Cell Cycle-Dependent Regulation of Human DNA Polymerase α-Primase Activity by Phosphorylation
收藏PubMed Central2026-05-16 收录
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https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC83922/
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DNA polymerase α-primase is known to be phosphorylated in human and yeast cells in a cell cycle-dependent manner on the p180 and p68 subunits. Here we show that phosphorylation of purified human DNA polymerase α-primase by purified cyclin A/cdk2 in vitro reduced its ability to initiate simian virus 40 (SV40) DNA replication in vitro, while phosphorylation by cyclin E/cdk2 stimulated its initiation activity. Tryptic phosphopeptide mapping revealed a family of p68 peptides that was modified well by cyclin A/cdk2 and poorly by cyclin E/cdk2. The p180 phosphopeptides were identical with both kinases. By mass spectrometry, the p68 peptide family was identified as residues 141 to 160. Cyclin A/cdk2- and cyclin A/cdc2-modified p68 also displayed a phosphorylation-dependent shift to slower electrophoretic mobility. Mutation of the four putative phosphorylation sites within p68 peptide residues 141 to 160 prevented its phosphorylation by cyclin A/cdk2 and the inhibition of replication activity. Phosphopeptide maps of the p68 subunit of DNA polymerase α-primase from human cells, synchronized and labeled in G(1)/S and in G(2), revealed a cyclin E/cdk2-like pattern in G(1)/S and a cyclin A/cdk2-like pattern in G(2). The slower-electrophoretic-mobility form of p68 was absent in human cells in G(1)/S and appeared as the cells entered G(2)/M. Consistent with this, the ability of DNA polymerase α-primase isolated from synchronized human cells to initiate SV40 replication was maximal in G(1)/S, decreased as the cells completed S phase, and reached a minimum in G(2)/M. These results suggest that the replication activity of DNA polymerase α-primase in human cells is regulated by phosphorylation in a cell cycle-dependent manner.
提供机构:
Taylor & Francis



