A quantitative atlas of mitotic phosphorylation

N Dephoure, C Zhou, J Villén… - Proceedings of the …, 2008 - National Acad Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008National Acad Sciences
The eukaryotic cell division cycle is characterized by a sequence of orderly and highly
regulated events resulting in the duplication and separation of all cellular material into two
newly formed daughter cells. Protein phosphorylation by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs)
drives this cycle. To gain further insight into how phosphorylation regulates the cell cycle, we
sought to identify proteins whose phosphorylation is cell cycle regulated. Using stable
isotope labeling along with a two-step strategy for phosphopeptide enrichment and high …
The eukaryotic cell division cycle is characterized by a sequence of orderly and highly regulated events resulting in the duplication and separation of all cellular material into two newly formed daughter cells. Protein phosphorylation by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) drives this cycle. To gain further insight into how phosphorylation regulates the cell cycle, we sought to identify proteins whose phosphorylation is cell cycle regulated. Using stable isotope labeling along with a two-step strategy for phosphopeptide enrichment and high mass accuracy mass spectrometry, we examined protein phosphorylation in a human cell line arrested in the G1 and mitotic phases of the cell cycle. We report the identification of >14,000 different phosphorylation events, more than half of which, to our knowledge, have not been described in the literature, along with relative quantitative data for the majority of these sites. We observed >1,000 proteins with increased phosphorylation in mitosis including many known cell cycle regulators. The majority of sites on regulated phosphopeptides lie in [S/T]P motifs, the minimum required sequence for CDKs, suggesting that many of the proteins may be CDK substrates. Analysis of non-proline site-containing phosphopeptides identified two unique motifs that suggest there are at least two undiscovered mitotic kinases.
National Acad Sciences