| Literature DB >> 26011858 |
Anna Caballe1, Dawn M Wenzel2, Monica Agromayor1, Steven L Alam2, Jack J Skalicky2, Magdalena Kloc1, Jeremy G Carlton1, Leticia Labrador1, Wesley I Sundquist2, Juan Martin-Serrano1.
Abstract
The endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) machinery mediates the physical separation between daughter cells during cytokinetic abscission. This process is regulated by the abscission checkpoint, a genome protection mechanism that relies on Aurora B and the ESCRT-III subunit CHMP4C to delay abscission in response to chromosome missegregation. In this study, we show that Unc-51-like kinase 3 (ULK3) phosphorylates and binds ESCRT-III subunits via tandem MIT domains, and thereby, delays abscission in response to lagging chromosomes, nuclear pore defects, and tension forces at the midbody. Our structural and biochemical studies reveal an unusually tight interaction between ULK3 and IST1, an ESCRT-III subunit required for abscission. We also demonstrate that IST1 phosphorylation by ULK3 is an essential signal required to sustain the abscission checkpoint and that ULK3 and CHMP4C are functionally linked components of the timer that controls abscission in multiple physiological situations.Entities:
Keywords: ESCRT; ULK3; abscission checkpoint; biochemistry; cell biology; cytokinesis; human; phosphorylation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26011858 PMCID: PMC4475061 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.06547
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140