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Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment

Regulated centrosome biogenesis is required for accurate cell division and for maintaining genome integrity(1). Centrosomes consist of a centriole pair surrounded by a protein network known as pericentriolar material (PCM)(1). PCM assembly is a tightly regulated, critical step that determines a cent...

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Autores principales: Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran, Chim, Yiu-Cheung Frederick, Ha, Andrew, Basiri, Marcus L., Lerit, Dorothy A., Rusan, Nasser M., Avidor-Reiss, Tomer
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3411905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22729084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncb2527
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author Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran
Chim, Yiu-Cheung Frederick
Ha, Andrew
Basiri, Marcus L.
Lerit, Dorothy A.
Rusan, Nasser M.
Avidor-Reiss, Tomer
author_facet Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran
Chim, Yiu-Cheung Frederick
Ha, Andrew
Basiri, Marcus L.
Lerit, Dorothy A.
Rusan, Nasser M.
Avidor-Reiss, Tomer
author_sort Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran
collection PubMed
description Regulated centrosome biogenesis is required for accurate cell division and for maintaining genome integrity(1). Centrosomes consist of a centriole pair surrounded by a protein network known as pericentriolar material (PCM)(1). PCM assembly is a tightly regulated, critical step that determines a centrosome’s size and capability(2–4). Here, we report a role for tubulin in regulating PCM recruitment via the conserved centrosomal protein Sas-4. Tubulin directly binds to Sas-4; together they are components of cytoplasmic complexes of centrosomal proteins(5,6). A Sas-4 mutant, which cannot bind tubulin, enhances centrosomal protein complex formation and has abnormally large centrosomes with excessive activity. These suggest that tubulin negatively regulates PCM recruitment. Whereas tubulin-GTP prevents Sas-4 from forming protein complexes, tubulin-GDP promotes it. Thus, tubulin’s regulation of PCM recruitment depends on its GTP/GDP-bound state. These results identify a role for tubulin in regulating PCM recruitment independent of its well-known role as a building block of microtubules(7). Based on its guanine bound state, tubulin can act as a molecular switch in PCM recruitment.
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spelling pubmed-34119052013-02-01 Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran Chim, Yiu-Cheung Frederick Ha, Andrew Basiri, Marcus L. Lerit, Dorothy A. Rusan, Nasser M. Avidor-Reiss, Tomer Nat Cell Biol Article Regulated centrosome biogenesis is required for accurate cell division and for maintaining genome integrity(1). Centrosomes consist of a centriole pair surrounded by a protein network known as pericentriolar material (PCM)(1). PCM assembly is a tightly regulated, critical step that determines a centrosome’s size and capability(2–4). Here, we report a role for tubulin in regulating PCM recruitment via the conserved centrosomal protein Sas-4. Tubulin directly binds to Sas-4; together they are components of cytoplasmic complexes of centrosomal proteins(5,6). A Sas-4 mutant, which cannot bind tubulin, enhances centrosomal protein complex formation and has abnormally large centrosomes with excessive activity. These suggest that tubulin negatively regulates PCM recruitment. Whereas tubulin-GTP prevents Sas-4 from forming protein complexes, tubulin-GDP promotes it. Thus, tubulin’s regulation of PCM recruitment depends on its GTP/GDP-bound state. These results identify a role for tubulin in regulating PCM recruitment independent of its well-known role as a building block of microtubules(7). Based on its guanine bound state, tubulin can act as a molecular switch in PCM recruitment. 2012-06-24 2012-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3411905/ /pubmed/22729084 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncb2527 Text en Users may view, print, copy, download and text and data- mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Gopalakrishnan, Jayachandran
Chim, Yiu-Cheung Frederick
Ha, Andrew
Basiri, Marcus L.
Lerit, Dorothy A.
Rusan, Nasser M.
Avidor-Reiss, Tomer
Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title_full Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title_fullStr Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title_full_unstemmed Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title_short Tubulin nucleotide status controls Sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
title_sort tubulin nucleotide status controls sas-4-dependent pericentriolar material recruitment
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3411905/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22729084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncb2527
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