Katanin p80, NuMA and cytoplasmic dynein cooperate to control microtubule dynamics

被引:0
作者
Mingyue Jin
Oz Pomp
Tomoyasu Shinoda
Shiori Toba
Takayuki Torisawa
Ken’ya Furuta
Kazuhiro Oiwa
Takuo Yasunaga
Daiju Kitagawa
Shigeru Matsumura
Takaki Miyata
Thong Teck Tan
Bruno Reversade
Shinji Hirotsune
机构
[1] Osaka City University,Department of Genetic Disease Research
[2] Graduate School of Medicine,Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology
[3] Institute of Medical Biology,Department of Bioscience and Bioinformatics
[4] Human Genetics and Embryology Laboratory,Division of Centrosome Biology, Department of Molecular Genetics
[5] Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine,Department of Cell Biology
[6] Advanced ICT Research Institute,Department of Paediatrics
[7] National Institute of Information and Communications Technology,undefined
[8] CREST,undefined
[9] Japan Science and Technology Agency,undefined
[10] Graduate School of Life Science,undefined
[11] University of Hyogo,undefined
[12] Harima Science Park City,undefined
[13] Faculty of Computer Science and Systems Engineering,undefined
[14] Kyushu Institute of Technology,undefined
[15] JST-SENTAN,undefined
[16] JST-CREST,undefined
[17] National Institute of Genetics,undefined
[18] Institute for Virus Research,undefined
[19] Kyoto University,undefined
[20] Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biology,undefined
[21] National University of Singapore,undefined
来源
Scientific Reports | / 7卷
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Human mutations in KATNB1 (p80) cause severe congenital cortical malformations, which encompass the clinical features of both microcephaly and lissencephaly. Although p80 plays critical roles during brain development, the underlying mechanisms remain predominately unknown. Here, we demonstrate that p80 regulates microtubule (MT) remodeling in combination with NuMA (nuclear mitotic apparatus protein) and cytoplasmic dynein. We show that p80 shuttles between the nucleus and spindle pole in synchrony with the cell cycle. Interestingly, this striking feature is shared with NuMA. Importantly, p80 is essential for aster formation and maintenance in vitro. siRNA-mediated depletion of p80 and/or NuMA induced abnormal mitotic phenotypes in cultured mouse embryonic fibroblasts and aberrant neurogenesis and neuronal migration in the mouse embryonic brain. Importantly, these results were confirmed in p80-mutant harboring patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells and brain organoids. Taken together, our findings provide valuable insights into the pathogenesis of severe microlissencephaly, in which p80 and NuMA delineate a common pathway for neurogenesis and neuronal migration via MT organization at the centrosome/spindle pole.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 104 条
[1]  
Gupta A(2002)Life is a journey: a genetic look at neocortical development Nature reviews. Genetics 3 342-355
[2]  
Tsai LH(2012)A developmental and genetic classification for malformations of cortical development: update 2012. Brain: a journal of neurology 135 1348-1369
[3]  
Wynshaw-Boris A(2009)Primary microcephaly: do all roads lead to Rome? Trends in genetics: TIG 25 501-510
[4]  
Barkovich AJ(2011)Autosomal Recessive Primary Microcephaly (MCPH): clinical manifestations, genetic heterogeneity and mutation continuum Orphanet journal of rare diseases 6 39-830
[5]  
Guerrini R(2010)Lissencephaly: mechanistic insights from animal models and potential therapeutic strategies Seminars in cell & developmental biology 21 823-721
[6]  
Kuzniecky RI(1993)Isolation of a Miller-Dieker lissencephaly gene containing G protein beta-subunit-like repeats Nature 364 717-339
[7]  
Jackson GD(1998)Graded reduction of Pafah1b1 (Lis1) activity results in neuronal migration defects and early embryonic lethality Nature genetics 19 333-72
[8]  
Dobyns WB(1998)Doublecortin, a brain-specific gene mutated in human X-linked lissencephaly and double cortex syndrome, encodes a putative signaling protein Cell 92 63-96
[9]  
Thornton GK(2000)Autosomal recessive lissencephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia is associated with human RELN mutations Nature genetics 26 93-1064
[10]  
Woods CG(2007)Large spectrum of lissencephaly and pachygyria phenotypes resulting from de novo missense mutations in tubulin alpha 1A (TUBA1A) Human mutation 28 1055-540