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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II mediates inactivation of MPF and CSF upon fertilization of Xenopus eggs.

In vertebrates, unfertilized eggs are arrested at second meiotic metaphase by a cytostatic factor (CSF), an essential component of which is the product of the c-mos proto-oncogene. CSF prevents ubiquitin-dependent degradation of mitotic cyclins and thus inactivation or the M phase-promoting factor (MPF). Fertilization or parthenogenetic activation triggers a transient increase in the cytoplasmic free Ca2+ (reviewed in refs 5 and 6), inactivates both CSF and MPF, and releases eggs from meiotic metaphase arrest. A calmodulin-dependent process is required for cyclin degradation to occur in cell-free extracts prepared from metaphase II-arrested eggs (CSF extracts) when the free Ca2+ concentration is transiently raised in the physiological micromolar range. Here we show that when a constitutively active mutant of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaM KII) is added to a CSF extract, cyclin degradation and Cdc2 kinase inactivation occur even in the absence of Ca2+, and the extract loses its ability to cause metaphase arrest when transferred into embryos. Furthermore, specific inhibitors of CaM KII prevent cyclin degradation after calcium addition. Finally, the direct microinjection of constitutively active CaM KII into unfertilized eggs inactivates Cdc2 kinase and CSF, even in the absence of a Ca2+ transient. The target for Ca(2+)-calmodulin is thus CaM KII.[1]

References

  1. Calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II mediates inactivation of MPF and CSF upon fertilization of Xenopus eggs. Lorca, T., Cruzalegui, F.H., Fesquet, D., Cavadore, J.C., Méry, J., Means, A., Dorée, M. Nature (1993) [Pubmed]
 
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