Mitotic spindle disassembly in human cells relies on CRIPT having hierarchical redox signals

Author:

Xu Kehan1,Wang Chunxue1,Keinänen Kari2ORCID,Li Hong13ORCID,Cai Chunlin14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Basic Medical Sciences, Anhui Medical University 1 , Hefei, Anhui 230032 , China

2. University of Helsinki 2 Research Program in Molecular and Integrative Biosciences, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences , , Helsinki 00014 , Finland

3. Yale University School of Medicine 3 Department of Neuroscience , , New Haven, CT 06510 , USA

4. Anhui Duoneng Biotechnology Co., Ltd. 4 , Hefei, Anhui 230088 , China

Abstract

ABSTRACT Swift and complete spindle disassembly in late mitosis is essential for cell survival, yet how it happens is largely unknown in mammalian cells. Here we used real-time live cell microscopy and biochemical assays to show that the primordial dwarfism (PD)-related cysteine-rich protein CRIPT dictates the spindle disassembly in a redox-dependent manner in human cells. This previously reported cytoplasmic protein was found to have a confined nuclear localization with a nucleolar concentration during interphase but was distributed to spindles and underwent redox modifications to form disulfide bonds in CXXC pairs during mitosis. Then, it directly interacted with, and might transfer a redox response to, tubulin subunits via a putative redox exchange among cysteine residues to induce microtubule depolymerization. Expression of CRIPT proteins with mutations of these cysteine residues blocked spindle disassembly, generating two cell types with long-lasting metaphase spindles or spindle remnants. Live-cell recordings of a disease-relevant mutant (CRIPTC3Y) revealed that microtubule depolymerization at spindle ends during anaphase and the entire spindle dissolution during telophase might share a common CRIPT-bearing redox-controlled mechanism.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Natural Science Foundation of Anhui Province

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Cell Biology

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