Cyclin D1 is a nuclear protein required for cell cycle progression in G1.

Véronique Baldin(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Jiří Lukáš(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), María Jesús Marcote(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Michele Pagano(490 BioTech (United States)), Giulio Draetta(European Molecular Biology Laboratory)
Genes & Development
May 1, 1993
Cited by 1,632Open Access
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Abstract

A cascade of events is triggered upon the addition of growth factor to quiescent mammalian cells, which ultimately restarts proliferation by inducing the transition from G0/G1 to S-phase. We have studied cyclin D1, a putative G1 cyclin, in normal diploid human fibroblasts. Cyclin D1 accumulated and reached a maximum level before S-phase upon the addition of serum to quiescent cells. The protein was localized to the nucleus, and it disappeared from the nucleus as cells proceeded into S-phase. Microinjection of anti-cyclin D1 antibodies or antisense plasmid prevented cells from entering S-phase, and the kinetics of inhibition showed that cyclin D1 is required at a point in the cell cycle earlier than cyclin A. These results demonstrate that cyclin D1 is a critical target of proliferative signals in G1.


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