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Cell Growth and Development

p21Waf1/Cip1 Inhibition of Cyclin E/Cdk2 Activity Prevents Endoreduplication after Mitotic Spindle Disruption

, &
Pages 205-215 | Received 11 Mar 1998, Accepted 30 Jul 1998, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

During a normal cell cycle, entry into S phase is dependent on completion of mitosis and subsequent activation of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks) in G1. These events are monitored by checkpoint pathways. Recent studies and data presented herein show that after treatment with microtubule inhibitors (MTIs), cells deficient in the Cdk inhibitor p21Waf1/Cip1 enter S phase with a ≥4N DNA content, a process known as endoreduplication, which results in polyploidy. To determine how p21 prevents MTI-induced endoreduplication, the G1/S and G2/M checkpoint pathways were examined in two isogenic cell systems: HCT116 p21+/+ and p21−/− cells and H1299 cells containing an inducible p21 expression vector (HIp21). Both HCT116 p21−/− cells and noninduced HIp21 cells endoreduplicated after MTI treatment. Analysis of G1-phase Cdk activities demonstrated that the induction of p21 inhibited endoreduplication through direct cyclin E/Cdk2 regulation. The kinetics of p21 inhibition of cyclin E/Cdk2 activity and binding to proliferating-cell nuclear antigen in HCT116 p21+/+ cells paralleled the onset of endoreduplication in HCT116 p21−/− cells. In contrast, loss of p21 did not lead to deregulated cyclin D1-dependent kinase activities, nor did p21 directly regulate cyclin B1/Cdc2 activity. Furthermore, we show that MTI-induced endoreduplication in p53-deficient HIp21 cells was due to levels of p21 protein below a threshold required for negative regulation of cyclin E/Cdk2, since ectopic expression of p21 restored cyclin E/Cdk2 regulation and prevented endoreduplication. Based on these findings, we propose that p21 plays an integral role in the checkpoint pathways that restrain normal cells from entering S phase after aberrant mitotic exit due to defects in microtubule dynamics.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health institutional training grant GM07347 (to Z.A.S.), American Cancer Society Award 96-46 (to S.D.L.), National Institutes of Health grants CA70856 (to J.A.P.) and ES00267 and CA68485 (Core Services), and a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Grant (to J.A.P.).

We thank Liying Yang for expert technical assistance in generation of the HIp21 cell line and Scott Hiebert, Hal Moses, and members of the Pietenpol laboratory for critical reading of the manuscript.

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