Literature DB >> 24138026

Disruption of clathrin-mediated trafficking causes centrosome overduplication and senescence.

Maciej B Olszewski1, Panagiotis Chandris, Bum-Chan Park, Evan Eisenberg, Lois E Greene.   

Abstract

The Hsc70 cochaperone, G cyclin-associated kinase (GAK), has been shown to be essential for the chaperoning of clathrin by Hsc70 in the cell. In this study, we used conditional GAK knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) to determine the effect of completely inhibiting clathrin-dependent trafficking on the cell cycle. After GAK was knocked out, the cells developed the unusual phenotype of having multiple centrosomes, but at the same time failed to divide and ultimately became senescent. To explain this phenotype, we examined the signaling profile and found that mitogenic stimulation of the GAK KO cells and the control cells were similar except for increased phosphorylation of Akt. In addition, the disruption of intracellular trafficking caused by knocking out GAK destabilized the lysosomal membranes, resulting in DNA damage due to iron leakage. Knocking down clathrin heavy chain or inhibiting dynamin largely reproduced the GAK KO phenotype, but inhibiting only clathrin-mediated endocytosis by knocking down adaptor protein (AP2) caused growth arrest and centrosome overduplication, but no DNA damage or senescence. We conclude that disruption of clathrin-dependent trafficking induces senescence accompanied by centrosome overduplication because of a combination of DNA damage and changes in mitogenic signaling that uncouples centrosomal duplication from DNA replication. Published 2013. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

Entities:  

Keywords:  DNA damage; centrosome; clathrin; endocytosis; overduplication; senescence; trafficking

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24138026      PMCID: PMC3868896          DOI: 10.1111/tra.12132

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Traffic        ISSN: 1398-9219            Impact factor:   6.215


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