the re-association of all the components that were disassembled during mitosis in a sequential and timely fashion, and it is a highly regulated mechanism.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call