Separase: a universal trigger for sister chromatid disjunction but not chromosome cycle progression
Open Access
- 13 March 2006
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 172 (6), 847-860
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200506119
Abstract
Separase is a protease whose liberation from its inhibitory chaperone Securin triggers sister chromatid disjunction at anaphase onset in yeast by cleaving cohesin's kleisin subunit. We have created conditional knockout alleles of the mouse Separase and Securin genes. Deletion of both copies of Separase but not Securin causes embryonic lethality. Loss of Securin reduces Separase activity because deletion of just one copy of the Separase gene is lethal to embryos lacking Securin. In embryonic fibroblasts, Separase depletion blocks sister chromatid separation but does not prevent other aspects of mitosis, cytokinesis, or chromosome replication. Thus, fibroblasts lacking Separase become highly polyploid. Hepatocytes stimulated to proliferate in vivo by hepatectomy also become unusually large and polyploid in the absence of Separase but are able to regenerate functional livers. Separase depletion in bone marrow causes aplasia and the presumed death of hematopoietic cells other than erythrocytes. Destruction of sister chromatid cohesion by Separase may be a universal feature of mitosis in eukaryotic cells.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF SMC AND KLEISIN COMPLEXESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 2005
- Shugoshin Prevents Dissociation of Cohesin from Centromeres During Mitosis in Vertebrate CellsPLoS Biology, 2005
- Dissociation of Cohesin from Chromosome Arms and Loss of Arm Cohesion during Early Mitosis Depends on Phosphorylation of SA2PLoS Biology, 2005
- Loss of the anaphase-promoting complex in quiescent cells causes unscheduled hepatocyte proliferationGenes & Development, 2004
- Drosophila Separase is required for sister chromatid separation and binds to PIM and THRGenes & Development, 2001
- Anaphase initiation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is controlled by the APC-dependent degradation of the anaphase inhibitor Pds1p.Genes & Development, 1996
- Cut2 proteolysis required for sister-chromatid separation in fission yeastNature, 1996
- Separation of Sister Chromatids in Mitosis Requires the Drosophila pimples Product, a Protein Degraded after the Metaphase/Anaphase TransitionCell, 1996
- Inducible Gene Targeting in MiceScience, 1995
- The fission yeast cut1+ gene regulates spindle pole body duplication and has homology to the budding yeast ESP1 geneCell, 1990