Consensus model of the cell cycle control mechanism in budding yeast. (For a full justification of this diagram, with references to the original literature, see our Web site at http://mpf.biol.vt.edu.) The diagram should be read from bottom left toward top right. (In the diagram, Cln2 stands for Cln1 and 2, Clb5 for Clb5 and 6, and Clb2 for Clb1 and 2; furthermore, the kinase partner of the cyclins, Cdc28, is not shown explicitly. There is an excess of Cdc28 and it combines rapidly with cyclins as soon as they are synthesized.) Newborn daughter cells must grow to a critical size to have enough Cln3 and Bck2 to activate the transcription factors MBF and SBF, which drive synthesis of two classes of cyclins, Cln2 and Clb5. Cln2 is primarily responsible for bud emergence and Clb5 for initiating DNA synthesis. Clb5-dependent kinase activity is not immediately evident because the G1-phase cell is full of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKI; namely, Sic1 and Cdc6). After the CKIs are phosphorylated by Cln2/Cdc28, they are rapidly degraded by SCF, releasing Clb5/Cdc28 to do its job. A fourth class of “mitotic cyclins,” denoted Clb2, are out of the picture in G1 because their transcription factor Mcm1 is inactive, their degradation pathway Cdh1/APC is active, and their stoichiometric inhibitors CKI are abundant. Cln2- and Clb5-dependent kinases remove CKI and inactivate Cdh1, allowing Clb2 to accumulate, after some delay, as it activates its own transcription factor, Mcm1. Clb2/Cdc28 turns off SBF and MBF. (Clb5/Cdc28 is probably the other down-regulator of MBF.) As Clb2/Cdc28 drives the cell into mitosis, it also sets the stage for exit from mitosis by stimulating the synthesis of Cdc20 and by phosphorylating components of the APC (see text for details). Meanwhile, Cdc20/APC is kept inactive by the Mad2-dependent checkpoint signal responsive to unattached chromosomes. When the replicated chromosomes are attached, active Cdc20/APC initiates mitotic exit. First, it degrades Pds1, releasing Esp1, a protease involved in sister chromatid separation. It also degrades Clb5 and partially Clb2, lowering their potency on Cdh1 inactivation. In this model, Cdc20/APC promotes degradation of a phosphatase (PPX) that has been keeping Net1 in its unphosphorylated form, which binds with Cdc14. As the attached chromosomes are properly aligned on the metaphase spindle, Tem1 is activated, which in turn activates Cdc15 (the endpoint of the “MEN” signal-transduction pathway in the model). When Net1 gets phosphorylated by Cdc15, it releases its hold on Cdc14. Cdc14 (a phosphatase) then does battle against the cyclin-dependent kinases: activating Cdh1, stabilizing CKIs, and activating Swi5 (the transcription factor for CKIs). In this manner, Cdc14 returns the cell to G1 phase (no cyclins, abundant CKIs, and active Cdh1).