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CDK1 Prevents Unscheduled PLK4-STIL Complex Assembly in Centriole Biogenesis.

Authors :
Zitouni, Sihem
Francia, Maria E.
Leal, Filipe
Montenegro Gouveia, Susana
Nabais, Catarina
Duarte, Paulo
Gilberto, Samuel
Brito, Daniela
Moyer, Tyler
Kandels-Lewis, Steffi
Ohta, Midori
Kitagawa, Daiju
Holland, Andrew J.
Karsenti, Eric
Lorca, Thierry
Lince-Faria, Mariana
Bettencourt-Dias, Mónica
Source :
Current Biology. May2016, Vol. 26 Issue 9, p1127-1137. 11p.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Summary Centrioles are essential for the assembly of both centrosomes and cilia. Centriole biogenesis occurs once and only once per cell cycle and is temporally coordinated with cell-cycle progression, ensuring the formation of the right number of centrioles at the right time. The formation of new daughter centrioles is guided by a pre-existing, mother centriole. The proximity between mother and daughter centrioles was proposed to restrict new centriole formation until they separate beyond a critical distance. Paradoxically, mother and daughter centrioles overcome this distance in early mitosis, at a time when triggers for centriole biogenesis Polo-like kinase 4 (PLK4) and its substrate STIL are abundant. Here we show that in mitosis, the mitotic kinase CDK1-CyclinB binds STIL and prevents formation of the PLK4-STIL complex and STIL phosphorylation by PLK4, thus inhibiting untimely onset of centriole biogenesis. After CDK1-CyclinB inactivation upon mitotic exit, PLK4 can bind and phosphorylate STIL in G1, allowing pro-centriole assembly in the subsequent S phase. Our work shows that complementary mechanisms, such as mother-daughter centriole proximity and CDK1-CyclinB interaction with centriolar components, ensure that centriole biogenesis occurs once and only once per cell cycle, raising parallels to the cell-cycle regulation of DNA replication and centromere formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09609822
Volume :
26
Issue :
9
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Current Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
115216555
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.03.055