At the end of cell division, cytokinesis splits the cytoplasm of nascent daughter cells and partitions segregated sister genomes. To coordinate cell division with chromosome segregation, the mitotic spindle controls cytokinetic events at the cell envelope. The spindle midzone stimulates the actomyosin-driven contraction of the cleavage furrow, which proceeds until the formation of a microtubule-rich intercellular bridge with the midbody at its centre. The midbody directs the final membrane abscission reaction and has been proposed to attach the cleavage furrow to the intercellular bridge. How the mitotic spindle is connected to the plasma membrane during cytokinesis is not understood. Here we identify a plasma membrane tethering activity in the centralspindlin protein complex, a conserved component of the spindle midzone and midbody. We demonstrate that the C1 domain of the centralspindlin subunit MgcRacGAP associates with the plasma membrane by interacting with polyanionic phosphoinositide lipids. Using X-ray crystallography we determine the structure of this atypical C1 domain. Mutations in the hydrophobic cap and in basic residues of the C1 domain of MgcRacGAP prevent association of the protein with the plasma membrane, and abrogate cytokinesis in human and chicken cells. Artificial membrane tethering of centralspindlin restores cell division in the absence of the C1 domain of MgcRacGAP. Although C1 domain function is dispensable for the formation of the midzone and midbody, it promotes contractility and is required for the attachment of the plasma membrane to the midbody, a long-postulated function of this organelle. Our analysis suggests that centralspindlin links the mitotic spindle to the plasma membrane to secure the final cut during cytokinesis in animal cells.
Sister chromatid cohesion mediated by the cohesin complex is essential for chromosome segregation
during cell division. Using functional genomic screening, we identify a set of 26 pre-mRNA splicing
factors that are required for sister chromatid cohesion in human cells. Loss of spliceosome subunits
increases the dissociation rate of cohesin from chromatin and abrogates cohesion after DNA
replication, ultimately causing mitotic catastrophe. Depletion of splicing factors causes defective
processing of the pre-mRNA encoding sororin, a factor required for the stable association of cohesin
with chromatin, and an associated reduction of sororin protein level. Expression of an intronless
version of sororin and depletion of the cohesin release protein WAPL suppress the cohesion defect in
cells lacking splicing factors. We propose that spliceosome components contribute to sister
chromatid cohesion and mitotic chromosome segregation through splicing of sororin pre-mRNA. Our
results highlight the loss of cohesion as an early cellular consequence of compromised splicing.
This may have clinical implications because SF3B1, a splicing factor that we
identify to be essential for cohesion, is recurrently mutated in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia.
FLIRT (Fast Local InfraRed Thermogenetics) is a microscopy-based technology to locally and reversibly manipulate protein function during cellular behaviors while simultaneously monitoring the effects
in vivo
. FLIRT locally inactivates fast-acting temperature sensitive (ts) mutant proteins, using non-ts mutants as controls. We demonstrate that FLIRT can control ts proteins required for cell division, Delta-Notch cell fate signaling, and germline structure in
C. elegans
with cell-specific and even subcellular precision.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.