scholarly journals Kinetochore phosphatases suppress autonomous Polo-like kinase 1 activity to control the mitotic checkpoint

2020 ◽  
Vol 219 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilia H. Cordeiro ◽  
Richard J. Smith ◽  
Adrian T. Saurin

Local phosphatase regulation is needed at kinetochores to silence the mitotic checkpoint (a.k.a. spindle assembly checkpoint [SAC]). A key event in this regard is the dephosphorylation of MELT repeats on KNL1, which removes SAC proteins from the kinetochore, including the BUB complex. We show here that PP1 and PP2A-B56 phosphatases are primarily required to remove Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) from the BUB complex, which can otherwise maintain MELT phosphorylation in an autocatalytic manner. This appears to be their principal role in the SAC because both phosphatases become redundant if PLK1 is inhibited or BUB–PLK1 interaction is prevented. Surprisingly, MELT dephosphorylation can occur normally under these conditions even when the levels or activities of PP1 and PP2A are strongly inhibited at kinetochores. Therefore, these data imply that kinetochore phosphatase regulation is critical for the SAC, but primarily to restrain and extinguish autonomous PLK1 activity. This is likely a conserved feature of the metazoan SAC, since the relevant PLK1 and PP2A-B56 binding motifs have coevolved in the same region on MADBUB homologues.

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia R Heasley ◽  
Jennifer G DeLuca ◽  
Steven M Markus

The Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) prevents erroneous chromosome segregation by delaying mitotic progression when chromosomes are incorrectly attached to the mitotic spindle. This delay is mediated by Mitotic Checkpoint Complexes (MCCs), which assemble at unattached kinetochores and repress the activity of the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C). The cellular localizations of MCCs are likely critical for proper SAC function, yet remain poorly defined. We recently demonstrated that in mammalian cells, in which the nuclear envelope disassembles during mitosis, MCCs diffuse throughout the spindle region and cytoplasm. Here, we employed binucleate yeast zygotes to examine the localization dynamics of SAC effectors required for MCC assembly and function in budding yeast, in which the nuclear envelope remains intact throughout mitosis. Our findings indicate that in yeast MCCs are confined to the nuclear compartment and excluded from the cytoplasm during mitosis. In contrast, we find that effectors of the Mitotic Exit Network (MEN) - a pathway that initiates disassembly of the anaphase spindle only when it is properly oriented - are in fact freely exchanged between multiple nuclei within a shared cytoplasm. Our study provides insight into how cell cycle checkpoints have evolved to function in diverse cellular contexts.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 3612-3612
Author(s):  
Richa Sharma ◽  
Zahi Abdul Sater ◽  
Rikki Enzor ◽  
Ying He ◽  
Grzegorz Nalepa

Abstract Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetic disorder characterized by progressive bone marrow failure, congenital abnormalities and predilection towards development of hematopoietic malignancies, including acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Congenital biallelic disruption of the FA/BRCA signaling network causes Fanconi anemia and somatic mutations within the same genes are increasingly identified in a variety of malignancies in non-FA individuals, consistent with the critical role of this signaling pathway in FA and in the general population. The FA/BRCA tumor suppressor network orchestrates interphase DNA-damage repair (DDR) and DNA replication to maintain genomic stability. Additionally, we and others have demonstrated that the genome housekeeping function of FA/BRCA signaling extends beyond interphase: loss of FA/BRCA signaling perturbs execution of mitosis, including the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), centrosome maintenance, cytokinesis and resolution of anaphase DNA bridges. Interphase errors exacerbate mitotic abnormalities and mitotic failure promotes interphase mutagenesis. Consequently, we had demonstrated that primary FA patients' cells accumulate genomic abnormalities consistent with a dual mechanism of impaired interphase DDR/replication and defective mitosis. Previous detailed studies had elucidated multiple mechanisms of interphase DDR-dependent assembly and activation of the FA complex at DNA damage sites to arrest the cell cycle and repair DNA lesions. However, the signaling cross-talk nodes between the FA and mitotic checkpoint pathways remain to be discovered. In this study, we identified functionally relevant mitotic signaling defects resulting from FANCA deficiency via a synthetic lethal kinome-wide pooled shRNA screen in primary patient-derived FANCA -deficient cells compared to isogenic FANCA -corrected cell line. Bioinformatics analysis of our screen results followed by secondary validation of selected hits with alternative shRNAs and small-molecule inhibitors revealed conserved mitotic signal transduction pathways regulating the SAC and centrosome maintenance. Our super-resolution structured illumination (SR-SIM) microscopy coupled with deconvolution imaging revealed that a fraction of FANCA co-localizes with key SAC kinases at mitotic centrosomes and kinetochores, consistent with the role of FANCA in centrosome maintenance and the SAC. Co-immunoprecipitation assays identified the biochemical interaction between FANCA and an essential SAC kinase whose loss is synthetic lethal with FANCA deficiency, providing first insights into the interactions between FA signaling and the canonical SAC network. Together, our study has unraveled functional and biochemical connections between FANCA and the centrosome/SAC kinases, consistent with the essential role of FANCA in cell division. Our ongoing work is aimed at mechanistically dissecting molecular links between these two key tumor suppressor signaling pathways in more detail. We hypothesize that impaired FANCA/SAC cross-talk may contribute to genomic instability in FA-deficient cells and provide opportunities to selectively kill FANCA-/- cells. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Teye ◽  
Shasha Lu ◽  
Fangyuan Chen ◽  
Wenrui Yang ◽  
Thomas Abraham ◽  
...  

Abstract Phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis class N (PIGN) has been previously linked to the suppression of chromosomal instability. The spindle assembly checkpoint complex is responsible for proper chromosome segregation during mitosis to prevent chromosomal instability. In this study, the novel role of PIGN as a regulator of the spindle assembly checkpoint was unveiled in leukemic patient cells and cell lines. Transient downregulation or ablation of PIGN resulted in impaired mitotic checkpoint activation due to the dysregulated expression of spindle assembly checkpoint-related proteins including MAD1, MAD2, BUBR1, and MPS1. Moreover, ectopic overexpression of PIGN restored the expression of MAD2. PIGN regulated the spindle assembly checkpoint by forming a complex with the spindle assembly checkpoint proteins MAD1, MAD2, and the mitotic kinase MPS1. Thus, PIGN could play a vital role in the spindle assembly checkpoint to suppress chromosomal instability associated with the leukemic transformation of myelodysplastic syndromes.


2009 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 537-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianjun Luo ◽  
Xinjing Xu ◽  
Hana Hall ◽  
Edel M. Hyland ◽  
Jef D. Boeke ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT It has been firmly established that many interphase nuclear functions, including transcriptional regulation, are regulated by chromatin and histones. How mitotic progression and quality control might be influenced by histones is less well characterized. We show that histone H3 plays a crucial role in activating the spindle assembly checkpoint in response to a defect in mitosis. Prior to anaphase, all chromosomes must attach to spindles emanating from the opposite spindle pole bodies. The tension between sister chromatids generated by the poleward pulling force is an integral part of chromosome biorientation. Lack of tension due to erroneous attachment activates the spindle assembly checkpoint, which corrects the mistakes and ensures segregation fidelity. A histone H3 mutation impairs the ability of yeast cells to activate the checkpoint in a tensionless crisis, leading to missegregation and aneuploidy. The defects in tension sensing result directly from an attenuated H3-Sgo1p interaction essential for pericentric recruitment of Sgo1p. Reinstating the pericentric enrichment of Sgo1p alleviates the mitotic defects. Histone H3, and hence the chromatin, is thus a key factor transmitting the tension status to the spindle assembly checkpoint.


Oncogene ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lan Yu ◽  
Yue Lang ◽  
Ching-Cheng Hsu ◽  
Wei-Min Chen ◽  
Jui-Chung Chiang ◽  
...  

AbstractChromosomal instability (CIN) is a driving force for cancer development. The most common causes of CIN include the dysregulation of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), which is a surveillance mechanism that prevents premature chromosome separation during mitosis by targeting anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C). DAB2IP is frequently silenced in advanced prostate cancer (PCa) and is associated with aggressive phenotypes of PCa. Our previous study showed that DAB2IP activates PLK1 and functions in mitotic regulation. Here, we report the novel mitotic phosphorylation of DAB2IP by Cdks, which mediates DAB2IP’s interaction with PLK1 and the activation of the PLK1-Mps1 pathway. DAB2IP interacts with Cdc20 in a phosphorylation-independent manner. However, the phosphorylation of DAB2IP inhibits the ubiquitylation of Cdc20 in response to SAC, and blocks the premature release of the APC/C-MCC. The PLK1-Mps1 pathway plays an important role in mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC) assembly. It is likely that DAB2IP acts as a scaffold to aid PLK1-Mps1 in targeting Cdc20. Depletion or loss of the Cdks-mediated phosphorylation of DAB2IP destabilizes the MCC, impairs the SAC, and increases chromosome missegregation and subsequent CIN, thus contributing to tumorigenesis. Collectively, these results demonstrate the mechanism of DAB2IP in SAC regulation and provide a rationale for targeting the SAC to cause lethal CIN against DAB2IP-deficient aggressive PCa, which exhibits a weak SAC.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anand Banerjee ◽  
Chu Chen ◽  
Lauren Humphrey ◽  
John J. Tyson ◽  
Ajit Joglekar

During mitosis, unattached kinetochores in a dividing cell generate the anaphase-inhibitory Mitotic Checkpoint Complex (MCC) to activate the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint (SAC) and delay anaphase onset. To generate MCC, these kinetochores recruit MCC constituent proteins including the protein BubR1. The increased local concentration of BubR1 resulting from this recruitment should enhance MCC generation, but prior studies found this not to be the case. We analyzed the contribution of two BubR1 recruitment pathways to MCC generation in human kinetochores. For these analyses, we isolated a subset of the MCC generation reactions to the cytosol using ectopic SAC activation systems. These analyses and mathematical modeling show that BubR1 binding to the SAC protein Bub1, but not to the 'KI' motifs in the kinetochore protein Knl1, significantly enhances the rate of Bub1-mediated MCC generation in the kinetochore. Our work also suggests that Bub1-BubR1 stoichiometry will strongly influence the dose-response characteristics of SAC signaling.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jamin Hein ◽  
Dimitriya H Garvanska ◽  
Isha Nasa ◽  
Arminja Kettenbach ◽  
Jakob Nilsson

Tight regulation of the APC/C-Cdc20 ubiquitin ligase that targets Cyclin B1 for degradation is important for mitotic fidelity. The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) inhibits Cdc20 through the mitotic checkpoint complex (MCC). In addition, phosphorylation of Cdc20 by Cyclin B1-Cdk1 independently inhibits APC/C-Cdc20 activation. This creates a conundrum for how Cdc20 gets activated prior to Cyclin B1 degradation. Here we show that the MCC component BubR1 harbours both Cdc20 inhibition and activation activities, allowing for cross-talk between the two Cdc20 inhibition pathways. Specifically BubR1 acts as a substrate specifier for PP2A-B56 to enable efficient Cdc20 dephosphorylation in the MCC. A mutant Cdc20 mimicking the dephosphorylated state escapes a mitotic checkpoint arrest arguing that restricting Cdc20 dephosphorylation to the MCC is important. Collectively our work reveals how Cdc20 can be dephosphorylated in the presence of Cyclin B1-Cdk1 activity without causing premature anaphase onset.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilia H Cordeiro ◽  
Richard J Smith ◽  
Adrian T Saurin

AbstractLocal phosphatase regulation is critical for determining when phosphorylation signals are activated or deactivated. A typical example is the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) during mitosis, which regulates kinetochore PP1 and PP2A-B56 activities to switch-off signalling events at the correct time. In this case, kinetochore phosphatase activation dephosphorylates MELT motifs on KNL1 to remove SAC proteins, including the BUB complex. We show here that, surprisingly, neither PP1 or PP2A are required to dephosphorylate the MELT motifs. Instead, they remove polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) from the BUB complex, which can otherwise maintain MELT phosphorylation in an autocatalytic manner. This is their principle role in the SAC, because both phosphatases become redundant if PLK1 is inhibited or BUB-PLK1 interaction is prevented. Therefore, phosphatase regulation is critical for the SAC, but primarily to restrain and extinguish autonomous kinase activity. We propose that these circuits have evolved to generate a semi-autonomous SAC signal that can be synchronously silenced following kinetochore-microtubule tension.


2011 ◽  
Vol 366 (1584) ◽  
pp. 3595-3604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Musacchio

The spindle assembly checkpoint controls cell cycle progression during mitosis, synchronizing it with the attachment of chromosomes to spindle microtubules. After the discovery of the mitotic arrest deficient ( MAD ) and budding uninhibited by benzymidazole ( BUB ) genes as crucial checkpoint components in 1991, the second decade of checkpoint studies (2001–2010) witnessed crucial advances in the elucidation of the mechanism through which the checkpoint effector, the mitotic checkpoint complex, targets the anaphase-promoting complex (APC/C) to prevent progression into anaphase. Concomitantly, the discovery that the Ndc80 complex and other components of the microtubule-binding interface of kinetochores are essential for the checkpoint response finally asserted that kinetochores are crucial for the checkpoint response. Nevertheless, the relationship between kinetochores and checkpoint control remains poorly understood. Crucial advances in this area in the third decade of checkpoint studies (2011–2020) are likely to be brought about by the characterization of the mechanism of kinetochore recruitment, activation and inactivation of checkpoint proteins, which remains elusive for the majority of checkpoint components. Here, we take a molecular view on the main challenges hampering this task.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel K. Teye ◽  
Shasha Lu ◽  
Fangyuan Chen ◽  
Wenrui Yang ◽  
Thomas Abraham ◽  
...  

AbstractPhosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis class N (PIGN) has been linked to the suppression of chromosomal instability. The spindle assembly checkpoint complex is responsible for proper chromosome segregation during mitosis to prevent chromosomal instability. In this study, the novel role of PIGN as a regulator of the spindle assembly checkpoint was unveiled in leukemic patient cells and cell lines. Transient downregulation or ablation of PIGN resulted in impaired mitotic checkpoint activation due to the dysregulated expression of spindle assembly checkpoint-related proteins including MAD1, MAD2, BUBR1, and MPS1. Moreover, ectopic overexpression of PIGN restored the expression of MAD2. PIGN regulated the spindle assembly checkpoint by forming a complex with the spindle assembly checkpoint proteins MAD1, MAD2, and the mitotic kinase MPS1. Thus, PIGN could play a vital role in the spindle assembly checkpoint to suppress chromosomal instability associated with leukemic transformation and progression.


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