Mud binds the kinesin-14 Ncd in Drosophila

Maintenance of proper mitotic spindle structure is necessary for error-free chromosome segregation and cell division. Spindle assembly is controlled by force-generating kinesin motors that contribute to its geometry and bipolarity, and balancing motor-dependent forces between opposing kinesins is cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biochemistry and biophysics reports 2021-07, Vol.26, p.101016-101016, Article 101016
Hauptverfasser: Cutillas, Vincent, Johnston, Christopher A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Maintenance of proper mitotic spindle structure is necessary for error-free chromosome segregation and cell division. Spindle assembly is controlled by force-generating kinesin motors that contribute to its geometry and bipolarity, and balancing motor-dependent forces between opposing kinesins is critical to the integrity of this process. Non-claret dysjunctional (Ncd), a Drosophila kinesin-14 member, crosslinks and slides microtubule minus-ends to focus spindle poles and sustain bipolarity. However, mechanisms that regulate Ncd activity during mitosis are underappreciated. Here, we identify Mushroom body defect (Mud), the fly ortholog of human NuMA, as a direct Ncd binding partner. We demonstrate this interaction involves a short coiled-coil domain within Mud (MudCC) binding the N-terminal, non-motor microtubule-binding domain of Ncd (NcdnMBD). We further show that the C-terminal ATPase motor domain of Ncd (NcdCTm) directly interacts with NcdnMBD as well. Mud binding competes against this self-association and also increases NcdnMBD microtubule binding in vitro. Our results describe an interaction between two spindle-associated proteins and suggest a potentially new mode of minus-end motor protein regulation at mitotic spindle poles.
ISSN:2405-5808
2405-5808
DOI:10.1016/j.bbrep.2021.101016