Maturation-specific polyadenylation: in vitro activation by p34cdc2 and phosphorylation of a 58-kD CPE-binding protein.

  1. J Paris,
  2. K Swenson,
  3. H Piwnica-Worms, and
  4. J D Richter
  1. Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts 01545.

Abstract

During Xenopus oocyte maturation, poly(A) elongation controls the translational recruitment of specific mRNAs that possess a CPE (cytoplasmic polyadenylation element). To investigate the activation of polyadenylation, we have employed oocyte extracts that are not normally competent for polyadenylation. Addition of cell lysates containing baculovirus-expressed cyclin to these extracts induces the polyadenylation of exogenous B4 RNA. The involvement of p34cdc2 kinase in cyclin-mediated polyadenylation was demonstrated by p13-Sepharose depletion; removal of the kinase from oocyte extracts with this affinity matrix abolishes polyadenylation activation. Reintroduction of cell lysates containing baculovirus-expressed p34cdc2, however, completely restores this activity. To identify factors of the polyadenylation apparatus that might be responsible for the activation, we employed UV cross-linking and identified a 58-kD protein that binds the B4 CPE in oocyte extracts. In polyadenylation-proficient egg extracts, this protein has a slower electrophoretic mobility, which suggests a post-translational modification. A similar size shift of the protein is evident in oocyte extracts supplemented with lysates containing baculovirus-expressed cyclin and p34cdc2. This size shift, which is reversed by treatment with acid phosphatase, coincides temporally with cyclin-induced polyadenylation activation. We propose that p34cdc2 kinase activity leads to the phosphorylation of the 58-kD CPE-binding protein and that this event is crucial for the cytoplasmic polyadenylation that occurs during oocyte maturation.

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