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Priority Report

Cyclin B and Cyclin A Confer Different Substrate Recognition Properties on CDK2

Pages 1350-1359 | Published online: 07 Jun 2007
 

Abstract

The transitions of the cell cycle are regulated by the cyclin dependent protein kinases(CDKs). The cyclins activate their respective CDKs and confer substrate recognitionproperties. We report the structure of phospho-CDK2/cyclin B and show that cyclin Bconfers M phase-like properties on CDK2, the kinase that is usually associated with S phase.Cyclin B produces an almost identical activated conformation of CDK2 as that produced bycyclin A. There are differences between cyclin A and cyclin B at the recruitment site, whichin cyclin A is used to recruit substrates containing an RXL motif. Because of sequencedifferences this site in cyclin B binds RXL motifs more weakly than in cyclin A. Despitesimilarity in kinase structures, phospho-CDK2/cyclin B phosphorylates substrates, such asnuclear lamin and a model peptide derived from p107, at sequences SPXX that differ fromthe canonical CDK2/cyclin A substrate recognition motif, SPXK. CDK2/cyclin Bphosphorylation at these non-canonical sites is not dependent on the presence of a RXLrecruitment motif. The p107 peptide contained two SP motifs each followed by a noncanonicalsequence of which only one site (Ser640) is phosphorylated by pCDK2/cyclin Awhile two sites are phosphorylated by pCDK2/cyclin B. The second site is too close to theRXL motif to allow the cyclin A recruitment site to be effective, as previous work has shownthat there must be at least 16 residues between the catalytic site serine and the RXL motif.Thus the cyclins A and B in addition to their role in promoting the activatory conformationalswitch in CDK2, also provide differential substrate specificity.