Mechanism of APC/C <sup>CDC20</sup> activation by mitotic phosphorylation

Renping Qiao(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Florian Weissmann(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Masaya Yamaguchi(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Nicholas G. Brown(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Ryan T. VanderLinden(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Richard Imre(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Marc A. Jarvis(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Michael R. Brunner(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Iain F. Davidson(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), Gabriele Litos(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology), David Haselbach(Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry), Karl Mechtler(Institute of Molecular Biotechnology), Holger Stark(Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry), Brenda A. Schulman(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Jan‐Michael Peters(Research Institute of Molecular Pathology)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 25, 2016
Cited by 156Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Chromosome segregation and mitotic exit are initiated by the 1.2-MDa ubiquitin ligase APC/C (anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome) and its coactivator CDC20 (cell division cycle 20). To avoid chromosome missegregation, APC/C(CDC20) activation is tightly controlled. CDC20 only associates with APC/C in mitosis when APC/C has become phosphorylated and is further inhibited by a mitotic checkpoint complex until all chromosomes are bioriented on the spindle. APC/C contains 14 different types of subunits, most of which are phosphorylated in mitosis on multiple sites. However, it is unknown which of these phospho-sites enable APC/C(CDC20) activation and by which mechanism. Here we have identified 68 evolutionarily conserved mitotic phospho-sites on human APC/C bound to CDC20 and have used the biGBac technique to generate 47 APC/C mutants in which either all 68 sites or subsets of them were replaced by nonphosphorylatable or phospho-mimicking residues. The characterization of these complexes in substrate ubiquitination and degradation assays indicates that phosphorylation of an N-terminal loop region in APC1 is sufficient for binding and activation of APC/C by CDC20. Deletion of the N-terminal APC1 loop enables APC/C(CDC20) activation in the absence of mitotic phosphorylation or phospho-mimicking mutations. These results indicate that binding of CDC20 to APC/C is normally prevented by an autoinhibitory loop in APC1 and that its mitotic phosphorylation relieves this inhibition. The predicted location of the N-terminal APC1 loop implies that this loop controls interactions between the N-terminal domain of CDC20 and APC1 and APC8. These results reveal how APC/C phosphorylation enables CDC20 to bind and activate the APC/C in mitosis.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis