late telophase
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takanobu Moriuchi ◽  
Fumiko Hirose

Dephosphorylation of lamin A, which triggers nuclear lamina reconstitution, is crucial for the completion of mitosis. However, the specific phosphatase and regulatory mechanism that allow timely lamin A dephosphorylation remain unclear. Here, we report that RepoMan, a regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase 1γ (PP1γ) is transiently modified with SUMO-2 at K762 during late telophase. SUMOylation of RepoMan markedly enhanced its binding affinity with lamin A. Moreover, the SUMOylated RepoMan/PP1γ contributes to lamin A recruitment to telophase chromosomes and dephosphorylation of the mitotic lamin A phosphorylation. Expression of a SUMO-2 mutant defective in interaction with SUMO interacting motif (SIM) resulted in failure of the lamin A and RepoMan association, along with abrogation of lamin A dephosphorylation and subsequent nuclear lamina formation. These findings strongly suggested that RepoMan/PP1γ recruits lamin A through SUMO-SIM interaction. Thus, transient SUMOylation of RepoMan plays an important role in the spatio-temporal regulation of lamin A dephosphorylation and the subsequent nuclear lamina formation at the end of mitosis.


Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 297
Author(s):  
Soňa Legartová ◽  
Paolo Fagherazzi ◽  
Lenka Stixová ◽  
Aleš Kovařík ◽  
Ivan Raška ◽  
...  

The essential components of splicing are the splicing factors accumulated in nuclear speckles; thus, we studied how DNA damaging agents and A-type lamin depletion affect the properties of these regions, positive on the SC-35 protein. We observed that inhibitor of PARP (poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase), and more pronouncedly inhibitors of RNA polymerases, caused DNA damage and increased the SC-35 protein level. Interestingly, nuclear blebs, induced by PARP inhibitor and observed in A-type lamin-depleted or senescent cells, were positive on both the SC-35 protein and another component of the spliceosome, SRRM2. In the interphase cell nuclei, SC-35 interacted with the phosphorylated form of RNAP II, which was A-type lamin-dependent. In mitotic cells, especially in telophase, the SC-35 protein formed a well-visible ring in the cytoplasmic fraction and colocalized with β-catenin, associated with the plasma membrane. The antibody against the SRRM2 protein showed that nuclear speckles are already established in the cytoplasm of the late telophase and at the stage of early cytokinesis. In addition, we observed the occurrence of splicing factors in the nuclear blebs and micronuclei, which are also sites of both transcription and splicing. This conclusion supports the fact that splicing proceeds transcriptionally. According to our data, this process is A-type lamin-dependent. Lamin depletion also reduces the interaction between SC-35 and β-catenin in mitotic cells.


Cells ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 1834
Author(s):  
Marianne Grafe ◽  
Phillip Hofmann ◽  
Petros Batsios ◽  
Irene Meyer ◽  
Ralph Gräf

We expressed Dictyostelium lamin (NE81) lacking both a functional nuclear localization signal and a CAAX-box for C-terminal lipid modification. This lamin mutant assembled into supramolecular, three-dimensional clusters in the cytosol that disassembled at the onset of mitosis and re-assembled in late telophase, thus mimicking the behavior of the endogenous protein. As disassembly is regulated by CDK1-mediated phosphorylation at serine 122, we generated a phosphomimetic S122E mutant called GFP-NE81-S122E-ΔNLSΔCLIM. Surprisingly, during imaging, the fusion protein assembled into cytosolic clusters, similar to the protein lacking the phosphomimetic mutation. Clusters disassembled again in the darkness. Assembly could be induced with blue but not green or near ultraviolet light, and it was independent of the fusion tag. Assembly similarly occurred upon cell flattening. Earlier reports and own observations suggested that both blue light and cell flattening could result in a decrease of intracellular pH. Indeed, keeping the cells at low pH also reversibly induced cluster formation. Our results indicate that lamin assembly can be induced by various stress factors and that these are transduced via intracellular acidification. Although these effects have been shown in a phosphomimetic CDK1 mutant of the Dictyostelium lamin, they are likely relevant also for wild-type lamin.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Abramo ◽  
Anne-Laure Valton ◽  
Sergey V. Venev ◽  
Hakan Ozadam ◽  
A. Nicole Fox ◽  
...  

SummaryChromosome folding is extensively modulated as cells progress through the cell cycle. During mitosis, condensin complexes fold chromosomes in helically arranged nested loop arrays. In interphase, the cohesin complex generates loops that can be stalled at CTCF sites leading to positioned loops and topologically associating domains (TADs), while a separate process of compartmentalization drives the spatial segregation of active and inactive chromatin domains. We used synchronized cell cultures to determine how the mitotic chromosome conformation is transformed into the interphase state. Using Hi-C, chromatin binding assays, and immunofluorescence we show that by telophase condensin-mediated loops are lost and a transient folding intermediate devoid of most loops forms. By late telophase, cohesin-mediated CTCF-CTCF loops and positions of TADs start to emerge rapidly. Compartment boundaries are also established in telophase, but long-range compartmentalization is a slow process and proceeds for several hours after cells enter G1. Our results reveal the kinetics and order of events by which the interphase chromosome state is formed and identify telophase as a critical transition between condensin and cohesin driven chromosome folding.


Open Biology ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
pp. 160103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Romina Burla ◽  
Mariateresa Carcuro ◽  
Mattia La Torre ◽  
Federica Fratini ◽  
Marco Crescenzi ◽  
...  

AKTIP is a shelterin-interacting protein required for replication of telomeric DNA. Here, we show that AKTIP biochemically interacts with A- and B-type lamins and affects lamin A, but not lamin C or B, expression. In interphase cells, AKTIP localizes at the nuclear rim and in discrete regions of the nucleoplasm just like lamins. Double immunostaining revealed that AKTIP partially co-localizes with lamin B1 and lamin A/C in interphase cells, and that proper AKTIP localization requires functional lamin A. In mitotic cells, AKTIP is enriched at the spindle poles and at the midbody of late telophase cells similar to lamin B1. AKTIP-depleted cells show senescence-associated markers and recapitulate several aspects of the progeroid phenotype. Collectively, our results indicate that AKTIP is a new player in lamin-related processes, including those that govern nuclear architecture, telomere homeostasis and cellular senescence.


2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 437-441 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bohdan Rodkiewicz ◽  
Krystyna Kudlicka ◽  
Halina Stobiecka

During the meiotic prophase I in <em>Tradescantia</em> and <em>Impatiens</em> microsporocyte becomes temporarily asymmetric, with excentrically situated nucleus and all amyloplasts gathered in a dense group close to the nuclear envelope.. Further microsporogenesis in <em>Impatiens</em> differs in amyloplast distribution from that in <em>Tradescantia</em> and <em>Larix</em>. In Impatiens at the telophase I amyloplasts are assembled in a dense equatorial plate. At the late telophase II this plate reshapes and separates a meiocyte into four areas (a tetrad) until cell plates are formed in simultaneous cytokinesis. Similar assemblages of amyloplasts do not occur in telophase meiocytes of <em>Tradescantia</em> and <em>Larix</em> where cytokinesis is of a successive type.


2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (23) ◽  
pp. 3663-3674 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hélia Neto ◽  
Alexandra Kaupisch ◽  
Louise L. Collins ◽  
Gwyn W. Gould

Recently it was shown that both recycling endosome and endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) components are required for cytokinesis, in which they are believed to act in a sequential manner to bring about secondary ingression and abscission, respectively. However, it is not clear how either of these complexes is targeted to the midbody and whether their delivery is coordinated. The trafficking of membrane vesicles between different intracellular organelles involves the formation of soluble N-ethylmalei­mide–sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes. Although membrane traffic is known to play an important role in cytokinesis, the contribution and identity of intracellular SNAREs to cytokinesis remain unclear. Here we demonstrate that syntaxin 16 is a key regulator of cytokinesis, as it is required for recruitment of both recycling endosome–associated Exocyst and ESCRT machinery during late telophase, and therefore that these two distinct facets of cytokinesis are inextricably linked.


2009 ◽  
Vol 20 (20) ◽  
pp. 4348-4361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosemarie Blau-Wasser ◽  
Ursula Euteneuer ◽  
Huajiang Xiong ◽  
Berthold Gassen ◽  
Michael Schleicher ◽  
...  

The Dictyostelium centrosome is a nucleus associated body consisting of a box-shaped core surrounded by the corona, an amorphous matrix functionally equivalent to the pericentriolar material of animal centrosomes which is responsible for the nucleation and anchoring of microtubules. Here we describe CP250 a component of the corona, an acidic coiled coil protein that is present at the centrosome throughout interphase while disappearing during prophase and reappearing at the end of late telophase. Amino acids 756-1148 of the 2110 amino acids are sufficient for centrosomal targeting and cell cycle–dependent centrosome association. Mutant cells lacking CP250 are smaller in size, growth on bacteria is delayed, chemotaxis is altered, and development is affected, which, in general, are defects observed in cytoskeletal mutants. Furthermore, loss of CP250 affected the nuclear envelope and led to reduced amounts and altered distribution of Sun-1, a conserved nuclear envelope protein that connects the centrosome to chromatin.


2009 ◽  
Vol 28 (11) ◽  
pp. 1562-1575 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Varela ◽  
Kenji Shimada ◽  
Thierry Laroche ◽  
Didier Leroy ◽  
Susan M Gasser
Keyword(s):  

2006 ◽  
Vol 174 (6) ◽  
pp. 779-790 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sujata Hajra ◽  
Santanu Kumar Ghosh ◽  
Makkuni Jayaram

The centromere protein A homologue Cse4p is required for kinetochore assembly and faithful chromosome segregation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. It has been regarded as the exquisite hallmark of centromeric chromatin. We demonstrate that Cse4 resides at the partitioning locus STB of the 2-μm plasmid. Cse4p-STB association is absolutely dependent on the plasmid partitioning proteins Rep1p and Rep2p and the integrity of the mitotic spindle. The kinetochore mutation ndc10-1 excludes Cse4p from centromeres without dislodging it from STB. Cse4p-STB association lasts from G1/S through late telophase during the cell cycle. The release of Cse4p from STB chromatin is likely mediated through spindle disassembly. A lack of functional Cse4p disrupts the remodeling of STB chromatin by the RSC2 complex, negates Rep2p binding and cohesin assembly at STB, and causes plasmid missegregation. Poaching of a specific histone variant by the plasmid to mark its partitioning locus with a centromere tag reveals yet another one of the molecular trickeries it performs for achieving chromosome- like fidelity in segregation.


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