Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 273, Issue 50, 11 December 1998, Pages 33279-33286
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CELL BIOLOGY AND METABOLISM
Calmodulin Is Essential for Cyclin-dependent Kinase 4 (Cdk4) Activity and Nuclear Accumulation of Cyclin D1-Cdk4 during G1*

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Although it is known that calmodulin is involved in G1 progression, the calmodulin-dependent G1 events are not well understood. We have analyzed here the role of calmodulin in the activity, the expression, and the intracellular location of proteins involved in G1 progression. The addition of anti-calmodulin drugs to normal rat kidney cells in early G1 inhibited cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (Cdk4) and Cdk2 activities, as well as retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation. Protein levels of cdk4, cyclin D1, cyclin D2, cyclin E, p21, and p27 were not affected after CaM inhibition, whereas decreases in the amount of cyclin A and Cdc2 were observed. The decrease of Cdk4 activity was due neither to changes in its association to cyclin D1 nor to changes in the amount of p21 or p27 bound to cyclin D1-Cdk4 complexes. Calmodulin inhibition also produced a translocation of nuclear cyclin D1 and Cdk4 to the cytoplasm. This translocation could be responsible for the decreased Cdk4 activity upon calmodulin inhibition. Immunoprecipitation, calmodulin affinity chromatography, and direct binding experiments indicated that calmodulin associates with Cdk4 and cyclin D1 through a calmodulin-binding protein. The facts that Hsp90 interacts with Cdk4 and that its inhibition induced Cdk4 and cyclin D1 translocation to the cytoplasm point to Hsp90 as a good candidate for being the calmodulin-binding protein involved in the nuclear accumulation of Cdk4 and cyclin D1.

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*

This work was supported by Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria Grant 94/1017 and Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnologia Grant SAF95-0041-C02-02.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Recipient of a predoctoral fellowship form the University of Barcelona.

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Present address: Dept. of Molecular Biology, MB3, The Scripps Research Institute, 10555 N. Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, CA 92037.