Chromatin-association of the Polycomb group protein BMI1 is cell cycle-regulated and correlates with its phosphorylation status

JW Voncken, D Schweizer, L Aagaard… - Journal of cell …, 1999 - journals.biologists.com
JW Voncken, D Schweizer, L Aagaard, L Sattler, MF Jantsch, M Lohuizen
Journal of cell science, 1999journals.biologists.com
The human proto-oncogene Bmi1 is a member of the mammalian Polycomb Group (Pc-G)
genes. The subnuclear distribution of the BMI1 protein was studied in several primary
human and tumor-derived cell lines using immunohistochemical and biochemical methods.
In primary and tumor cells, nuclear BMI1 shows a fine-grain distribution over chromatin,
usually dense in interphase nuclei and significantly weaker along mitotic chromosomes. In
addition, BMI1 preferentially associates with several distinct heterochromatic domains in …
Abstract
The human proto-oncogene Bmi1 is a member of the mammalian Polycomb Group (Pc-G) genes. The subnuclear distribution of the BMI1 protein was studied in several primary human and tumor-derived cell lines using immunohistochemical and biochemical methods. In primary and tumor cells, nuclear BMI1 shows a fine-grain distribution over chromatin, usually dense in interphase nuclei and significantly weaker along mitotic chromosomes. In addition, BMI1 preferentially associates with several distinct heterochromatic domains in tumor cell lines. In both primary and tumor cell lines a marked cell cycle-regulation of Pc-G-chromatin interaction is observed: nuclear BMI1-staining dissipates in late S phase and is re-established early in G1-phase. Chromatin-association of BMI1 inversely correlates with its phosphorylation status in a cell cycle-dependent fashion: at G1/S, hypophosphorylated BMI1 is specifically retained in the chromatin-associated nuclear protein fraction, whereas during G2/M, phosphorylated BMI1 is not chromatin-bound. Our findings indicate a strict cell cycle-controlled regulation of Pc-G complex-chromatin association and provide molecular tools for improving our understanding of Pc-G complex regulation and function in mammalian cells.
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