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Start. The
CDC28 step was the first step in the cell cycle. From it branched the
two pathways of gene activity leading to the cell surface events, budding
and cytokinesis, and the nuclear events, spindle pole duplication,
separation and elongation, and DNA replication and nuclear division. It was
also the step where growth was integrated with division. CDC28 is not
executed until the cell reaches a specific size but once the CDC28
event was completed the cell could finish the rest of the cycle without
appreciable growth. CDC28 was also the step at which mating was
coordinated with the cell cycle. Both pheromones arrested cells at a
position, interdependent with the CDC28 step so that when the two
cells fused in G1 they were synchronized at the unduplicated spindle pole
body stage. Thus CDC28 was of central importance. We called the event
that was performed by CDC28 "Start" Cyclin Dependent Kinase.
My initial work on temperature-sensitive mutants had been motivated by an
interest in cancer with the hope of learning about the genes that controlled
cell division. The genes we discovered, especially CDC28 seemed like
they might eventually shed some light on why cancer cells divided. When
Steve Reed joined the lab as a postdoc, he decided to focus on the CDC28
gene, setting up selections that uncovered new alleles as well as new
genes that arrested at the same step. In 1980 he and Kim Nasmyth used
recently developed techniques to clone the CDC28 gene (19) and after
Steve set up his own laboratory, he found that it had protein kinase
activity. |