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The mitosis-regulating and protein-protein interaction activities of astrin are controlled by aurora-A-induced phosphorylation.

Authors :
Chiu SC
Chen JM
Wei TY
Cheng TS
Wang YH
Ku CF
Lian CH
Liu CC
Kuo YC
Yu CT
Source :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology [Am J Physiol Cell Physiol] 2014 Sep 01; Vol. 307 (5), pp. C466-78. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jul 09.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Cells display dramatic morphological changes in mitosis, where numerous factors form regulatory networks to orchestrate the complicated process, resulting in extreme fidelity of the segregation of duplicated chromosomes into two daughter cells. Astrin regulates several aspects of mitosis, such as maintaining the cohesion of sister chromatids by inactivating Separase and stabilizing spindle, aligning and segregating chromosomes, and silencing spindle assembly checkpoint by interacting with Src kinase-associated phosphoprotein (SKAP) and cytoplasmic linker-associated protein-1α (CLASP-1α). To understand how Astrin is regulated in mitosis, we report here that Astrin acts as a mitotic phosphoprotein, and Aurora-A phosphorylates Astrin at Ser(115). The phosphorylation-deficient mutant Astrin S115A abnormally activates spindle assembly checkpoint and delays mitosis progression, decreases spindle stability, and induces chromosome misalignment. Mechanistic analyses reveal that Astrin phosphorylation mimicking mutant S115D, instead of S115A, binds and induces ubiquitination and degradation of securin, which sequentially activates Separase, an enzyme required for the separation of sister chromatids. Moreover, S115A fails to bind mitosis regulators, including SKAP and CLASP-1α, which results in the mitotic defects observed in Astrin S115A-transfected cells. In conclusion, Aurora-A phosphorylates Astrin and guides the binding of Astrin to its cellular partners, which ensures proper progression of mitosis.<br /> (Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1522-1563
Volume :
307
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25009111
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00164.2014