| Literature DB >> 30687396 |
Abstract
A faithful cell division is essential for proper cellular proliferation of all eukaryotic cells; indeed the correct segregation of the genetic material allows daughter cells to proceed into the cell cycle safely. Conversely, errors during chromosome partition generate aneuploid cells that have been associated to several human pathological conditions, including cancer. Given the importance of this issue, all the steps that lead to cell separation are finely regulated. The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a unicellular eukaryotic organism that divides asymmetrically and it is a suitable model system to study the regulation of cell division. Humans and budding yeast are distant 1 billion years of evolution, nonetheless several essential pathways, proteins, and cellular structures are conserved. Among these, the mitotic spindle is a key player in chromosome segregation and its correct morphogenesis and functioning is essential for genomic stability. In this review we will focus on molecular pathways and proteins involved in the control mitotic spindle morphogenesis and function that are conserved from yeast to humans and whose impairment is connected with the development of human diseases.Entities:
Keywords: SPB; aneuploidy; centrosome; genomic stability; mitotic spindle
Year: 2019 PMID: 30687396 PMCID: PMC6335322 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2018.00738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
FIGURE 1(A) graphic representation of the budding yeast spindle pole body. (B) the SPB and spindle cycle in budding yeast, some key regulators are indicated. (C) schematic structure of a metazoan centrosome. (D) centrosome duplication and maturation cycle, some key regulators are indicated. See text for details.
Summary of conserved genes involved in MTOC dynamics/signaling and the correlated genetic diseases.
| Disease | Protein function | Localization yeast/human | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plk1 | Glioma, several types of carcinoma, melanoma, colorectal cancers, breast cancer, prostate cancer | MTOC separation | SPB outerplaque/centrosome | |
| hSFI1 | – | MTOC duplication | SPB half bridge/centriole | |
| Centrin | – | MTOC duplication | SPB half bridge/centriole | |
| – | hPOC5 | Idiopathic scoliosis | Binds Centrin and hSFI1 | – |
| Centrosomin CDK5RAP2/Cnn | Autosomal primary recessive microcephaly (MCPH) | MTOC organization | SPB outer plaque/centrosome | |
| – | CEP63, CEP135, CEP152, CPAP/MCPH6, STIL/MCPH7 | Autosomal primary recessive microcephaly (MCPH) | Centriole duplication | Centrosome |
| – | ASPM, WDR62 | Autosomal primary recessive microcephaly (MCPH) | Centriole duplication | Spindle poles |
| Pericentrin | Microcephalic osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism 2 (MOPD2) | MTOC maturation | SPB central plaque/centrosome | |
| Centriolin | Stem cell myeloproliferative disorder (MPD) | MTOC signaling | SPB outer plaque/centriole | |
| Calmodulin | CPV Tachycardia, early-onset severe long QT syndrome (esLQT), idiopathic ventricular fibrillation (IVF) | Calcium binding protein (MTOC structure) | SPB central plaque/nucleus and cytoplasm | |
| GCP1 | Microcephaly, cortical dysplasia | γ-tubulin | SPB outer and inner plaque/centrosome | |
| GCP2 | Dilated cardiomyopathy | γ-tubulin small complex | SPB outer and inner plaque/centrosome | |
| GCP3 | Dilated cardiomyopathy | γ-tubulin small complex | SPB outer and inner plaque/centrosome | |
| MST1/2 | Breast cancer, soft tissue sarcoma | Signaling kinase (Hippo pathway) | SPB/spindle poles | |
| LATs/NDR | Breast cancer, astrocytoma | Signaling kinases (Hippo pathway) | SPB/spindle poles | |
| MOB1 | Colorectal and lung cancers | Co-activator (Hippo pathway) | SPB/spindle poles |