학술논문

A mitotic kinase scaffold depleted in testicular seminomas impacts spindle orientation in germ line stem cells.
Document Type
article
Source
eLife. 4(September)
Subject
Germ Cells
Stem Cells
Animals
Mice
Knockout
Humans
Mice
Seminoma
Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases
Cell Cycle Proteins
Proto-Oncogene Proteins
Cell Division
A Kinase Anchor Proteins
Spindle Apparatus
Aurora Kinase A
biochemistry
cell biology
cell regulation
human
mitotic spindle
mouse
protein kinase
signal transduction
testicular cancer
Knockout
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Language
Abstract
Correct orientation of the mitotic spindle in stem cells underlies organogenesis. Spindle abnormalities correlate with cancer progression in germ line-derived tumors. We discover a macromolecular complex between the scaffolding protein Gravin/AKAP12 and the mitotic kinases, Aurora A and Plk1, that is down regulated in human seminoma. Depletion of Gravin correlates with an increased mitotic index and disorganization of seminiferous tubules. Biochemical, super-resolution imaging, and enzymology approaches establish that this Gravin scaffold accumulates at the mother spindle pole during metaphase. Manipulating elements of the Gravin-Aurora A-Plk1 axis prompts mitotic delay and prevents appropriate assembly of astral microtubules to promote spindle misorientation. These pathological responses are conserved in seminiferous tubules from Gravin(-/-) mice where an overabundance of Oct3/4 positive germ line stem cells displays randomized orientation of mitotic spindles. Thus, we propose that Gravin-mediated recruitment of Aurora A and Plk1 to the mother (oldest) spindle pole contributes to the fidelity of symmetric cell division.