Abstract

BackgroundThe evolutionary conserved cyclin-dependent kinase phosphatase hCdc14A has been shown to play potential roles in the regulation of mitotic exit and in the centrosome duplication cycle. We have recently shown that hCdc14A also can interact with the tumor suppressor p53 both in vitro and in vivo and specifically dephosphorylates the ser315 site of p53 in vitro. In this study we developed antibodies against hCdc14A to investigate the expression and regulation of hCdc14A in human tissues and cancer cells.ResultsWe show that hCdc14A is differentially expressed in human tissues and in 75 cancer cell lines examined. Treatments with the histone deacetylase inhibitor TSA, the demethylating agent 5-aza-2'-deoxycytodine or the proteasome inhibitor MG132 significantly induced expression of hCdc14A in cell lines expressing low or undetectable levels of hCdc14A. There was a strong bias for low expression of hCdc14A in cancer cell lines harboring wild-type p53, suggesting that high Cdc14A expression is not compatible with wild-type p53 expression. We present evidence for a role for hCdc14A in the dephosphorylation of the ser315 site of p53 in vivo and that hCdc14A forms a complex with Cdk1/cyclin B during interphase but not during mitosis.ConclusionOur results that hCdc14A is differentially expressed in human cancer cells and that hCdc14A can interact with both p53 and the Cdk1/cyclin B complex may implicate that dysregulation of hCdc14A expression may play a role in carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • The evolutionary conserved cyclin-dependent kinase phosphatase hCdc14A has been shown to play potential roles in the regulation of mitotic exit and in the centrosome duplication cycle

  • Our results show that hCdc14A is differentially expressed in human cancer cell lines and that the low expression of hCdc14A could be enhanced by blocking DNA methylation, histone deacetylation or proteasome activity

  • We incubated Ab-1 or Ab-2 anti-hCdc14A monoclonal antibodies with two independent INSTA-blot membranes (IMGENEX) containing pre-blotted proteins isolated from different human tissues

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Summary

Introduction

The evolutionary conserved cyclin-dependent kinase phosphatase hCdc14A has been shown to play potential roles in the regulation of mitotic exit and in the centrosome duplication cycle. Cerevisiae is regulated both spatially and temporally by cyclin B-Cdk and the mitotic-exit network (MEN), which releases Cdc from the inhibitory RENT complex in the nucleolus in late (page number not for citation purposes). Flp1/Clp is not an essential gene in S. pombe and is thought to act in the G2 phase of the cell cycle, during exit from mitosis and cytokinesis by regulating the Cdc phosphatase and the wee kinase [10,11,12,13,14,15]

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