Previous studies have indicated that a ∼1,500-kDa complex, designated the cyclosome or anaphase-promoting complex, has a regulated cyclin-ubiquitin ligase activity that targets cyclin B for degradation at the end of mitosis. The cyclosome is inactive in the interphase of the embryonic cell cycle and is converted to the active form in late mitosis in a phosphorylation-dependent process initiated by protein kinase Cdc2-cyclin B. We show here that the active, phosphorylated form of the cyclosome from clam oocytes binds to p13 suc1, a protein known to associate with Cdc2. The following evidence indicates that the binding of the cyclosome to p13 suc1 is not mediated via the Cdc2-cyclin B complex: ( a) activated cyclosome binds to p13 suc1 -Sepharose following its separation from Cdc2-cyclin B by gel filtration chromatography; ( b) cyclosome from interphase extracts, activated by a kinase in which cyclin B has been replaced by an N-terminally truncated derivative fused to glutathione S -transferase, binds well to p13 suc1 -Sepharose but not to glutathione-agarose. An alternative possibility, that the phosphorylated cyclosome binds directly to a phosphate-binding site of p13 suc1, is supported by the observation that the cyclosome is efficiently eluted from p13 suc1 -Sepharose by phosphate-containing compounds. This information was utilized to develop a procedure for the affinity purification of the cyclosome. A factor abundant in the fraction not adsorbed to p13 suc1 -Sepharose stimulates the activity of purified cyclosome. It is suggested that binding of Suc1 may have a role in the regulation of cyclosome activity.
CITATION STYLE
Sudakin, V., Shteinberg, M., Ganoth, D., Hershko, J., & Hershko, A. (1997). Binding of Activated Cyclosome to p13. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(29), 18051–18059. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.29.18051
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