chromosome alignment
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron R. Tipton ◽  
Gary J. Gorbsky

The microtubules of the mitotic spindle mediate chromosome alignment to the metaphase plate, then sister chromatid segregation to the spindle poles in anaphase. Previous analyses of spindle microtubule kinetics utilizing fluorescence dissipation after photoactivation described two main populations, a slow and a fast turnover population, and these were ascribed to reflect kinetochore versus non-kinetochore microtubules, respectively. Here, we test this categorization by disrupting kinetochores through depletion of the Ndc80 complex. In the absence of functional kinetochores, microtubule dynamics still exhibit slow and fast turnover populations, though the proportion of each population and the timings of turnover are altered. Importantly, the data obtained following Hec1/Ndc80 depletion suggests other sub-populations, in addition to kinetochore microtubules, contribute to the slow turnover population. Further manipulation of spindle microtubules revealed a complex landscape. For example, while Aurora B kinase functions to destabilize kinetochore bound microtubules it may also stabilize certain slow turnover, non-kinetochore microtubules. Dissection of the dynamics of microtubule populations provides a greater understanding of mitotic spindle kinetics and insight into their roles in facilitating chromosome attachment, movement, and segregation during mitosis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilma Amalina ◽  
Ailsa Bennett ◽  
Helen Whalley ◽  
David Perera ◽  
Joanne C. McGrail ◽  
...  

Bub1 is a serine/threonine kinase proposed to function centrally in mitotic chromosome alignment and the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC); however, its role remains controversial. Although it is well documented that Bub1 phosphorylation of Histone 2A at T120 (H2ApT120) recruits Sgo1/2 to kinetochores, the requirement of its kinase activity for chromosome alignment and the SAC is debated. As small-molecule inhibitors are invaluable tools for investigating kinase function, we evaluated two potential Bub1 inhibitors: 2OH-BNPPI and BAY-320. After confirming that both inhibit Bub1 in vitro , we developed a cell-based assay for Bub1 inhibition. We overexpressed a fusion of Histone 2B and Bub1 kinase region, tethering it in proximity to H2A to generate a strong ectopic H2ApT120 signal along chromosome arms. Ectopic signal was effectively inhibited by BAY-320, but not 2OH-BNPP1 at concentrations tested. In addition, only BAY-320 was able to inhibit endogenous Bub1-mediated Sgo1 localization. Preliminary experiments using BAY-320 suggest a minor role for Bub1 kinase activity in chromosome alignment and the SAC; however, BAY-320 may exhibit off-target effects at the concentration required. Thus, 2OH-BNPP1 may not be an effective Bub1 inhibitor in cellulo , and while BAY-320 can inhibit Bub1 in cells, off-target effects highlight the need for improved Bub1 inhibitors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Anton Ivanov Kolarov ◽  
Irina Valcheva Chakarova ◽  
Valentina Prodanova Hadzhinesheva ◽  
Venera Pantaleeva Nikolova ◽  
Stefka Metodieva Delimitreva ◽  
...  

Known as a degenerative joint disorder of advanced age affecting predominantly females, osteoarthritis can develop in younger and actively working people because of activities involving loading and injuries of joints. Collagenase-induced osteoarthritis (CIOA) in a mouse model allowed us to investigate for the first time its effects on key cytoskeletal structures (meiotic spindles and actin distribution) of ovulated mouse oocytes. Their meiotic spindles, actin caps, and chromatin were analyzed by immunofluorescence. A total of 193 oocytes from mice with CIOA and 209 from control animals were obtained, almost all in metaphase I (M I) or metaphase II (MII). The maturation rate was lower in CIOA (26.42% M II) than in controls (55.50% M II). CIOA oocytes had significantly larger spindles (average 37 μm versus 25 μm in controls, p < 0.001 ), with a proportion of large spindles more than 64% in CIOA versus up to 15% in controls ( p < 0.001 ). Meiotic spindles were wider in 68.35% M I and 54.90% M II of CIOA oocytes (mean 18.04 μm M I and 17.34 μm M II versus controls: 11.64 μm M I and 12.64 μm M II), and their poles were approximately two times broader (mean 6.9 μm) in CIOA than in controls (3.6 μm). CIOA oocytes often contained disoriented microtubules. Actin cap was visible in over 91% of controls and less than 20% of CIOA oocytes. Many CIOA oocytes without an actin cap had a nonpolarized thick peripheral actin ring (61.87% of M I and 52.94% of M II). Chromosome alignment was normal in more than 82% in both groups. In conclusion, CIOA affects the cytoskeleton of ovulated mouse oocytes—meiotic spindles are longer and wider, their poles are broader and with disorganized fibers, and the actin cap is replaced by a broad nonpolarized ring. Nevertheless, meiotic spindles were successfully formed in CIOA oocytes and, even when abnormal, allowed correct alignment of chromosomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ho-Soo Lee ◽  
Sunwoo Min ◽  
Ye-Eun Jung ◽  
Sunyoung Chae ◽  
June Heo ◽  
...  

AbstractThe chromatin remodeler RSF1 enriched at mitotic centromeres is essential for proper chromosome alignment and segregation and underlying mechanisms remain to be disclosed. We here show that PLK1 recruitment by RSF1 at centromeres creates an activating phosphorylation on Thr236 in the activation loop of Aurora B and this is indispensable for the Aurora B activation. In structural modeling the phosphorylated Thr236 enhances the base catalysis by Asp200 nearby, facilitating the Thr232 autophosphorylation. Accordingly, RSF1-PLK1 is central for Aurora B-mediated microtubule destabilization in error correction. However, under full microtubule-kinetochore attachment RSF1-PLK1 positions at kinetochores, halts activating Aurora B and phosphorylates BubR1, regardless of tension. Spatial movement of RSF1-PLK1 to kinetochores is triggered by Aurora B-mediated phosphorylation of centromeric histone H3 on Ser28. We propose a regulatory RSF1-PLK1 axis that spatiotemporally controls on/off switch on Aurora B. This feedback circuit among RSF1-PLK1-Aurora B may coordinate dynamic microtubule-kinetochore attachment in early mitosis when full tension yet to be generated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole J Camlin ◽  
Ilakkiya Venkatachalam ◽  
Janice P Evans

Tightly controlled fluctuations in kinase and phosphatase activity play important roles in regulating M-Phase transitions (e.g., G2/M). Protein Phosphatase 1 (PP1) is one of these phosphatases, with oscillations in activity driving mitotic M-Phase entry, progression, and exit, with evidence from a variety of experimental systems pointing to roles in meiosis as well. Here we report that PP1 is important for M-Phase transitions through mouse oocyte meiosis. Employing a unique small-molecule approach to inhibit or activate PP1 at distinct phases of mouse oocyte meiosis, we found that aberrations in normal cyclical PP1 activity leads to meiotic abnormalities. We report here that temporal control of PP1 activity is essential for G2/M transition, metaphase I/anaphase I transition, and the formation of a normal metaphase II oocyte. Our data also reveal that inappropriate activation of PP1 is more deleterious at G2/M transition than at prometaphase I-to-metaphase I, and that an active pool of PP1 during prometaphase I is vital for metaphase I/anaphase I transition and metaphase II chromosome alignment. Taken together, these results establish that loss of oscillations in PP1 activity causes a range of severe meiotic defects, pointing to essential roles for PP1 in oocytes and female fertility, and more broadly, M-Phase regulation.


Author(s):  
Manjuan Zhang ◽  
Fengrui Yang ◽  
Wenwen Wang ◽  
Xiwei Wang ◽  
Dongmei Wang ◽  
...  

Abstract Chromosome segregation in mitosis is orchestrated by the dynamic interactions between the kinetochore and spindle microtubules. Our recent studies show that mitotic motor CENP-E cooperates with SKAP and forms a link between kinetochore core MIS13 complex and spindle microtubule plus-ends to achieve accurate chromosome alignment in mitosis. However, it remains elusive how SKAP regulates kinetochore attachment from lateral association to end-on attachment during metaphase alignment. Here, we identify a novel interaction between Aurora B and SKAP that orchestrates accurate interaction between the kinetochore and dynamic spindle microtubules. Interestingly, SKAP spontaneously phase-separates in vitro via weak, multivalent interactions into droplets with fast internal dynamics. SKAP and Aurora B form heterogeneous coacervates in vitro, which recapitulate the dynamics and behavior of SKAP comets in vivo. Importantly, SKAP interaction with Aurora B via phase separation is essential for accurate chromosome segregation and alignment. Based on those findings, we reason that SKAP–Aurora B interaction via phase separation constitutes a dynamic pool of Aurora B activity during the lateral to end-on conversion of kinetochore–microtubule attachments to achieve faithful cell division.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lumin Sui ◽  
Ke Yan ◽  
Huiting Zhang ◽  
Junyu Nie ◽  
Xiaogan Yang ◽  
...  

Accumulating evidence has demonstrated that benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) exposure adversely affects female reproduction, especially oocyte meiotic maturation and subsequent embryo development. Although we previously found that mogroside V (MV), a major bioactive component of S. grosvenorii, can protect oocytes from quality deterioration caused by certain stresses, whether MV can alleviate BaP exposure-mediated oocyte meiotic defects remains unknown. In this study, female mice were exposed to BaP and treated concomitantly with MV by gavage. We found that BaP exposure reduced the oocyte maturation rate and blastocyst formation rate, which was associated with increased abnormalities in spindle formation and chromosome alignment, reduced acetylated tubulin levels, damaged actin polymerization and reduced Juno levels, indicating that BaP exposure results in oocyte nucleic and cytoplasmic damage. Interestingly, MV treatment significantly alleviated all the BaP exposure-mediated defects mentioned above, indicating that MV can protect oocytes from BaP exposure-mediated nucleic and cytoplasmic damage. Additionally, BaP exposure increased intracellular ROS levels, meanwhile induced DNA damage and early apoptosis in oocytes, but MV treatment ameliorated these defective parameters, therefore it is possible that MV restored BaP-mediated oocyte defects by reducing oxidative stress. In summary, our findings demonstrate that MV might alleviate oocyte meiotic defects and quality deterioration in BaP-exposed mice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (34) ◽  
pp. e2108145118
Author(s):  
Anja Bufe ◽  
Ana García del Arco ◽  
Magdalena Hennecke ◽  
Anchel de Jaime-Soguero ◽  
Matthias Ostermaier ◽  
...  

Canonical Wnt signaling plays critical roles in development and tissue renewal by regulating β-catenin target genes. Recent evidence showed that β-catenin–independent Wnt signaling is also required for faithful execution of mitosis. However, the targets and specific functions of mitotic Wnt signaling still remain uncharacterized. Using phosphoproteomics, we identified that Wnt signaling regulates the microtubule depolymerase KIF2A during mitosis. We found that Dishevelled recruits KIF2A via its N-terminal and motor domains, which is further promoted upon LRP6 signalosome formation during cell division. We show that Wnt signaling modulates KIF2A interaction with PLK1, which is critical for KIF2A localization at the spindle. Accordingly, inhibition of basal Wnt signaling leads to chromosome misalignment in somatic cells and pluripotent stem cells. We propose that Wnt signaling monitors KIF2A activity at the spindle poles during mitosis to ensure timely chromosome alignment. Our findings highlight a function of Wnt signaling during cell division, which could have important implications for genome maintenance, notably in stem cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuta Asakura ◽  
Hitoshi Osaka ◽  
Hiromi Aoi ◽  
Takeshi Mizuguchi ◽  
Naomichi Matsumoto ◽  
...  

AbstractMutations in a number of genes related to chromosomal segregation reportedly cause developmental disorders, e.g., chromosome alignment-maintaining phosphoprotein 1 (CHAMP1). We report on an 8-year-old Japanese girl who presented with a developmental disorder and microcephaly and carries a novel nonsense mutation in CHAMP1. Therefore, CHAMP1 mutation should be considered as a differential diagnosis of global developmental delay and microcephaly.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Li ◽  
Prabha Sarangi ◽  
Hanrong Feng ◽  
Lisa Moreau ◽  
Huy Nguyen ◽  
...  

Abstract A critical determinant of DNA repair pathway choice is the HORMA protein REV7, a small abundant adaptor which binds to various DNA repair proteins through its C-terminal seatbelt domain. The REV7 seatbelt binds to the REV3 polymerase to form the Polymerase ζ complex, a positive regulator of translesion synthesis (TLS) repair. Alternatively, the REV7 seatbelt binds to SHLD3 in the Shieldin complex, a positive regulator of NHEJ repair. Recent studies have identified another novel REV7 seatbelt-binding protein, CAMP (Chromosome Alignment-Maintaining Phosphoprotein), though its role in DNA repair is unknown. Here, we show that the REV7-CAMP complex promotes homologous recombination (HR) repair by sequestering REV7 from the Shieldin complex. CAMP competes directly with the SHLD3 subunit of the Shieldin complex for a limited pool of C-REV7, thereby inhibiting the REV7-mediated recruitment of the SHLD2 and SHLD1 effector subunits to DNA double strand breaks. CAMP thereby channels DNA repair away from error-prone NHEJ and towards the competing error-free HR pathway. Similarly, CAMP competes with the REV3 component of the POL-Zeta complex, thereby reducing the level of mutagenic TLS repair. CAMP has a distinct function in promoting chromosome alignment which is independent of its REV7 binding activity. Importantly, in human tumors, CAMP overexpression promotes HR, confers PARP inhibitor resistance, and correlates with poor prognosis. Thus, by binding to either REV3, SHLD3, or CAMP through its seatbelt, the REV7 protein can promote either TLS repair, NHEJ repair, or HR repair respectively.


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