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DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction

Diaphanous (DIAPH) three (DIAPH3) is a member of the formin proteins that have the capacity to nucleate and elongate actin filaments and, therefore, to remodel the cytoskeleton. DIAPH3 is essential for cytokinesis as its dysfunction impairs the contractile ring and produces multinucleated cells. Her...

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Autores principales: Lau, Eva On-Chai, Damiani, Devid, Chehade, Georges, Ruiz-Reig, Nuria, Saade, Rana, Jossin, Yves, Aittaleb, Mohamed, Schakman, Olivier, Tajeddine, Nicolas, Gailly, Philippe, Tissir, Fadel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8102060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33899739
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.61974
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author Lau, Eva On-Chai
Damiani, Devid
Chehade, Georges
Ruiz-Reig, Nuria
Saade, Rana
Jossin, Yves
Aittaleb, Mohamed
Schakman, Olivier
Tajeddine, Nicolas
Gailly, Philippe
Tissir, Fadel
author_facet Lau, Eva On-Chai
Damiani, Devid
Chehade, Georges
Ruiz-Reig, Nuria
Saade, Rana
Jossin, Yves
Aittaleb, Mohamed
Schakman, Olivier
Tajeddine, Nicolas
Gailly, Philippe
Tissir, Fadel
author_sort Lau, Eva On-Chai
collection PubMed
description Diaphanous (DIAPH) three (DIAPH3) is a member of the formin proteins that have the capacity to nucleate and elongate actin filaments and, therefore, to remodel the cytoskeleton. DIAPH3 is essential for cytokinesis as its dysfunction impairs the contractile ring and produces multinucleated cells. Here, we report that DIAPH3 localizes at the centrosome during mitosis and regulates the assembly and bipolarity of the mitotic spindle. DIAPH3-deficient cells display disorganized cytoskeleton and multipolar spindles. DIAPH3 deficiency disrupts the expression and/or stability of several proteins including the kinetochore-associated protein SPAG5. DIAPH3 and SPAG5 have similar expression patterns in the developing brain and overlapping subcellular localization during mitosis. Knockdown of SPAG5 phenocopies DIAPH3 deficiency, whereas its overexpression rescues the DIAHP3 knockdown phenotype. Conditional inactivation of Diaph3 in mouse cerebral cortex profoundly disrupts neurogenesis, depleting cortical progenitors and neurons, leading to cortical malformation and autistic-like behavior. Our data uncover the uncharacterized functions of DIAPH3 and provide evidence that this protein belongs to a molecular toolbox that links microtubule dynamics during mitosis to aneuploidy, cell death, fate determination defects, and cortical malformation.
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spelling pubmed-81020602021-05-11 DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction Lau, Eva On-Chai Damiani, Devid Chehade, Georges Ruiz-Reig, Nuria Saade, Rana Jossin, Yves Aittaleb, Mohamed Schakman, Olivier Tajeddine, Nicolas Gailly, Philippe Tissir, Fadel eLife Neuroscience Diaphanous (DIAPH) three (DIAPH3) is a member of the formin proteins that have the capacity to nucleate and elongate actin filaments and, therefore, to remodel the cytoskeleton. DIAPH3 is essential for cytokinesis as its dysfunction impairs the contractile ring and produces multinucleated cells. Here, we report that DIAPH3 localizes at the centrosome during mitosis and regulates the assembly and bipolarity of the mitotic spindle. DIAPH3-deficient cells display disorganized cytoskeleton and multipolar spindles. DIAPH3 deficiency disrupts the expression and/or stability of several proteins including the kinetochore-associated protein SPAG5. DIAPH3 and SPAG5 have similar expression patterns in the developing brain and overlapping subcellular localization during mitosis. Knockdown of SPAG5 phenocopies DIAPH3 deficiency, whereas its overexpression rescues the DIAHP3 knockdown phenotype. Conditional inactivation of Diaph3 in mouse cerebral cortex profoundly disrupts neurogenesis, depleting cortical progenitors and neurons, leading to cortical malformation and autistic-like behavior. Our data uncover the uncharacterized functions of DIAPH3 and provide evidence that this protein belongs to a molecular toolbox that links microtubule dynamics during mitosis to aneuploidy, cell death, fate determination defects, and cortical malformation. eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd 2021-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8102060/ /pubmed/33899739 http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.61974 Text en © 2021, Lau et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Lau, Eva On-Chai
Damiani, Devid
Chehade, Georges
Ruiz-Reig, Nuria
Saade, Rana
Jossin, Yves
Aittaleb, Mohamed
Schakman, Olivier
Tajeddine, Nicolas
Gailly, Philippe
Tissir, Fadel
DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title_full DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title_fullStr DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title_full_unstemmed DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title_short DIAPH3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
title_sort diaph3 deficiency links microtubules to mitotic errors, defective neurogenesis, and brain dysfunction
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8102060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33899739
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.61974
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