Regulated interaction of ID2 with the anaphase-promoting complex links progression through mitosis with reactivation of cell-type-specific transcription

  • Sang Bae Lee*
  • , Luciano Garofano
  • , Aram Ko
  • , Fulvio D’Angelo
  • , Brulinda Frangaj
  • , Danika Sommer
  • , Qiwen Gan
  • , Kyeong Jin Kim
  • , Timothy Cardozo
  • , Antonio Iavarone*
  • , Anna Lasorella*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articlepeer-review

Abstract

Tissue-specific transcriptional activity is silenced in mitotic cells but it remains unclear whether the mitotic regulatory machinery interacts with tissue-specific transcriptional programs. We show that such cross-talk involves the controlled interaction between core subunits of the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) and the ID2 substrate. The N-terminus of ID2 is independently and structurally compatible with a pocket composed of core APC/C subunits that may optimally orient ID2 onto the APCCDH1 complex. Phosphorylation of serine-5 by CDK1 prevented the association of ID2 with core APC, impaired ubiquitylation and stabilized ID2 protein at the mitosis-G1 transition leading to inhibition of basic Helix-Loop-Helix (bHLH)-mediated transcription. The serine-5 phospho-mimetic mutant of ID2 that inefficiently bound core APC remained stable during mitosis, delayed exit from mitosis and reloading of bHLH transcription factors on chromatin. It also locked cells into a “mitotic stem cell” transcriptional state resembling the pluripotent program of embryonic stem cells. The substrates of APCCDH1 SKP2 and Cyclin B1 share with ID2 the phosphorylation-dependent, D-box-independent interaction with core APC. These results reveal a new layer of control of the mechanism by which substrates are recognized by APC.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2089
JournalNature Communications
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022.12

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