| Literature DB >> 23266953 |
Anna Noatynska1, Monica Gotta, Patrick Meraldi.
Abstract
Correct alignment of the mitotic spindle during cell division is crucial for cell fate determination, tissue organization, and development. Mutations causing brain diseases and cancer in humans and mice have been associated with spindle orientation defects. These defects are thought to lead to an imbalance between symmetric and asymmetric divisions, causing reduced or excessive cell proliferation. However, most of these disease-linked genes encode proteins that carry out multiple cellular functions. Here, we discuss whether spindle orientation defects are the direct cause for these diseases, or just a correlative side effect.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23266953 PMCID: PMC3529530 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201209015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 1.Orientation of the mitotic spindle: symmetric vs. asymmetric divisions. In polarized cells, orientation of the spindle perpendicular to the polarity axis causes a symmetric (proliferative) division (A). However, spindle orientation parallel to the polarity axis results in an asymmetric (differentiative) division (B).
Figure 2.Spindle orientation is regulated by a conserved set of molecules in metazoans. (A) The C. elegans one-cell embryo is polarized along the anterior–posterior axis and divides asymmetrically in a somatic anterior cell (AB) and a posterior germline precursor cell (P1). The conserved PAR (partitioning defective) proteins are localized asymmetrically at the cortex: PAR-3, PAR-6, and PKC-3 at the anterior and PAR-1 and PAR-2 at the posterior. Spindle positioning is regulated downstream of polarity by GOA-1 and GPA-16 (Gα subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins), which localize around the entire cortex (not depicted), GPR-1 and GPR-2 (receptor-independent activators of G protein signaling), LIN-5 (coil-coiled protein), and the motor dynein (not depicted; Morin and Bellaïche, 2011). GPR-1/2 and LIN-5 are enriched at the posterior cortex in a PAR-dependent manner. The data suggest a model in which the GPR–GαGDP–LIN-5 complex promotes higher activity of dynein at the posterior cortex, resulting in posterior spindle pulling (Morin and Bellaïche, 2011). (B) D. melanogaster neuroblasts are stem cell–like precursors that generate the fly’s central nervous system. They divide asymmetrically along the apical–basal axis to give rise to a self-renewed neuroblast and a ganglion mother cell. Baz (PAR-3), Par6 (PAR-6), and aPKC (PKC-3) form a complex that localizes at the apical cortex. PINS (GPR-1/2) binds to Gα and localizes to the apical complex by interacting with the Baz-binding protein Inscuteable. (C) The same set of proteins regulates spindle orientation in mammalian cells (Lechler and Fuchs, 2005; Williams et al., 2011; see also Table 1).
Genes regulating spindle orientation and mutated in diseases
| Gene name – species | Cellular function | Associated disease | Molecular characteristics | ||
| Vertebrate | Fly | Worm | |||
| lis1 | lis1 | lis-1 | Dynein-based movement, nucleokinesis (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), chromosome alignment (vertebrate), centrosome separation (fly, worm) spindle positioning (worm) ( | Lissencephaly ( | Coiled-coil domain, WD40 repeats |
| dcx | CG17528 | zyg-8 | Microtubule polymerization (vertebrate, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate), spindle positioning (worm) ( | Lissencephaly ( | Doublecortin domain, kinase domain |
| nde1 | nudE | nud-2 | Centrosome duplication and maturation, chromosome alignment, spindle orientation, nucleokinesis (vertebrate), kinetochore function, chromosome congression, centrosome behavior (fly), nuclear migration (worm) ( | Microlissencephaly ( | Coiled-coil domain |
| Gαi1, Gαi2, Gαi3 | Gαi1 | goa-1, gpa-16 | Spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), ACD (fly, worm), spindle positioning, chromosome segregation (worm) ( | – | GTPase subunit of heterotrimeric G proteins |
| numa | mud | lin-5 | ACD, chromosome segregation (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation, spindle pole integrity (vertebrate, fly), spindle positioning, cytokinesis (worm) ( | Leukemia ( | Coiled-coil domain |
| pins/lgn/gpsm2/ags3 | pins | gpr-1, gpr-2 | ACD (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), chromosome segregation (vertebrate, worm), spindle positioning (worm) ( | Non-syndromic deafness ( | GoLoco motif, tetratricopeptide (TPR) domains |
| insc | insc | – | Spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), asymmetric cell division (fly) ( | – | Armadillo repeats |
| htt | htt | F21G4.6 | Neuronal transport, spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly) ( | Polyglutamine tract, polyproline sequence, HEAT repeats | |
| magoh | mago | mag-1 | RNA processing (vertebrate, fly worm), RNA localization (vertebrate, fly), spindle orientation and integrity, genomic stability (vertebrate), cytoskeleton organization (fly) ( | – | Mago nashi domain |
| apc | apc1, apc2 | apr-1 | Wnt signaling, ACD, microtubule stability (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), chromosome segregation, tumor suppressor (vertebrate) ( | Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), gastrointestinal tumors ( | Armadillo repeats, oligomerization domain, CRM1, β-catenin, microtubule-binding domains, |
| vegf | pvf1, pvf2, pvf3 | pvf-1 | Cell migration (vertebrate, fly), growth factor, oncogene, spindle orientation, angiogenesis (vertebrate) ( | Epithelia skin cancer ( | PDGF domain |
| vhl | vhl | vhl-1 | HIF1α regulation (vertebrate, fly, worm), microtubule stability, endocytosis, cell migration (vertebrate, fly), tumor suppressor, spindle orientation, genome integrity (vertebrate) ( | Renal cell carcinoma ( | Cullin E3 ubiquitin ligase |
| pten | pten | daf-18 | PI3K signaling (vertebrate, fly, worm), tumor suppressor, spindle orientation, genome integrity, cell growth (vertebrate), cell growth, actin cytoskeleton organization, (fly) ( | PTEN hamartoma tumor syndromes (PHTS) ( | Protein and lipid phosphatase |
| mcph1/microcephalin/brit1 | mcph1 | – | DNA damage response, centrosome integrity, chromosome segregation (vertebrate, fly), spindle orientation (vertebrate) ( | Microcephaly ( | BRCA1 C-terminal (BRCT) domains |
| mcph2/wdr62 | – | – | Centrosome integrity, spindle orientation, chromosome alignment (vertebrate) ( | Microcephaly, lissencephaly, schizencephaly ( | WD40 repeats |
| mcph3/cdk5rap2/cep215 | cnn | – | Centrosome assembly, spindle orientation, chromosome segregation (vertebrate, fly), DNA damage response (vertebrate) ( | Microcephaly ( | Coiled-coil domains, centrosomin motives (CM) 1 and 2 |
| mcph4/cep152 | asl | – | Centriole formation and duplication (vertebrate, fly), genome integrity (vertebrate) ( | Microcephaly ( | Coiled-coil domains |
| mcph5/aspm/calmbp1 | asp | aspm-1 | Spindle assembly, spindle orientation, cytokinesis (vertebrate, fly), the integrity of spindle poles and the central spindle (fly), meiotic spindle orientation (worm) ( | Microcephaly ( | Calponin homology (CH) domains, IQ-repeat motifs |
| mcph6/cenpj/cpap | sas4 | sas-4 | Centriole duplication (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate), ACD (fly) ( | Microcephaly ( | Coiled-coil motives, PN2-3 domain, T-complex protein 10 (TCP) domain |
| mcph7/stil/sil | ana2 | sas-5 | Centriole duplication (vertebrate, fly, worm), spindle orientation (vertebrate, fly), ACD (fly) ( | Microcephaly ( | Coiled-coil domain, STIL/ANA2 (STAN) motif |
| cep63 | – | – | Spindle assembly, mitotic entry, genome maintenance, centrosome duplication (vertebrate) ( | Microcephaly ( | Coiled-coil domains |
In many cases genes mutated in these pathologies control spindle orientation at the cellular level. ACD, asymmetric cell division.
The function of the genes has not been characterized.
Figure 3.Mammalian neuronal progenitors and spindle orientation. (A) Cell subtypes in the developing mammalian brain. NESCs, neuroepithelial stem cells. RG, radial glia. IP, intermediate progenitor. oRG, outer radial glia. IP′, transit amplifying intermediate progenitors. Adherens junctions are in red. (B) A putative role of spindle orientation in the decision of symmetric vs. asymmetric division.
Figure 4.Equilibrium between symmetric and asymmetric divisions confers proper development and tissue homeostasis. Schematic representation of the balance between symmetric and asymmetric cell division and its relevance. ACD, asymmetric cell division. SCD, symmetric cell division.