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Publication : Checkpoint kinase 1 prevents cell cycle exit linked to terminal cell differentiation.

First Author  Ullah Z Year  2011
Journal  Mol Cell Biol Volume  31
Issue  19 Pages  4129-43
PubMed ID  21791608 Mgi Jnum  J:175866
Mgi Id  MGI:5287549 Doi  10.1128/MCB.05723-11
Citation  Ullah Z, et al. (2011) Checkpoint kinase 1 prevents cell cycle exit linked to terminal cell differentiation. Mol Cell Biol 31(19):4129-43
abstractText  Trophoblast stem (TS) cells proliferate in the presence of fibroblast growth factor 4, but in its absence, they differentiate into polyploid trophoblast giant (TG) cells that remain viable but nonproliferative. Differentiation is coincident with expression of the cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK)-specific inhibitors p21 and p57, of which p57 is essential for switching from mitotic cell cycles to endocycles. Here, we show that, in the absence of induced DNA damage, checkpoint kinase-1 (CHK1), an enzyme essential for preventing mitosis in response to DNA damage, functions as a mitogen-dependent protein kinase that prevents premature differentiation of TS cells into TG cells by suppressing expression of p21 and p57, but not p27, the CDK inhibitor that regulates mitotic cell cycles. CHK1 phosphorylates p21 and p57 proteins at specific sites, thereby targeting them for degradation by the 26S proteasome. TG cells lack CHK1, and restoring CHK1 activity in TG cells suppresses expression of p57 and restores mitosis. Thus, CHK1 is part of a 'G2 restriction point' that prevents premature cell cycle exit in cells programmed for terminal differentiation, a role that CHK2 cannot play.
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