| Literature DB >> 27595611 |
Yasuharu Kushida1,2, Masak Takaine1,3, Kentaro Nakano1, Toshiro Sugai1, Krishna Kumar Vasudevan4, Mayukh Guha4, Yu-Yang Jiang4, Jacek Gaertig4, Osamu Numata1.
Abstract
Ciliates such as Tetrahymena thermophila have two distinct nuclei within one cell: the micronucleus that undergoes mitosis and meiosis and the macronucleus that undergoes amitosis, a type of nuclear division that does not involve a bipolar spindle, but still relies on intranuclear microtubules. Ciliates provide an opportunity for the discovery of factors that specifically contribute to chromosome segregation based on a bipolar spindle, by identification of factors that affect the micronuclear but not the macronuclear division. Kinesin-14 is a conserved minus-end directed microtubule motor that cross-links microtubules and contributes to the bipolar spindle sizing and organization. Here, we use homologous DNA recombination to knock out genes that encode kinesin-14 orthologues (KIN141, KIN142) in Tetrahymena. A loss of KIN141 led to severe defects in the chromosome segregation during both mitosis and meiosis but did not affect amitosis. A loss of KIN141 altered the shape of the meiotic spindle in a way consistent with the KIN141's contribution to the organization of the spindle poles. EGFP-tagged KIN141 preferentially accumulated at the spindle poles during the meiotic prophase and metaphase I. Thus, in ciliates, kinesin-14 is important for nuclear divisions that involve a bipolar spindle.Entities:
Keywords: Macronucleus; micronucleus; microtubule; minus-end motors; spindle
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27595611 DOI: 10.1111/jeu.12366
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eukaryot Microbiol ISSN: 1066-5234 Impact factor: 3.346