Nicola Brownlow1, Tanya Pike1, Daniel Zicha2, Lucy Collinson3, Peter J Parker4. 1. Protein Phosphorylation Laboratory, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, 44 Lincolns Inn Fields, London WC2A 3LY, UK. 2. Light Microscopy, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, London, WC2A 3LY, UK. 3. Electron Microscopy, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, London WC2A 3LY, UK. 4. 1] Protein Phosphorylation Laboratory, Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, 44 Lincolns Inn Fields, London WC2A 3LY, UK [2] Division of Cancer Studies, King's College London, New Hunt's House, Guy's Campus, London SE1 1UL, UK.
Abstract
Exit from mitosis is controlled by silencing of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). It is important that preceding exit, all sister chromatid pairs are correctly bioriented, and that residual catenation is resolved, permitting complete sister chromatid separation in the ensuing anaphase. Here we determine that the metaphase response to catenation in mammalian cells operates through PKCε. The PKCε-controlled pathway regulates exit from the SAC only when mitotic cells are challenged by retained catenation and this delayed exit is characterized by BubR1-high and Mad2-low kinetochores. In addition, we show that this pathway is necessary to facilitate resolution of retained catenanes in mitosis. When delayed by catenation in mitosis, inhibition of PKCε results in premature entry into anaphase with PICH-positive strands and chromosome bridging. These findings demonstrate the importance of PKCε-mediated regulation in protection from loss of chromosome integrity in cells failing to resolve catenation in G2.
Exit from mitosis is controlled by silencing of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC). It is important that preceding exit, all sister chromatid pairs are correctly bioriented, and that residual catenation is resolved, permitting complete sister chromatid separation in the ensuing anaphase. Here we determine that the metaphase response to catenation in mammalian cells operates through PKCε. The PKCε-controlled pathway regulates exit from the SAC only when mitotic cells are challenged by retained catenation and this delayed exit is characterized by BubR1-high and Mad2-low kinetochores. In addition, we show that this pathway is necessary to facilitate resolution of retained catenanes in mitosis. When delayed by catenation in mitosis, inhibition of PKCε results in premature entry into anaphase with PICH-positive strands and chromosome bridging. These findings demonstrate the importance of PKCε-mediated regulation in protection from loss of chromosome integrity in cells failing to resolve catenation in G2.
The metaphase-to-anaphase transition is the critical point in the cell cycle where the cell
commits to separation of sister chromatids. Mistakes at this stage can lead to aneuploidy
and chromosome breakages, which are features common in cancer1. Before
anaphase, spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) monitors correct spindle attachment and
biorientation of sister chromatids2. Once spindle attachment is complete,
cohesion must be eliminated to enable the physical separation of sister chromatids. This
requires cleavage of the protein complex cohesin by separase and, in some instances,
completion of chromosome decatenation34567. Loss of topoisomerase
activity in metaphase leads to delayed exit and extensive anaphase chromosome bridging,
often resulting in cytokinesis failure, although maintenance of limited catenation until
anaphase may be important for sister chromatid structural organization8910.Anaphase is initiated by activation of an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, the anaphase
promoting complex (APC), which directs protease-mediated degradation of anaphase inhibitors
cyclinB1 and securin11. Various mitotic signalling
components are transiently localized to the kinetochore during mitosis and control of their
dynamic association with the kinetochore generates a diffusible inhibitor of the APC1112. This inhibitory complex is maintained until bioriented microtubule
engagement is established for all sister chromatid kinetochores. Kinetochore signalling
components include the checkpoint proteins Bub1, BubR1 and
Mad2 (ref. 13). Other regulatory components present at the kinetochore include the RZZ
complex (Rod, ZW10, Zwilch)14 and various motor proteins
including dynein and CENP-E1516. Once all sister chromatids are bioriented, the APC is activated and
anaphase is initiated.SAC silencing is a complex process and various mechanisms are involved in regulating
anaphase onset. These include the activation of PP1 phosphatase activity171819, ubiquitination of cdc20 by the APC20 and dynein-mediated streaming of
checkpoint components from the kinetochore, a process which is regulated by the RZZ
complex2122. Regulation of mitotic exit when biorientation is
incomplete is well studied23, but how anaphase is delayed when sister
chromatids retain catenation is unclear.DNA catenanes formed during replication are corrected by topoisomerase II (topoII), which
is essential for complete decatenation of sister chromatids and subsequent segregation in
mitosis24. Topoisomerase
IIa (topoIIa) is
associated with mitotic chromosome arms throughout mitosis25 and plays an
essential role in mouse embryonic development as disruption of the topoIIa gene is lethal at the four- to
eight-cell stage where cells show evidence of mitotic segregation failures26. Consistently, either inhibition of topoIIa using bis(2,6-dioxopiperazine) derivatives such as ICRF193 or depletion of topoIIa in human cells results in anaphase
chromosome bridging, leading to polyploidy and cell death827. Persistence
of DNA sister chromatid catenation during anaphase is likely to promote DNA damage and
genomic instability through chromosome non-disjunction and breakage28. Thus,
topoIIa-mediated decatenation of
sister chromatids is required for proper cell division. A catenation-sensitive delay at the
metaphase-to-anaphase transition has been identified in both vertebrates4293031 and budding yeast32. However, there are few
insights into what signalling molecules are involved in this process and what relationship
this has with the SAC.Here we demonstrate that protein kinase
Cε (PKCε)
controls a pathway required to trigger and maintain the catenation-dependent metaphase
delay characterized by retention of a subset of SAC regulators. This delay can be
overridden without catenation resolution by PKCε ablation or inhibition, thus representing a metaphase control
point rather than a physical block to anaphase onset. Using a direct measure of metaphase
catenation, we demonstrate that this PKCε pathway controls catenation resolution in mitosis. We thereby
show that PKCε becomes engaged when
there is excess metaphase catenation, and that it controls a pathway that delays anaphase
entry and promotes decatenation. We and others have identified transformed cell lines that
have a leaky G2 catenation checkpoint33. We hypothesize that this process
acts as a failsafe mechanism to protect cells that aberrantly enter mitosis with excess
catenation. Importantly, we find that non-transformed cells with a robust G2 catenation
arrest do not enter mitosis with catenated sister chromatids and display no dependence on
the PKCε-regulated pathway,
suggesting a potentially excellent therapeutic index for PKCε intervention in cancer.
Results
PKCε regulates mitotic
catenation resolution
We have reported previously that PKCε is important in completion of cytokinesis3435. Here we imaged HeLa cells by time-lapse microscopy and found
evidence of an earlier mitotic defect as a result of PKCε loss, which manifests as an
increase in anaphase chromosome bridging, demonstrated by an increase in the mean
number of anaphase chromosome bridges by 55.7% (siControl versus PKCε si1, P=0.0008; Fig. 1a,b). We observe heterogeneity between the three different
small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) used and attribute this to efficiency of knockdown
(Fig. 1a). The chromatin bridging typically consists of
large sections of chromatin emanating from both sides of the furrow, often with a
central section that is not marked by mCherry-H2B or 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI; Fig. 1b,c). We
inspected these structures by correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) and
found that the large chromatin sections were linked together by thin stretches of
DNA, which are continuous through the furrow (Fig. 1c). The
mitotic spindle appears to be correctly attached at the kinetochore as the
centromeres segregate normally, indicating that the bridging portions do not
represent incorrect kinetochore attachments (Fig. 1d). Anaphase
chromatin bridging persisted into telophase in 61.5% of telophase cells scored and
the centromere section of the chromosome was not seen in the furrow (Supplementary Fig. 1a). Intriguingly, we did not
see any such chromatin bridging in normal diploid RPE-1 cells after knockdown of
PKCε (Supplementary Fig. 1b).
Figure 1
Knockdown of PKCε causes
chromatin bridging that is associated with an increase in both metaphase and anaphase
catenation.
(a–c) HeLa cells that stably express mCherry-H2B and
GFP-Tubulin (HeLa H2B) were imaged by time-lapse microscopy. (a) Graph
showing the number of HeLa-H2B cells that enter anaphase with chromatin bridging.
Cells were treated with either control siRNA or one of three different siRNAs that
target PKCε (si1, si2 and
si3) and imaged by time-lapse microscopy. Graph shows average of three
experiments±s.e.m., n>30 per experiment, per condition. Right panel
shows quantification of knockdown to show correlation between knockdown and the
frequency of chromatin bridges observed, chart shows mean ±s.d. (n=3)
(b) Stills taken from time-lapse imaging of HeLa-H2B cells after
treatment with PKCε si1;
time in minutes marked in white. (c) CLEM image of a Hela H2B cell in
cytokinesis showing chromatin in red (arrowed) and juxtaposed electron micrograph
sections showing details of this chromatin bridge. Top right panel shows a higher
magnification of the area denoted by the white box in the far right panel, the red
arrow shows electron dense chromatin bridges. (d) Immunoflourescence images
of HeLa cells after treatment±PKCε siRNA showing PICH-PS (green), centromeres by ACA staining (red) and
DAPI (blue). Open arrows
indicate PICH-positive strands
that do not colocalize with DAPI, and closed arrows indicate PICH and DAPI colocalization, stared open arrow
indicates DAPI-positive bridges
with no PICH staining.
(e,f) PICH-PS
are more persistent after PKCε knockdown or inhibition evidenced by long
PICH-PS. Immunoflourescence
images of DLD-1 PKCε
M486A cells after treatment with NaPP1showing examples of PICH-PS that are persistent into telophase
PICH-PS (red) and
DAPI (blue). (f)
Chart shows length of PICH-PS
measured using Zen software (Zeiss), red line indicates mean length, each spot
represents a single strand (n>70). (g, upper panel) Scheme to
describe the basis of the catenation spread assay. (g, lower panel)
Representative example images of catenation spread assay with catenated sister
chromosomes starred and an example chromosome enlarged for clarity. (h)
Chart shows the percentage of sister chromatids per cell with catenated
chromosomes; mean shown by black line (n>30 cells, repeated three
times). Scale bars, 5 μm (unless otherwise stated).
PICH (Plk-1 checkpoint helicase) binds to fine
strands of DNA that span the anaphase plate and are postulated to be associated with
centromeric catenated DNA36. As we observed fine strands of DNA in the
furrow by CLEM (Fig. 1c), we employed PICH as a marker of ultra-fine strands, to
quantify the association between loss of PKCε and the appearance of these strands. We indeed saw a
change in PICH-positive strands
(PICH-PS) after PKCε knockdown, which increased from 25%
of cells in the control to 64% in cells treated with PKCε si1 (Fig.
1d). This high basal level of PICH-PS in control cells is corroborated by others37. We confirmed this finding in a second cell line and exploited the PKCε M486A gatekeeper mutant. The small
molecule NaPP1 binds to very few wild-type kinases due to a steric clash with the
gatekeeper residue in the ATP-binding pocket; PKCεM486A is inhibited, as the gatekeeper residue has been
substituted with a less bulky alanine3538. In the DLD-1 PKCεM486A cell line, we observe an
increase in PICH-PS from 16% under
basal conditions to 58% in cells after treatment with NaPP1. These PICH-PS generally did not co-localize with the
DAPI-stained chromatin bridges
(23% colocalization in HeLa and 25% colocalization in DLD-1 PKCεM486A cells; see Fig.
1d,e), indicating that most of the PICH-PS can be attributed to ultra-fine stretches of DNA as seen
by others7363739. In addition to an increase in the number of
PICH-PS, we also observe an
increased persistence of these strands into late anaphase and telophase, and this
manifests as very long PICH-PS
after PKCε inhibition or
knockdown (Fig. 1e,f). Chromosome bridging and PICH-PS have been associated with an increase
in anaphase catenation736373940, we therefore investigated
whether the increase in chromosome bridging seen after PKCε knockdown correlates with an
increase in metaphase catenation.DNA catenation in mitosis can trigger a delayed exit from mitosis293031 and there may be a varying requirement in different cell lines
for decatenation in metaphase, dependent on the fidelity of the G2 catenation
checkpoint4142. We therefore sought to establish the cause of the
anaphase bridging that we observed on PKCε knockdown. We hypothesized two non-exclusive scenarios:
(i) that there may be a high basal level of metaphase catenation in these cell lines,
which is inefficiently resolved due to the loss of a PKCε-promoted decatenation pathway or
(ii) that PKCε may operate a
checkpoint-associated response to metaphase catenation, which would normally
implement a metaphase delay, providing time for decatenation and preventing bridging
in anaphase.To address whether there is an increase in mitotic catenation, we directly measured
the degree to which sister chromatids were catenated in prometaphase. In this assay,
we monitor sister chromatid catenation by enabling the removal of centromeric cohesin
and then viewing the chromosome formations. Centromeric cohesion is protected from
removal during prophase by Sgo-1
(ref. 43). When Sgo-1 is targeted, sister chromosome cohesion is lost resulting in
mitotic cells with single sister chromatids. The extent to which sister chromatids
are catenated is revealed as a tethering of sister chromatid arms (Fig. 1g and Supplementary Fig.
2). The frequency of this tethering increases with knockdown of
topoIIa by siRNA as expected
(Supplementary Fig. 2), and in
confirmation that the structures seen here reflect catenation, we found that addition
of recombinant topoIIa
ex vivo reversed the tethering phenotype observed (Fig.
1h).We applied this assay to determine whether PKCε plays a role in metaphase decatenation. Interestingly,
we saw an increase in metaphase catenation after PKCε knockdown using siRNA (Fig. 1g,h)
and this could be recovered using recombinant topoIIa, suggesting that the tethering seen in this assay
represents catenation. We confirmed this using the DLD-1 PKCεM486A cell line and find that
specific inhibition using NaPP1 also caused an increase in sister chromatid
catenation in metaphase (Fig. 1h)In contrast to our findings above in the HeLa and DLD-1 cells, PKCε knockdown in the non-transformed
RPE-hTERT cells did not increase
either metaphase catenation or PICH-PS (Fig. 1h) and, in fact, out of over 100
fields of view revealing at least 30 early anaphase cells, we did not see any
PICH-PS. This is in line with
our observation that we also do not see an influence of PKCε on chromatin bridging in RPE-1
cells (Supplementary Fig. 1b). We did
observe an increase in metaphase catenation after TopoIIa knockdown in this cell line, which is expected, as
TopoIIa is essential for both
decatenation and arrest at the G2 catenation checkpoint4445. We
could not rescue this increase in catenation, as it was much more pronounced than the
other two cell lines. Given this evidence, we hypothesized that the PKCε-dependent phenotype seen in HeLa
and DLD-1 cells may be due to a requirement for a metaphase decatenation pathway in
response to excess catenation persisting from G2.To investigate the possible G2 origin of the metaphase catenation, we carried out a
fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis to compare the robustness of the
G2 checkpoint in the three cell lines discussed above. We used ICRF193 to assay the G2 checkpoint response to
catenation and bleomycin to measure the checkpoint response to DNA damage4146. In line with our previous observations, RPE1-hTERT arrest robustly in G2 when treated with
either ICRF193 or bleomycin (Fig. 2a,b). This could be weakened using an Ataxia telangiectasia mutated/ATM-RAD3-related
inhibitor as expected. Both HeLa and DLD-1 cells had a more leaky response to either
ICRF193 or bleomycin, indicating
that they both have a weakened G2 catenation checkpoint as predicted.
Figure 2
RPE-1 hTERT cells have an
intact G2 checkpoint but this response is weak in HeLa and DLD-1 cells.
(a) RPE-1 hTERT cells
have a robust G2 checkpoint shown by FACS analysis. Cells were treated for
24 h with the indicated inhibitors and analysed by FACS. Scatter charts
show DNA content plotted against MPM-2 intensity to measure the number of cells
that escape the G2 checkpoint into a nocodazole arrest in mitosis. The percentage of MPM-2-positive
cells was analysed and plotted in b–d for the three different
cell lines as indicated (chart shows average of three experiments ±s.e.m.,
n>10,000 cells counted per condition).
PKCε is required to
trigger the metaphase catenation delay
Excessive catenation in mitosis causes a delay to anaphase entry293031, and as we see evidence of catenation entering anaphase in our
transformed cell lines when PKCε is compromised, we postulated that the metaphase
catenation delay may also be abrogated after loss of PKCε. In agreement with Huang et
al.47, we find that the topoIIa inhibitor ICRF193 triggers a transient metaphase delay of
94±6.6 min (P<0.0001) in HeLa cells and
119±7.1 min, (P<0.0001) in DLD-1 cells (Fig.
3a–d). In these assays, we use time-lapse microscopy to record
images of either DLD-1 or HeLa cells expressing mCherry-Histone2B and record the time
taken from metaphase alignment to sister chromatid separation in anaphase. In the
presence of ICRF193, the anaphase
achieved is very unequal and more difficult to detect as shown in Fig.
3d. This is likely to be due to an excess of catenation preventing sister
chromatid separation. Interestingly, we find that this metaphase delay is very
dependent on PKCε and using
siRNA we see a reduced metaphase delay by 54±7 min (P<0.0001)
in HeLa cells (Fig. 3a,b). Consistently, knockdown or
inhibition of PKCε in DLD-1
cells also bypasses this metaphase delay and decreases the time spent in mitosis by
58±8 min (P<0.0001; Fig. 3c,d and Supplementary Fig. 1d). In addition to
using NaPP1 to inhibit PKCε
in these assays, we also confirmed the specificity of the PKCε siRNA by recovering the phenotype
with an siRNA-resistant PKCε
construct. In this system, the metaphase delay is recovered as shown by a decrease in
the metaphase transition speed of 56±11 min (P<0.0001)
following tetracycline induction of
the siRNA-resistant construct, confirming the specificity of the siRNA phenotype
(Supplementary Fig. 1c). We also
investigated whether both the decatenation pathway and the requirement for
PKCε could be triggered
after the cells had entered mitosis by inhibiting topoIIa and PKCε once cells enter mitosis. As with the data above, we
induce a delay to metaphase exit by adding ICRF193 once cells have entered prophase and this is again lost
when PKCε is inhibited. This
confirms that these cells require PKCε activity to trigger/maintain a metaphase delay in
mitosis (Supplementary Fig. 1d).
Figure 3
Knockdown of PKCε causes
cells to enter anaphase prematurely when challenged by catenation.
The fidelity of the metaphase catenation arrest was assessed by time-lapse
microscopy. (a,b) HeLa-H2B cells were treated for
48 h±siRNA targeting PKCε. Cumulative frequency chart (a) and
representative stills, time in minutes marked in white (b) showing time
taken in minutes from metaphase-to-anaphase±5 μM ICRF193. (c,d) Inhibition of
PKCε M486A in DLD-1
cells abrogates the metaphase catenation delay as illustrated by cumulative
frequency chart (c) and representative stills (d), showing time
taken in minutes from metaphase to anaphase after treatment with
NaPP1±5 μM ICRF193. (e–g) HeLa-H2B cells were treated
with either control siRNA or one of three different siRNAs that target
PKCε (si1, si2 and
si3). (e,f) Cumulative frequency charts showing the time spent in
either metaphase (e) or prometaphase (f), and representative stills
from the time-lapse videos, time in minutes marked in white (g). For all
live-cell experiments, n>30, all experiments repeated three times. Scale
bars, 5 μm.
In addition to a dependence on PKCε to trigger a metaphase delay in response to a
topoIIa inhibitor, we also see
an increase in the basal metaphase transition speed in HeLa cells after knockdown of
PKCε using the most
efficient siRNA (PKCεsi1) of 5 ±1.1 min (P<0.0001)
compared with the control (Fig. 3e,f). We do not observe any
difference in the time taken from prometaphase to metaphase, indicating that
chromosome congression to the metaphase plate is not affected by PKCε knockdown. We can again recover
this phenotype using the siRNA-resistant PKCε construct, indicating that the effect is specific to
PKCε (P<0.005;
Supplementary Fig. 1c).As with decatenation, we do not see PKCε dependence in RPE-1 cells under basal conditions (Supplementary Fig. 1e) and as HeLa cells
have high levels of metaphase catenation and PICH-PS in anaphase (Fig. 1h and Supplementary Fig. 2), we propose that the
increase in basal transition speed is the result of abrogation of a catenation delay
that is routinely engaged by HeLa cells having a ‘leaky’ G2 catenation
checkpoint. These results together suggest that the catenation resolution pathway and
the arrest triggered by detection of metaphase catenation may be intrinsically
linked, as both are highly dependent on PKCε.We tested whether we could induce a dependence on PKCε in RPE-hTERT cells by weakening the G2 catenation checkpoint, to allow
entry of catenated DNA into mitosis. We used an Ataxia telangiectasia mutated/ATM RAD3-related inhibitor48 and, in line with our findings, this causes cells to enter mitosis
even when ICRF193 is present and
these cells then arrest in metaphase for an extra 65.5±3.7 min
(P<0.0001) compared with the control (Supplementary Fig. 1f,g). In line with our
observations in HeLa and DLD-1 cells, this delay is abrogated by PKCε knockdown using siRNA by
19±6.4 min (P=0.0055), suggesting that RPE cells are also
dependent on PKCε if they
encounter catenation in mitosis.
Involvement of PKCε
in other perturbations of the SAC
The evidence above suggests that PKCε is involved in modulating exit from metaphase under
conditions of catenation stress. To address whether this PKCε control is triggered by other
known perturbations of anaphase entry, we assayed mitotic transition times in HeLa
cells, DLD1 and RPE-hTERT cells
under various conditions that perturb the mitotic spindle. Nocodazole treatment was used to assess the
fidelity of the SAC response to unattached kinetochores, the Eg5 inhibitor monastrol was used to assess the SAC response
to non-bioriented, monopole spindles49. All three cell lines tested
maintained a robust SAC arrest after loss of PKCε in response to nocodazole (Fig. 4a,b and Supplementary Fig. 3a,e) or monastrol (Fig. 4a,b
and Supplementary Fig. 3a,e), indicating
that PKCε is not required
for this aspect of the SAC arrest. Taxol was also used at various concentrations to assess the effect
of stabilization of the spindle to different degrees. The SAC arrest was entirely
insensitive to PKCε
modulation in DLD-1 and RPE-1-hTERT cells, indicating that this SAC trigger is not dependent on
PKCε. However, in HeLa
cells the arrest was weakened on treatment with PKCε siRNA (Supplementary Fig. 3c,d). This one contradictory result indicates that
PKCε is not an absolute
requirement for taxol-mediated
mitotic arrest, but can become engaged in some circumstances. Importantly,
PKCε dependence on
ICRF193-induced metaphase delay
was uniformly robust in the transformed cell lines after treatment with either
PKCε siRNA or a
PKCε inhibitor, Blu557
(Compound 18 (ref. 50), Fig. 3 and
Supplementary Fig. 1f,g). Catenation
is therefore the only penetrant trigger for the PKCε-dependent mitotic exit that we have tested.
Figure 4
Knockdown of PKCε using
siRNA does not affect the SAC arrest in DLD-1 cells.
(a–d) DLD-1 cells were treated with various SAC triggers and
the fidelity of the SAC arrest was measured after loss of PKCε. (a,b) DLD-1
parental cells or DLD-1 PKCε M486A cells were treated with 100 μM
Monastrol±20 nM
NaPP1 (a) or with PKCε si1 (b) and time taken to transit through
mitosis was assayed by time-lapse microscopy by monitoring cell rounding. Charts
show the number of cells that maintain a mitotic arrest for more than 7 h.
(c,d) DLD-1 parental cells or DLD-1 PKCε M486A cells were treated with
taxol or ICRF193 as indicated±20 nM
NaPP1 or with PKCε si1
and the time taken to transit through mitosis was assayed by time-lapse video
microscopy by monitoring cell rounding. The graph shows the time taken to transit
through mitosis as a cumulative frequency chart. For all live-cell experiments,
n>30, all experiments repeated three times.
PKCε regulation of
SAC silencing
Catenation appears to implement a PKCε-dependent delay to anaphase entry; we therefore sought
to understand whether and how PKCε influences exit from the SAC under conditions of high
catenation. We addressed this by determining whether key kinetochore components of
the SAC came under PKCε
control in catenation-challenged, transformed cells. Previous reports regarding
kinetochore occupation during a catenation-triggered metaphase delay are mixed429; however, in accordance with Toyoda and Yanagida4 we
find the level of Mad2 is below
the lower detection limit, but observe retention of intense Bub1 and BubR1 staining in both the DLD-1 and HeLa cell models (Supplementary Fig. 4a–c).To assess the effect of inhibiting PKCε on localization of the SAC proteins remaining on the
kinetochore, we arrested cells in metaphase using ICRF193 and added the PKCε inhibitor Blu577 (Compound 18 (ref. 50)) for 20 min to establish whether PKCε plays a dynamic role in
maintaining the checkpoint proteins on the kinetochore. Inhibition of PKCε causes acute loss of BubR1 and Bub1 from kinetochores of ICRF193-treated cells (Supplementary Fig. 4a,b). As biorientation is achieved at this point, this
is consistent with a role for PKCε in triggering a delay to the release of BubR1 and Bub1 from the kinetochore when resolution of decatenation has not
been achieved.
PKCε inhibition
modulates microtubule-dependent streaming of ZW10
The RZZ complex is known to play a role in mitotic exit and its depletion is
associated with increased segregation errors resulting in multinuclear cells51. All of the components of the RZZ complex are localized to the
kinetochore during prometaphase and bind to Zwint and Knl1
(refs 51, 52). Our
experiments indicate that both ZW10 and Zwilch
change their steady-state localization when delayed by catenation in metaphase and
become undetectable at the kinetochore (Supplementary Fig. 5a,b). Dynein is similarly reduced in cells delayed in
response to ICRF193 but not
nocodazole, suggesting a
dependence on the mitotic spindle for this reduction in signal at the kinetochore
(Supplementary Fig. 5c). In both of
these conditions, Bub1 and
Zwint remain attached to the
kinetochore, indicating a selective change in the apparent binding affinity of the
RZZ complex and not a general disassembly of kinetochore complexes. These altered
properties suggest that under conditions of excess catenation, the RZZ complex and
dynein may be actively removed from the kinetochore indicative of kinetochore
microtubule attachments53.We investigated whether the RZZ complex was actively streaming on the spindle by
using FLIP (fluorescence loss in photobleaching) to measure ZW10 kinetochore dynamics. Using a HeLa cell
model, which stably expresses GFP-ZW10 at a level that does not perturb normal mitotic transition,
we repeatedly bleached cytoplasmic GFP-ZW10 and measured its rate of loss from the kinetochore (Fig. 5a,b). As expected, cells that are delayed with metaphase
catenation have a faster kinetochore ZW10 turnover rate than cells arrested using nocodazole (Fig. 5c).
This indicates that stable microtubule attachments are made at this point and
correlates with our finding that levels of Mad2 are low (Supplementary
Fig. 4c)53. PKCε inhibition further decreases this half-life only in
cells arrested using ICRF193,
indicating that PKCε may
have some input into the regulation of kinetochore stripping (Fig.
5d).
Figure 5
ZW10 is actively stripped from
the kinetochore when cells are delayed in metaphase using ICRF193 and this is modulated by both
PKCε and dynein.
(a–d) HeLa eGFP-ZW10 cells were arrested in metaphase with 10 μM
ICRF193 or 250 nM
nocodazole for 4 h
and treated with either 100 nM Blu577 or 250 μM EHNA from the start of the video as
indicated. Cells were then alternatively bleached (red circle) and imaged
repeatedly, and the kinetochore intensity (blue dotted region) was fitted to a
decay curve and corrected for intensity loss through imaging. (a)
Representative stills from experiments. (b) Cartoon of experimental
procedure. (c,d) Quantification of half-life measured during FLIP
experiments as described above. Charts showing average ZW10 half-life. (n>20).
(e–g) HeLa cells that are arrested in metaphase with
ICRF193 have high levels of
CyclinB1 and kinetochore
BubR1. This is lost after
inhibition of PKCε using
Blu 557 in a dynein-dependent manner, suggesting stripping from the kinetochore.
(e) Representative images. (f,g) Quantification of
integrated pixel intensity measurements of CyclinB1 (f) or BubR1±s.e.m. (g) Chart shows mean of three
experiments±s.e.m., n>20 per condition per experiment. Scale bars,
5 μm.
Perturbation of dynein-mediated kinetochore stripping can be sufficient to prevent
anaphase entry and thus we tested whether PKCε feeds into this pathway54. Erythro-9-3-(2-hydroxynonyl)adenine
(EHNA) inhibits dynein ATPase
activity and prevents cytoplasmic fluxing of dynein and its substrates55. We tested whether EHNA could
prevent the kinetochore turnover of ZW10 in our system, to assess whether this was dominant over the
exit from mitosis induced by PKCε inhibition. Interestingly, the decrease in half-life
induced by PKCε inhibition
can be prevented by inhibiting dynein (Fig. 5d). This indicates
that mitotic exit triggered by PKCε inhibition is a dynein-dependent process.
PKCε-mediated
regulation of kinetochore SAC components
As we can recover the effect of PKCε on ZW10 kinetochore turnover by dynein inhibition, we hypothesized
that the mitotic exit triggered by PKCε inhibition may also be a dynein-dependent process. We
found that in metaphase-delayed cells, acute inhibition of dynein does indeed block
the degradation of cyclinB1
induced by acute PKCε
inhibition in metaphase cells (Fig. 5e–g). We also
investigated whether loss of BubR1
after PKCε inhibition is
prevented, given that others have shown that this regulator can be stripped by
dynein225456. Interestingly, we find that the loss of
BubR1 from the kinetochore
after PKCε inhibition is
also a dynein-dependent process (Fig. 5g).It is unclear whether the effect of inhibiting dynein in these assays is to directly
prevent ZW10 streaming from the
kinetochores or whether kinetochore microtubule binding is perturbed, because dynein
is also known to play a role in stabilizing kinetochore microtubule interactions56. We see a small increase in prometaphase cells with dispersed
metaphase plates, indicating that the cells transitioning from prometaphase to
metaphase during the 20-min EHNA
treatment do not fully congress to the metaphase plate and these cells have intense
Mad2 signal (Supplementary Fig. 4e). This is in agreement with
Varma et al.56 who showed abnormal spindle equator orientation
and oscillation of kinetochore pairs after dynein perturbation. We find that
Mad2 is not stabilized on fully
congressed metaphase kinetochores after EHNA treatment, indicating that these spindle attachments may be
maintained (Supplementary Fig. 4d,e).
This is in contrast to a short incubation with the microtubule depolymerizing agent
nocodazole, which quickly
causes recruitment of Mad2 to the
kinetochores (Supplementary Fig.
4f).
Discussion
The evidence here defines a PKCε-dependent pathway as a conditional player in exit from the
SAC that monitors appropriate sister chromatid decatenation (see Fig.
6 for working model). As part of this response, PKCε may trigger a resolution pathway as
evidenced by an increase in catenation in mitosis after loss of PKCε activity. This catenation manifests
as chromatin bridging and PICH-positive strands in anaphase. We further find that PKCε is required to trigger the metaphase
delay in response to catenation, indicating that PKCε is required for a global response to metaphase catenation.
Interestingly, it appears that this is particularly important in certain transformed
cells, which have a weak G2 catenation checkpoint and therefore a heightened requirement
for mitotic decatenation. This acquired, emergent behaviour suggests a transformed
cell-specific vulnerability to PKCε inhibition.
Figure 6
Model of the PKCε-dependent metaphase catenation delay.
There is a catenation checkpoint at the G2-mitosis boundary, which would normally
trigger resolution of excess DNA catenation before entry into mitosis. If this
process fails, as is the case in some transformed cells, there is a failsafe in
metaphase, which is dependent on PKCε to both implement a delay and to trigger catenation
resolution. This pathway is activated when there is persistent catenation after
the spindle is fully aligned at the point of mitotic exit and is effected through
a dynein-dependent modulation of the SAC. In cells with both an abrogated G2
catenation checkpoint and loss of PKCε, cells exit mitosis prematurely with disjunction
errors caused by sister chromatid catenation.
PKCε plays an essential role in
cytokinesis in some systems343557. The anaphase bridging observed
here correlates with cytokinesis failure, indicating that there may be a link between
the two phenotypes. Close examination of the cytokinesis phenotype, using a very
specific chemical genetic inhibitor, has shown that a cytokinesis defect can be induced
by inhibition of PKCε once the
cell is already in telophase. This suggests that although these phenotypes may be
related, they can be triggered independently. The cytokinesis phenotype described
previously may therefore be exacerbated by a failure to complete decatenation after
PKCε knockdown and this may
also explain the cell-type-specific penetrance of the phenotype34.The G2 catenation checkpoint is defective in a variety of different cancer cell
lines33. We have shown that only cells with a leaky G2 catenation
checkpoint enter mitosis with detectable basal catenation. These cells display a strong
dependence on PKCε for the
resolution of catenation in mitosis to avoid chromosome disjunction. We therefore
propose that PKCε is working
directly in mitosis to protect cells from anaphase entry with catenated sister
chromatids, although we cannot rule out that PKCε has additional roles in other stages of the cell
cycle.We show that normal (non-transformed) cells arrest robustly before mitosis when
challenged by catenation, and that this arrest is not dependent on PKCε. We therefore suggest that this
provides an explanation for the conditional requirement for PKCε in a subset of cell lines.The evidence indicates that PKCε is an apparently universal modulator of the metaphase
catenation delay in the transformed cell lines tested and also in the non-transformed
RPE cell line when a dependence is triggered using inhibitors of the G2 catenation
checkpoint. This appears to operate predominantly independently of the arrest triggered
by other perturbations that influence the SAC. However, there was one interesting
outlier, where in HeLa cells the mitotic arrest induced by taxol shows an interaction with the
PKCε-dependent pathway and
was weakened on loss of PKCε.
This was not the case in other cell lines tested. It is possible that a direct effect of
taxol on topoIIa activity may contribute to this
complexity58 or perhaps that the PKCε pathway may be influencing a subtle taxol-inducible property to which HeLa cells are
particularly sensitive. It has been shown by others that disruption of TopoIIa can interfere with tension sensing,
which may provide some explanation for an interaction with the taxol-mediated arrest, although not for the
discrepancy seen between different cell lines459. Indeed, a
tension-mediated property may provide some basis for the mechanisms involved in
detection of mitotic catenation and how this is mediated through the SAC.In support of a possible role for tension sensing, we and others show that the metaphase
delay invoked by catenation is characterized by high levels of BubR1 and undetectable Mad2 at the kinetochore4. Acute
inhibition of PKCε causes rapid
loss of BubR1 from the kinetochore
along with CyclinB1 degradation,
indicating mitotic exit. This mitotic exit is dependent on dynein and is consistent with
a role for PKCε in regulating
the very last stages of disassembly of the mitotic checkpoint via regulation of
dynein-dependent stripping of BubR1.
CyclinB1 levels remain high and
Mad2 levels low, suggesting that
kinetochore BubR1 may be sufficient
to impart a transient delay to APC activation in these circumstances, although we cannot
rule out that low or transient kinetochore Mad2 is providing a diffusible APC inhibitor11. The
RZZ complex and dynein are stripped from the kinetochore during the catenation delay,
indicating that spindle attachments are formed during this time, and this is supported
by the timely congression of the metaphase plate along with undetectable Mad2 on the kinetochore.It is not known whether kinetochore BubR1 is sufficient to inhibit the APC alone, although it is a strong
candidate as it has a rapid kinetochore–cytoplasm exchange and is an inhibitor of
the APC1260. Notably, Huang et al.61 show that
retention of BubR1 on the kinetochore
using a phosphomimetic mutant can delay anaphase onset. This is characterized by low
levels of kinetochore Mad1 and a
delay of around 2 h with full metaphase plate congression. This is similar to the
delay shown here after inhibition of topoIIa.Exit from the SAC can be modulated by dynein- and RZZ complex-regulated stripping of
checkpoint proteins from the kinetochore, allowing SAC silencing. We show evidence that
the mitotic exit implemented by PKCε inhibition is a dynein-dependent process and show that the
metaphase arrest stimulated by excess metaphase catenation is characterized by stripping
of both the RZZ complex and dynein from the kinetochore along with ZW10. We show that PKCε can modulate the rate of
ZW10 streaming by adding a
PKCε-specific inhibitor
during live-cell imaging, eliciting an increase in the rate of ZW10 streaming and showing that PKCε is playing an active role in
mitosis.Reports regarding whether dynein-dependent streaming can regulate BubR1 kinetochore retention are mixed2262. Others have shown that BubR1 is retained on the kinetochore when dynein-dependent stripping
is disrupted by point mutations in Zwint54 or by truncations of dynein itself56, showing dynein does regulate kinetochore BubR1 in some circumstances. Here we show loss
of kinetochore BubR1 after
PKCε inhibition before
anaphase entry and show that this can be prevented by inhibiting dynein. On inhibition
of dynein, we see no recovery of kinetochore Mad2, indicating that kinetochore BubR1 may be sufficient to impart the transient metaphase delay that
we observe in response to catenation in metaphase.It is unclear precisely what triggers the metaphase response to catenation.
TopoIIa appears to be
intrinsically required for both resolution and catenation detection in both metaphase
and G2. In both instances, deletion of the enzyme results in an abrogated catenation
checkpoint and progression with non-disjunction to the next cell cycle phase4445. ICRF193 is a
class 2 topoismerase inhibitor that blocks topoIIa in a catalytically inactive state; it does not cause DNA
damage directly as TopoIIa is
retained in a conformation in which it cannot induce double-stranded breaks. However,
this does not rule out DNA damage as a result of continued transit through the cell
cycle with excess catenation, which may contribute to the mixed reports regarding the
induction of DNA damage markers4563. Inhibition with this drug triggers
both the G2 and the mitotic checkpoint2945. It therefore seems that the
presence of TopoIIa in a particular
catalytic state may be important for activation of both of the checkpoints. In
accordance with this, Furness et al.44 have isolated various
catalytically inactive mutations of yeast top2 that differentially inactivate the mitotic catenation
checkpoint, suggesting that checkpoint signalling is propagated through topoisomerase
enzyme cycles and not through the DNA lesion itself44.Untangling this intriguing relationship with known functions of the SAC and also
investigating what other replication stress-induced segregation perturbations may be
detected and regulated in mitosis may prove to be important in our global understanding
of the mechanisms used to protect cells from DNA damage and aneuploidy. Here we have
identified PKCε as a
conditional player in the mitotic checkpoint, which is engaged only in the context of
metaphase catenation and serves to delay anaphase transition protecting from cell
division failure (Fig. 6). This conditional engagement provides a
unique opportunity for intervention in those tumours dependent on PKCε due to a weak G2 catenation
checkpoint64656667. The definition of this layer of SAC control
opens up a promising avenue to new mitotic cancer therapeutics capitalizing on our
growing understanding of the complexities involved in regulation of the cell cycle.
Methods
Reagents
All reagents, including Nocodazole, ICRF193, Colcemid, Taxol
and Nocodazole, were purchased
from Sigma Aldrich unless otherwise stated. ATM/ATR
inhibitors were purchased from Calbiochem. BLU577 was kindly provided by Dr Jon
Roffey, Cancer Research Technology, UK.
Cell culture
HeLa cells cultured in DMEM (Gibco)+10% FCS. For siRNA transfections, HiPerfect (Qiagen) was used
according to the manufacturer’s recommendations; all siRNAs were used at a
final concentration of 10 nM. Tetracycline-inducible 293 cell lines were generated using the
T-Rex Flp In system (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. To
induce GFP–PKC expression, HEK 293 cells were cultured in DMEM containing 10%
FCS and tetracycline
(100 ng ml−1) for 24 h before
assay.For siRNA transfections, HiPerfect (Qiagen) was used according to the
manufacturer’s recommendations; all siRNAs were used at a final concentration
of 10 nM. The following SmartPOOLs were purchased from Dharmacon:
PKCε si1: Cat.
D-004653-01 (5′-gggcaaagaugaaguauau-3′); PKCε si3: Cat. J-004653-08-0050
(5′-GACGUGGACUGCACAAUGA-3′); siBubR1Smartpool set of 4: Cat.
LU-004101-00-0002 (5′-CAAUACAGCUUCACUGAUA-3′,
5′-GCAAUGAGCCUUUGGAUAU-3′, 5′-GAAACGGGCAUUUGAAUAU-3′,
5′-GAUGGUGAAUUGUGGAAUA-3′); siMad2 Smartpool set of 4: Cat. D-003271-05
(5′-GAAAGAUGGCAGUUUGAUA, 5′-UAAAUAAUGUGGUGGAACA-3′,
5′-GAAAUCCGUUCAGUGAUCA-3′, 5′-UUACUCGAGUGCAGAAAUA-3′); si
topoIIa Smartpool set of 4:
Cat. J-004239-09 (5′-GGUAACUCCUUGAAAGUAA-3′,
5′-GGAGAAGAUUAUACAUGUA-3′, 5′-GAUGAACUCUGCAGGCUAA-3′,
5′-CGAAAGGAAUGGUUAACUA-3′); siSgo1 Smartpool set of 4: Cat. D-015475-17
(5′-UGUGAAGGAUUUACCGCAA-3′, 5′-CAGCCAGCGUGAACUAUAA-3′,
5′-UGAAAGAAGCCCAAGAUAU-3′, 5′-CAUCUUAGCCUGAAGGAUA-3′).
The remaining olionucleotides were purchased from Qiagen: PKCε si2: Cat. S100287784
(5′-cccgaccatggtagtgttcaa-3′); siControl: cat. 1027310
(5′-AATTCTCCGAACGTGTCACGT-3′).
Microscopy
For videomicroscopy experiments, cells were cultured on LabTek chambered coverglass
slides (Nunc) in Leibovitz CO2-independent media (Gibco). A low light
level inverted microscope (Nikon TE2000) imaging system equipped with a laminar-flow
heater to maintain a constant temperature of 37±0.01 °C, a PlanFluor
40 × DIC lens and a Xenon lamp for fluorescent excitation. Images were taken
using a high quantum efficiency charge-coupled device camera (Andor Ixon) every
4 min. Other images were taken using an inverted laser scanning confocal
microscope (Carl Zeiss LSM 780) equipped with a × 63 Plan-APOCHROMAT DIC
oil-immersion objective. For all experiments where live cell time lapse was carried
out on individual cells, n>30, as this was the maximum number of cells that
could be imaged in multiple position experiments with 3–4 min time
points. Fast time points were required to capture all phases of mitosis and to
capture transition time information. The experiments were repeated three times.For FLIP experiments, an inverted laser scanning confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss LSM
780) equipped with a × 63 Plan-APOCHROMAT DIC oil-immersion objective was used.
HeLa cells that stably express GFP-ZW10 were used. Individual cells were alternatively imaged and
bleached in a cytoplasmic 2-μm radius circle every 16 s, acquiring a 5
× 2 μm Z-stack to capture all kinetochores. The laser power
was kept consistent between experiments at 65 W. Z-stack images were
summed and time-lapse series were analysed using Metamorph software (Molecular Devices).
Kinetochore-localized GFP-ZW10
intensity time courses were collected using Metamorph (Molecular Devices) and
interpolated using Mathematica (Wolfram). The following exponential function was used:
Ie+I1*Exp[−t/t1], where Ie=background intensity, I1=initial
intensity, t=time (s) and t1=time constant. Images were also collected with
bleaching outside the cell to assess the effect of imaging to the half-life of
GFP-ZW10. The mean of these
values were used to correct the T1 values derived from FLIP experiments to achieve a
more accurate representation of GFP-ZW10 half-life using the following function:
T1=(TcT2)/T2−Tc), where T1=GFP-ZW10 time constant, T2=slow decay caused by
imaging, Tc=sum of T1 and T2. T1 half-life values were obtained by multiplying these
values by (1/ln(0.5)). ZW10
kinetics were measured for at least ten cells per condition and this sufficient to
control for biological variability.For CLEM, cells were grown on photo-etched gridded coverslips and fixed in 4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M PBS. Cells of interest were identified and imaged
using fluorescence and phase contrast microscopy after knockdown of PKCε using siRNA. Cells were then fixed
in 2·5% glutaraldehyde/4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M Phosphate Buffer for 1 h. The samples were
post-fixed in reduced osmium
tetroxide, stained with tannic
acid, dehydrated stepwise to 100% ethanol and embedded in epon. The cells of
interest were relocated on the block face and serial sections (~70 nm)
were cut using an Ultracut UCT ultramicrotome (Leica Microsystems UK), collected on
formvar-coated slot grids and post-stained with lead citrate. Serial sections were viewed using a Tecnai G2 Spirit
120 kV transmission electron microscope (FEI Company) and an Orius
charge-coupled device camera (Gatan UK).
Immunofluorescence and immunoblotting
For immunofluorescence experiments, cells were grown on 13 mm
poly-L-lysine (Sigma-Aldrich)-coated glass coverslips and fixed with 4%
paraformaldeyhyde/PBS for 15 min. Cells were then permeabilized with 1% Triton
X-100 (Sigma Aldrich), blocked using 1% BSA (Sigma Aldrich) and probed using the
following primary antibodies, all diluted at 1:100 in 1% BSA/PBS: rabbit
anti-BubR1 (Cell Signaling
Technology D32E8), sheep anti-Bub1
(ref. 68) (SB1.3) (courtesy of S. Taylor), mouse
anti-cyclinB1 (Santa-Cruz
Sc-245), mouse anti-phosphoH2A.X (Millipore JBW301) and mouse anti-PICH (Millipore 04-1540). For Triton X-100
pre-extraction assays, cells were grown on 13 mm coverslips and staining was
carried out as above, except they were simultaneously fixed and permeabilized using
2% paraformaldeyhyde 1% Triton X-100/PBS for 30 min. The following primary
antibodies were used in these assays: sheep anti-Bub1 (ref. 68) (SB1.3) (courtesy of
S. Taylor), rabbit anti-Mad2
(Bethyl Laboratories A300-301A), mouse anti-ZW10 (AbCam ab53676), mouse anti-Zwilch (Sigma Aldrich C1C9), rabbit and
Zwint (AbCam ab84367), mouse
anti-PICH (Millipore 04-1540)
and human anti-Centromere (ACA) (Antibodies Inc.15-234-0001). All coverslips were
mounted using ProLong Gold with DAPI (Invitrogen).Immunoblotting was carried out by lysing samples using LDS sample buffer (Invitrogen)
and resolving protein by SDS–PAGE using NuPAGE Bis-TRIS gradient gels
(Invitrogen). Samples were then transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes
(Amersham) and probed using targeted antibodies and Luminata chemiluminescence
detection system (Millipore). The following antibodies were used in these assays, all
diluted at 1:1,000 in 1% BSA/PBS/0.05% TWEEN-20: rabbit anti-PKCε (Santa Cruz sc-214), mouse
anti-topoIIa (Millipore
Mab4197), mouse anti-alpha-tubulin (Sigma T5168), mouse anti-PICH (Millipore 04-1540), rabbit
anti-Mad2 (Cell Signaling
Technology D8A7) and mouse anti-BubR1 (NovisBio NB100-353BR1). Band densitometry was carried out
using Image J software and normalized to a tubulin loading control.
FACS analysis of G2 and mitotic cells
To determine the permeability of the checkpoint, we added nocodazole to capture the cells that pass
through the G2 checkpoint into mitosis. We measured the number of cells that were
arrested in mitosis at the end of this assay by staining with propidium iodide to measure DNA content and
an MPM-2 antibody to measure the number of cells in mitosis69. Cells
were treated with various combinations of 1 μM nocodazole, 100 nM ATM inhibitor, 10 μM
ATR inhibitor,
10 μM ICRF193 and
10 μM bleomycin for 24 h. Cells were fixed in ice cold 70%
ethanol for 24 h and
stained with 50 μg ml−1
propidium iodide and
100 μg ml−1 RNAase to analyse DNA
content.Cells were then stained with a MPM-2 antibody that is directly conjugated to Alexa
633 (Millipore 16–220) for 2 h at room temperature and fluorescence
intensity was measured using a using FACS
Calibur (Becton Dickinson). This data was then
analysed using the FlowJo software.
Quantification of immunofluorescence images
Imaging was carried out using Carl Zeiss LSM 780 confocal microscope equipped with a
× 63 Plan-APOCHROMAT DIC oil-immersion objective and serial 1 μm
Z-sections with a 1μm pinhole were taken to ensure full coverage of chromatin
region. All image quantification was carried out using Metamorph image analysis
software (Molecular Devices). Z-sections were summed and corrected for
background signal (area with no cell). An inclusive threshold was then chosen to
include all kinetochore signal in the positive control and applied to all images.
Total integrated intensity for the chromatin region after thresholding was then
measured for each cell. At least ten cells were measured for each condition and this
is sufficient to control for biological variability.
Catenation spread assay
For measurement of metaphase catenation, cells were treated with siSgo1 for
24 h, followed by 1-h treatment with nocodazole to collapse the mitotic spindle, to aid spreading.
Cells were collected by shaking off the mitotic cells and resuspended in a hypotonic
solution of 75 mM KCl and
incubated at 37 °C for 30 min to expand the cell. Cells were then
resuspended in 3:1 methanol:acetic acid and fixed overnight at
−20 °C. Cells were then spread onto clear slides by dropping from
1 m height. For assays where topoIIa was reintroduced, recombinant topo IIa
(1 U μl−1, TopoGen) was incubated in the
hypotonic step where the cell membrane becomes hyperpermeable. The hypotonic buffer
used here contained 5 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, 75 mM KCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM ATP, 0.5 mM dithiothreitol. We confirmed by
video-microscopy that there was no significant difference between the time that all
samples had been arrested in mitosis at the start of the assay.
Statistical tests
In all cases where P-values are given an unpaired t-test was used. In
the cases where the data includes more than two conditions, a one-way analysis of
variance was used. Prism software (Graphpad) was used for all calculations. The level
of statistical significance is represented as follows: n.s.=P>0.05,
*=P≤0.05, **= P≤0.01, ***=P≤0.001 and
****=P≤0.0001.
Author contributions
N.B., T.P. and P.J.P. devised and carried out experiments, D.Z. wrote FLIP analysis
software and L.C. carried out electron microscopy.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Brownlow, N. et al. Mitotic catenation is
monitored and resolved by a PKCε-regulated pathway. Nat. Commun. 5:5685 doi:
10.1038/ncomms6685 (2014).
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