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Published March 15, 2001 | public
Journal Article

The role of Plo1 kinase in mitotic commitment and septation in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

Abstract

Plo1‐associated casein kinase activity peaked during mitosis before septation. Phosphatase treatment abolished this activity. Mitotic Plo1 activation had a requirement for prior activation of M‐phase promoting factor (MPF), suggesting that Plo1 does not act as a mitotic trigger kinase to initiate MPF activation during mitotic commitment. A link between Plo1 and the septum initiating network (SIN) has been suggested by the inability of plo1Δ cells to septate and the prolific septation following plo1⁺ overexpression. Interphase activation of Spg1, the G protein that modulates SIN activity, induced septation but did not stimulate Plo1‐associated kinase activity. Conversely, SIN inactivation did not affect the mitotic stimulation of Plo1‐associated kinase activity. plo1.ts4 cells formed a misshapen actin ring, but rarely septated at 36°C. Forced activation of Spg1 enabled plo1.ts4 mutant cells, but not cells with defects in the SIN component Sid2, to convert the actin ring to a septum. The ability of plo1⁺ overexpression to induce septation was severely compromised by SIN inactivation. We propose that Plo1 acts before the SIN to control septation.

Additional Information

© 2001 European Molecular Biology Organization. Received: 10 October 2000. Accepted: 26 January 2001. Published: 15 March 2001. We thank Dr Viesturs Simanis for strains, Professor Keith Gull for TAT1, Dr K.Sawin for anti‐GFP antibodies, Dr Viesturs Simanis, Hiroyuki Ohkura and colleagues in Manchester and Dr Ohkura's group for stimulating discussions. This work was supported by Cancer Research Campaign (CRC) Grants SP2219/0102 and SP2219/0601.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023