The NEDD8 system had been demonstrated to cooperate with SCF function in a variety of organisms (
Hochstrasser, 1998). Despite its evolutional conservation, the requirement of the NEDD8 system differs significantly among species. Here, we provide the first evidence that the NEDD8 system is indeed essential for cell cycle progression and development of mammalian embryos. Analysis of
Uba3−/− embryos revealed that the NEDD8 system is essential for both the mitotic and endoreduplicative cell cycle. The latter cycle is known to occur in several tissues in mammals, such as trophoblastic giant cells, hepatocytes, and megakaryocytes (
Varmuza et al., 1988;
Zimmet and Ravid, 2000). The role of the endoreduplication cycle is not well understood but has been proposed to be involved in cell differentiation, cell expansion, metabolic activity, and resistance against DNA-damaging agents (
Nagl, 1976;
MacAuley et al., 1998). Although the mechanisms that allow cells to switch from mitosis to endoreduplication are not well understood, it seems that the endoreduplication cycle uses the same machinery as mitotic cell cycle (
Traas et al., 1998;
Edgar and Orr-Weaver, 2001). Among these regulators, anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C), another Ub ligase complex essential at the mitotic phase, is important for the transition to endoreduplication in
Drosophila (
Sigrist and Lehner, 1997). Although APC/C contains Cul-like subunit APC2, APC2 lacks the consensus domain for NEDD8 modification. Thus, NEDD8 does not seem to regulate APC/C. The essential role of the NEDD8 system in endoreduplication is probably through the modification of Cul-3. Indeed,
Cul-3−/− trophoblastic cells failed to enter the endoreduplication cycle (
Singer et al., 1999). In contrast,
Cul-1−/− trophoblasts actively entered the cycle (
Wang et al., 1999), suggesting that Cul-1 and Cul-3 may act in an opposite manner in the cycle. Enhancement of polyploidization of the cells is also observed in mutants of F-box proteins, pop1 and pop2 in fission yeast (
Kominami and Toda, 1997), and Skp2 in mice (
Nakayama et al., 2000). These facts suggest that certain SCF complexes are involved in the negative regulation of switching from normal cell division cycle to the endoreduplication cycle. In
Uba3−/− embryos, residual cells in the extraembryonic tissue may have been actively committed to the endoreduplication cycle by loss of Cul-1 function. However, those may have failed to enter the next S phase by loss of Cul-3 function. These suggest that Cul-1 and Cul-3 may act in a sequential manner during the cell cycle progression.
We also showed aberrant expression of p57
Kip2 in
Uba3−/− trophoblasts. Consistent with this finding, it is reported that fluctuations of p57
Kip2 level are essential for the entry to S phase of the endoreduplication cycle (
Hattori et al., 2000). However, our results do not exclude the possibility that
Uba3−/− trophoblasts arrest just before the degradation of p57
Kip2 by other cell cycle defects. It is also possible that the presence of dysregulated Wnt/Wg signaling pathway might interfere with the endoreduplication cycle. It was reported recently that
knirps and
knirps-related transcription factors are regulated by the Wnt/Wg signaling pathway, and both inhibit endoreduplication in a spatio-temporal manner (
Fuss et al., 2001). Furthermore, in
Drosophila wing primordia Wnt/Wg induces arrests of the cells at G2 phase by downregulating mitosis-inducing phosphatase, Cdc25 (
Johnston and Edgar, 1998).
Our results also showed that loss of the NEDD8 system led to selective apoptosis of ICM although the exact mechanism could not be identified. Since
Uba3−/− ICM but not trophoblasts can enter the S phase, the apoptotic process may be linked to a DNA replication checkpoint. Based on previous findings and the results of our study, we postulate that loss of the NEDD8 system leads to impaired replication and/or repair of the DNA for the following reasons. First, subunit of global genomic repair protein xeroderma pigmentosa group E (XP-E) interacts with Cul4A (
Shiyanov et al., 1999). XP-E is induced by UV irradiation and binds to UV-damaged DNA (
Tang et al., 2000).
Uba3−/− embryos were not exposed to UV; however, loss of the XP-E activity may fail to replicate DNA faithfully. Secondly, the presence of such DNA damage in
Uba3−/− can be presumed from the report that p53 is highly expressed in
Cul-1−/− embryos because p53 is known to be upregulated upon DNA damage (
Dealy et al., 1999). Thus, the NEDD8 system may be essential for global genomic repair and prevention of high risk carcinogenesis in XP-E patients.
Upon UV irradiation, hamster cell line V79 fails to express UV-damaged DNA-binding activity, due to the low expression of XP-E (
Tang et al., 2000). Ts41 cells, which harbor mutation in
SMC gene, which is highly homologous to APP-BP1 (
Chen et al., 2000), are derived from the cell line (
Handeli and Weintraub, 1992). At nonpermissive temperature, ts41 cells undergo successive DNA replication without intervening mitosis nor apoptosis, suggesting that the XP-E activity may be relevant to the essential role of the NEDD8 system. Strikingly, XP-E gene homologue is present in fission yeast but not in budding yeast, which may also account for the indispensable role of the NEDD8 system in the former.
It has been reported that the SCF complex is exclusively modified by NEDD8 in the centrosomes (
Freed et al., 1999). Furthermore, in the initiation of DNA replication NEDD8-ylated SCF complex is recruited to chromatin through the preinitiation complex (
Laura et al., 2001). These results suggest that SCF complexes are active at those sites, and both centrosome duplication and DNA replication might be impaired in
Uba3−/− mice.
Given the possible involvement of the NEDD8 system in DNA replication and repair and possible dissociation from the apoptotic pathway, it is worth noting that accumulation of cyclin E and β-catenin, which was observed in
Uba3 mutants, has been otherwise implicated in carcinogenesis (
Nielsen et al., 1998;
Spruck et al., 1999;
Polakis, 2000). Moreover, one might expect that loss of the NEDD8 system should also lead to the dysfunction of tumor suppressor, pVHL (von Hippel-Lindau syndrome gene product), which acts as Ub ligase together with Cul-2. Thus, we propose that attenuation of the NEDD8 system may link to carcinogenesis or the unusual characters of cancer cells.
It is likely that NEDD8 modification is essential for all of the Cul family proteins because Uba3-deficient mice appear to have both phenotypes induced by loss of Cul-1 and Cul-3 and thus even severer than each
Cul-1−/− and
Cul-3−/− mouse. Why is NEDD8 modification essential for Cul function? NEDD8-ylation of Cul-1 recruits Ub-E2 to the SCF complex (
Kawakami et al., 2001) and stimulates in vitro ubiquitylation of IκBα and p27
Kip1 by SCF
βTrCP and SCF
Skp2, respectively (
Podust et al., 2000;
Read et al., 2000;
Wu et al., 2000). However, such NEDD8-ylation was not strictly required, at least for in vitro ubiquitylation activity (
Ganoth et al., 2001). Thus, the NEDD8 pathway may have other roles in addition to recruit the E2 enzyme to the SCF complex. Since NEDD8-ylated SCF complexes are spatio temporally regulated during centrosome duplication and DNA replication, the NEDD8 modification may control the regulation in those processes. Alternatively, the NEDD8 system may be regulated in a spatio-temporal manner.
Finally, the NEDD8 system, which seemed to be diverged from the Ub system, is a regulator of the protein degradation machinery. However, unlike Ub NEDD8 targets a highly conserved family of Cul-based E3 enzymes for activation of their ultimate functions. This pathway may coordinate the regulation of cell cycle progression and morphogenetic pathway.