CDK inhibitors: positive and negative regulators of G1-phase progression

CJ Sherr, JM Roberts - Genes & development, 1999 - genesdev.cshlp.org
CJ Sherr, JM Roberts
Genes & development, 1999genesdev.cshlp.org
Mitogen-dependent progression through the first gap phase (G1) and initiation of DNA
synthesis (S phase) during the mammalian cell division cycle are cooperatively regulated by
several classes of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) whose activities are in turn constrained
by CDK inhibitors (CKIs). CKIs that govern these events have been assigned to one of two
families based on their structures and CDK targets. The first class includes the INK4 proteins
(inhibitors of CDK4), so named for their ability to specifically inhibit the catalytic subunits of …
Mitogen-dependent progression through the first gap phase (G1) and initiation of DNA synthesis (S phase) during the mammalian cell division cycle are cooperatively regulated by several classes of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) whose activities are in turn constrained by CDK inhibitors (CKIs). CKIs that govern these events have been assigned to one of two families based on their structures and CDK targets. The first class includes the INK4 proteins (inhibitors of CDK4), so named for their ability to specifically inhibit the catalytic subunits of CDK4 and CDK6. Four such proteins [p16INK4a (Serrano et al. 1993), p15INK4b (Hannon and Beach 1994), p18INK4c (Guan et al. 1994; Hirai et al. 1995), and p19INK4d (Chan et al. 1995; Hirai et al. 1995)] are composed of multiple ankyrin repeats and bind only to CDK4 and CDK6 but not to other CDKs or to D-type cyclins. The INK4 proteins can be contrasted with more broadly acting inhibitors of the Cip/Kip family whose actions affect the activities of cyclin D-, E-, and A-dependent kinases. The latter class includes p21Cip1 (Gu et al. 1993; Harper et al. 1993; El-Deiry et al. 1993; Xiong et al. 1993a; Dulic et al. 1994; Noda et al. 1994), p27Kip1 (Polyak et al. 1994a, b; Toyoshima and Hunter 1994), and p57Kip2 (Lee et al. 1995; Matsuoka et al. 1995), all of which contain characteristic motifs within their amino-terminal moieties that enable them to bind both to cyclin and CDK subunits (Chen et al. 1995, 1996; Nakanishi et al. 1995; Warbrick et al. 1995; Lin et al. 1996; Russo et al. 1996). Based largely on in vitro experiments and in vivo overexpression studies, CKIs of the Cip/Kip family were initially thought to interfere with the activities of cyclin D-, E-, and A-dependent kinases. More recent work has altered this view and revealed that although the Cip/Kip proteins are potent inhibitors of cyclin E-and A-dependent CDK2, they act as positive regulators of cyclin D-dependent kinases. This challenges previous assumptions about how the G1/S transition of the mammalian cell cycle is governed, helps explain some enigmatic features of cell cycle control that also involve the functions of the retinoblastoma protein (Rb) and the INK4 proteins, and changes our thinking about how either p16INK4a loss or overexpression of cyclin D-dependent kinases contribute to cancer. Here we focus on the biochemical interactions that occur between CKIs and cyclin D-and E-dependent kinases in cultured mammalian cells, emphasizing the manner by which different positive and negative regulators of the cell division cycle cooperate to govern the G1-to-S transition. To gain a more comprehensive understanding of the biology of CDK inhibitors, readers are encouraged to refer to a rapidly emerging but already extensive literature (for review, see Elledge and Harper 1994; Sherr and Roberts 1995; Chellappan et al. 1998; Hengst and Reed 1998a; Kiyokawa and Koff 1998; Nakayama 1998; Ruas and Peters 1998).
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