multipolar spindles
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Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 1441
Author(s):  
En-Ju Chou ◽  
Tang K. Tang

Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by a small brain size with mild to moderate intellectual disability. We previously demonstrated that human microcephaly RTTN played an important role in regulating centriole duplication during interphase, but the role of RTTN in mitosis is not fully understood. Here, we show that RTTN is required for normal mitotic progression and correct spindle position. The depletion of RTTN induces the dispersion of the pericentriolar protein γ-tubulin and multiple mitotic abnormalities, including monopolar, abnormal bipolar, and multipolar spindles. Importantly, the loss of RTTN altered NuMA/p150Glued congression to the spindle poles, perturbed NuMA cortical localization, and reduced the number and the length of astral microtubules. Together, our results provide a new insight into how RTTN functions in mitosis.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva On-Chai Lau ◽  
Devid Damiani ◽  
Georges Chehade ◽  
Nuria Ruiz-Reig ◽  
Rana Saade ◽  
...  

Diaphanous (DIAPH) 3 is a member of the formin proteins that have the capacity to nucleate and elongate actin filaments and therefore, to remodel the cytoskeleton. DIAPH3 is essential for cytokinesis as its dysfunction impairs the contractile ring and produces multinucleated cells. Here, we report that DIAPH3 localizes at the centrosome during mitosis and regulates the assembly and bi-polarity of the mitotic spindle. DIAPH3-deficient cells display disorganized cytoskeleton, and multipolar spindles. DIAPH3-deficiency disrupts the expression and/or stability of several proteins including the kinetochore-associated protein SPAG5. DIAPH3 and SPAG5 have similar expression patterns in the developing brain and overlapping subcellular localization during mitosis. Knockdown of SPAG5 phenocopies the DIAPH3 deficiency, whereas its overexpression rescues the DIAHP3 knockdown phenotype. Conditional inactivation of Diaph3 in mouse cerebral cortex profoundly disrupts neurogenesis depleting cortical progenitors and neurons; and leading to cortical malformation and autistic-like behavior. Our data uncover uncharacterized functions of DIAPH3 and provide evidence that this protein belongs to a molecular toolbox that links microtubule dynamics during mitosis to aneuploidy, cell death, fate determination defects, and cortical malformation.


Biomolecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 424
Author(s):  
Huey-Jiun Ko ◽  
Cheng-Yu Tsai ◽  
Shean-Jaw Chiou ◽  
Yun-Ling Lai ◽  
Chi-Huei Wang ◽  
...  

Mitochondrial fission and fusion cycles are integrated with cell cycle progression. Here we first re-visited how mitochondrial ETC inhibition disturbed mitosis progression, resulting in multipolar spindles formation in HeLa cells. Inhibitors of ETC complex I (rotenone, ROT) and complex III (antimycin A, AA) decreased the phosphorylation of Plk1 T210 and Aurora A T288 in the mitotic phase (M-phase), especially ROT, affecting the dynamic phosphorylation status of fission protein dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) and the Ser637/Ser616 ratio. We then tested whether specific Drp1 inhibitors, Mdivi-1 or Dynasore, affected the dynamic phosphorylation status of Drp1. Similar to the effects of ROT and AA, our results showed that Mdivi-1 but not Dynasore influenced the dynamic phosphorylation status of Ser637 and Ser616 in Drp1, which converged with mitotic kinases (Cdk1, Plk1, Aurora A) and centrosome-associated proteins to significantly accelerate mitotic defects. Moreover, our data also indicated that evoking mito-Drp1-Ser637 by protein kinase A (PKA) rather than Drp1-Ser616 by Cdk1/Cyclin B resulted in mitochondrial fission via the PINK1/Parkin pathway to promote more efficient mitophagy and simultaneously caused multipolar spindles. Collectively, this study is the first to uncover that mito-Drp1-Ser637 by PKA, but not Drp1-Ser616, drives mitophagy to exert multipolar spindles formation during M-phase.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn Marquis ◽  
Cindy L. Fonseca ◽  
Katelyn A. Queen ◽  
Lisa Wood ◽  
Sarah E. Vandal ◽  
...  

AbstractChromosomal instability (CIN) is a hallmark of tumor cells caused by changes in the dynamics and control of microtubules that compromise the mitotic spindle. Thus, CIN cells may respond differently than diploid cells to treatments that target mitotic spindle regulation. Here, we test this idea by inhibiting a subset of kinesin motor proteins involved in mitotic spindle control. KIF18A is required for proliferation of CIN cells derived from triple negative breast cancer or colorectal cancer tumors but is not required in near-diploid cells. Following KIF18A inhibition, CIN tumor cells exhibit mitotic delays, multipolar spindles, and increased cell death. Sensitivity to KIF18A knockdown is strongly correlated with centrosome fragmentation, which requires dynamic microtubules but does not depend on bipolar spindle formation or mitotic arrest. Our results indicate the altered spindle microtubule dynamics characteristic of CIN tumor cells can be exploited to reduce the proliferative capacity of CIN cells.


Mutagenesis ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xihan Guo ◽  
Chunlei Wang ◽  
Weimeng Tian ◽  
Xueqin Dai ◽  
Juan Ni ◽  
...  

Abstract Bulbus of Fritillaria cirrhosa D. Don (BFC), an outstanding antitussive and expectorant herbal drug used in China and many other countries, has potential but less understood genotoxicity. Previously, we have reported that aqueous extract of BFC compromised the spindle assembly checkpoint and cytokinesis in NCM460 cells. Here, we found that one remarkable observation in BFC-treated NCM460 cells was multipolar mitosis, a trait classically compromises the fidelity of chromosome segregation. More detailed investigation revealed that BFC induced spindle multipolarity in metaphases and ana-telophases in a dose- and time-dependent manner, suggesting BFC-induced multipolar spindle conformation was not transient. The frequency of multipolar metaphase correlated well to that of multipolar ana-telophases, indicating that BFC-induced multipolar metaphases often persisted through anaphase. Unexpectedly, BFC blocked the proliferation of binucleated cells, suggesting spindle multipolarity was not downstream of BFC-induced cytokinesis failure. Exposure of BFC to early mitotic cells, rather than S/G2 cells, contributed greatly to spindle multipolarity, indicating BFC might disrupt centrosome integrity rather than induce centrosome overduplication. The immunofluorescence results showed that the centrosomes were severely fragmented by a short-term treatment of BFC and the extent of centrosome fragmentation in early mitotic cells was larger than this in S/G2 cells. Consistently, several genes (e.g., p53, Rb Centrin-2, Plk-4, Plk-1 and Aurora-A) involved in regulating centrosome integrity were significantly deregulated by BFC. Together, our results suggest that BFC causes multipolar spindles primarily by inducing centrosome fragmentation. Coupling these results to our previous observations, we recommend the risk/benefit ratio should be considered in practical use of BFC.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yibo Luo ◽  
Song-Tao Liu

AbstractPreviously we reported that mitochondrial fission regulator 2 (MTFR2, also termed DUFD1 or FAM54A) is co-transcribed with core centromere/kinetochore components, indicating a possible role in mitosis regulation. Here we show that human MTFR2 is a mitochondrial outer membrane protein and participates in DRP1 dependent mitochondrial fission. Multiple MTFR2 variants identified in cancer samples are defective in triggering mitochondrial fission. Inducible MTFR2 depletion caused prolonged mitotic duration and increased chromosome mis-segregation, resulting in multi-nucleated daughter cells. MTFR2 knockout cells accumulated spindle defects, producing either multipolar spindles or short oscillating spindles due to loss of astral microtubules. MTFR2 is phosphorylated during mitosis. The phosphorylation mutant, as well as the cancer variants, failed to correct the prolonged mitotic duration. MTFR2 knockout also rendered cells more resistant to apoptosis caused by taxol treatment. As overexpressing MFN1 or DRP1-K38A also caused spindle defects, we conclude that mitochondrial fragmentation during mitosis ensures spindle integrity and chromosomal stability, and MTFR2 plays a critical role in bridging proper mitochondrial fission and chromosome segregation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dilan Jaunky ◽  
Mathieu Husser ◽  
Kevin Larocque ◽  
Peter Liu ◽  
Sajinth Thampipillai ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTWe characterize the mechanism of action of a new microtubule-targeting compound in cells. Microtubule-targeting drugs are used as successful anti-cancer therapies. We synthesized a family of compounds that share a common scaffold and have several functional groups amenable to modifications. We found that one of the active derivatives, C75, reduces cell viability and prevents microtubule polymerization in vitro. In this study, we explore the phenotypes caused by C75 in cells. It causes mitotic arrest and spindle phenotypes in several cancer cell lines in the nanomolar range. C75 can bind to the Colchicine-pocket on tubulin in vitro, but causes different effects on microtubules in cells. While Colchicine causes a decrease in microtubules and spindle pole collapse without re-growth, similar concentrations of C75 cause a rapid loss of microtubules and spindle pole fragmentation followed by microtubule re-growth to form multipolar spindles. In addition, C75 and Colchicine synergize for reduced viability and spindle phenotypes. Importantly, the phenotypes caused by C75 are similar to those caused by the depletion of ch-TOG, a microtubule polymerase, and tubulin and ch-TOG are displaced and oscillate in C75-treated cells. This suggests that C75 causes microtubule depolymerization in cells either directly or indirectly via inhibiting ch-TOG. This unique effect of C75 on microtubules warrants further exploration of its anti-cancer potential.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva On-Chai Lau ◽  
Devid Damiani ◽  
Yves Jossin ◽  
Georges Chehade ◽  
Olivier Schakman ◽  
...  

AbstractDiaphanous (DIAPH) 3 is a member of the formin proteins that have the capacity to nucleate and elongate actin filaments and therefore, to remodel the cytoskeleton. DIAPH3 is essential for cytokinesis as its dysfunction impairs the contractile ring and produces multinucleated cells. Here, we report that DIAPH3 localizes at the centrosome during mitosis and regulates the assembly and polarity of the mitotic spindle. DIAPH3-deficient cells display disorganized cytoskeleton, multipolar spindles, and supernumerary centrosomes. DIAPH3-deficiency disrupts the expression and/or stability of microtubule-associated proteins SPAG5 and KNSTRN. SPAG5 and DIAPH3 have similar expression patterns in the developing brain and overlapping subcellular localization during mitosis. Knockdown of SPAG5 phenocopies the DIAPH3 deficiency, whereas its overexpression rescues the DIAH3 phenotype. Conditional inactivation of Diaph3 in the cerebral cortex profoundly disrupts neurogenesis depleting cortical progenitors and neurons; and leading to cortical malformation and autistic-like behavior. Our data uncover uncharacterized functions of DIAPH3 and provide evidence that this protein belongs to a molecular toolbox that links microtubule dynamics during mitosis to aneuploidy, cell death, fate determination defects, and cortical malformation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn Marquis ◽  
Cindy L. Fonseca ◽  
Katelyn A. Queen ◽  
Lisa Wood ◽  
Sarah E. Vandal ◽  
...  

SummaryChromosomal instability (CIN), characterized by frequent missegregation of chromosomes during mitosis, is a hallmark of tumor cells caused by changes in the dynamics and control of microtubules that comprise the mitotic spindle1–3. Thus, CIN tumor cells may respond differently than normal diploid cells to treatments that target mitotic spindle regulation. We tested this idea by inhibiting a subset of kinesin motor proteins that control spindle microtubule dynamics and mechanics but are not required for the proliferation of near-diploid cells. Our results indicated that KIF18A was required for proliferation of CIN cells derived from triple negative breast cancer or colorectal cancer tumors but was not required in near-diploid cells. CIN tumor cells exhibited mitotic delays, multipolar spindles due to centrosome fragmentation, and increased cell death following inhibition of KIF18A. Sensitivity to KIF18A knockdown was strongly correlated with centrosome fragmentation, which required dynamic microtubules but did not depend on bipolar spindle formation or mitotic arrest. Our results indicate the altered spindle microtubule dynamics characteristic of CIN tumor cells can be exploited to reduce the proliferative capacity of CIN cells.


Reproduction ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 159 (4) ◽  
pp. 383-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luhan Yang ◽  
Claudia Baumann ◽  
Rabindranth De La Fuente ◽  
Maria M Viveiros

Accurate chromosome segregation relies on correct chromosome-microtubule interactions within a stable bipolar spindle apparatus. Thus, exposure to spindle disrupting compounds can impair meiotic division and genomic stability in oocytes. The endocrine disrupting activity of bisphenols such as bisphenol A (BPA) is well recognized, yet their damaging effects on spindle microtubules (MTs) is poorly understood. Here, we tested the effect(s) of acute exposure to BPA and bisphenol F (BPF) on assembled spindle stability in ovulated oocytes. Brief (4 h) exposure to increasing concentrations (5, 25, and 50 µg/mL) of BPA or BPF disrupted spindle organization in a dose-dependent manner, resulting in significantly shorter spindles with highly unfocused poles and fragmented pericentrin. The chromosomes remained congressed in an abnormally elongated metaphase-like configuration, yet normal end-on chromosome-MT attachments were reduced in BPF-treated oocytes. Live-cell imaging revealed a rapid onset of bisphenol-mediated spindle MT disruption that was reversed upon compound removal. Moreover, MT stability and regrowth were impaired in BPA-exposed oocytes, with few cold-stable MTs and formation of multipolar spindles upon MT regrowth. MT-associated kinesin-14 motor protein (HSET/KIFC1) labeling along the spindle was also lower in BPA-treated oocytes. Conversely, cold stable MTs and HSET labeling persisted after BPF exposure. Notably, inhibition of Aurora Kinase A limited bisphenol-mediated spindle pole widening, revealing a potential interaction. These results demonstrate rapid MT disrupting activity by bisphenols, which is highly detrimental to meiotic spindle stability and organization. Moreover, we identify an important link between these defects and altered distribution of key spindle associated factors as well as Aurora Kinase A activity.


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