APC/C‐dependent degradation of Spd2 regulates centrosome asymmetry in Drosophila neural stem cells

Author:

Meghini Francesco1,Martins Torcato12ORCID,Zhang Qian3ORCID,Loyer Nicolas4ORCID,Trickey Michelle5,Abula Yusanjiang3ORCID,Yamano Hiroyuki5ORCID,Januschke Jens4ORCID,Kimata Yuu13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. Department of Medical Sciences, Institute of Biomedicine‐iBiMED University of Aveiro Aveiro Portugal

3. School of Life Science and Technology ShanghaiTech University Shanghai China

4. School of Life Science University of Dundee Dundee UK

5. UCL Cancer Institute University College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractA functional centrosome is vital for the development and physiology of animals. Among numerous regulatory mechanisms of the centrosome, ubiquitin‐mediated proteolysis is known to be critical for the precise regulation of centriole duplication. However, its significance beyond centrosome copy number control remains unclear. Using an in vitro screen for centrosomal substrates of the APC/C ubiquitin ligase in Drosophila, we identify several conserved pericentriolar material (PCM) components, including the inner PCM protein Spd2. We show that Spd2 levels are controlled by the interphase‐specific form of APC/C, APC/CFzr, in cultured cells and developing brains. Increased Spd2 levels compromise neural stem cell–specific asymmetric PCM recruitment and microtubule nucleation at interphase centrosomes, resulting in partial randomisation of the division axis and segregation patterns of the daughter centrosome in the following mitosis. We further provide evidence that APC/CFzr‐dependent Spd2 degradation restricts the amount and mobility of Spd2 at the daughter centrosome, thereby facilitating the accumulation of Polo‐dependent Spd2 phosphorylation for PCM recruitment. Our study underpins the critical role of cell cycle–dependent proteolytic regulation of the PCM in stem cells.

Funder

Cancer Research UK

H2020 European Research Council

Marie Curie

ShanghaiTech University

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Worldwide Cancer Research

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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