| Literature DB >> 25024437 |
Laura A Díaz-Martínez1, Zemfira N Karamysheva1, Ross Warrington1, Bing Li1, Shuguang Wei2, Xian-Jin Xie3, Michael G Roth2, Hongtao Yu4.
Abstract
The antimitotic anti-cancer drugs, including taxol, perturb spindle dynamics, and induce prolonged, spindle checkpoint-dependent mitotic arrest in cancer cells. These cells then either undergo apoptosis triggered by the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway or exit mitosis without proper cell division in an adaptation pathway. Using a genome-wide small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen in taxol-treated HeLa cells, we systematically identify components of the mitotic apoptosis and adaptation pathways. We show that the Mad2 inhibitor p31(comet) actively promotes mitotic adaptation through cyclin B1 degradation and has a minor separate function in suppressing apoptosis. Conversely, the pro-apoptotic Bcl2 family member, Noxa, is a critical initiator of mitotic cell death. Unexpectedly, the upstream components of the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway and the mitochondrial fission protein Drp1 contribute to mitotic adaption. Our results reveal crosstalk between the apoptosis and adaptation pathways during mitotic arrest.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; mitochondria; mitosis; mitotic slippage; the spindle checkpoint
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25024437 PMCID: PMC4195789 DOI: 10.15252/embj.201487826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598