1. Academic Validation
  2. Essential roles of KIF4 and its binding partner PRC1 in organized central spindle midzone formation

Essential roles of KIF4 and its binding partner PRC1 in organized central spindle midzone formation

  • EMBO J. 2004 Aug 18;23(16):3237-48. doi: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7600347.
Yasuhiro Kurasawa 1 William C Earnshaw Yuko Mochizuki Naoshi Dohmae Kazuo Todokoro
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cell Fate Signaling Research Unit, RIKEN (The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research), Wako, Saitama, Japan.
Abstract

A number of proteins accumulate in the anaphase spindle midzone, but the interaction and precise role of these proteins in midzone organization remain obscure. Here, we found that the microtubule-bundling protein PRC1 bound separately to the three motor proteins, KIF4, MKLP1 and CENP-E, but not to the chromosomal passenger proteins. In KIF4-deficient cells, the central spindle was disorganized, and all midzone-associated proteins including PRC1 failed to concentrate at the midline, instead being dispersed along the loosened microtubule bundles of the central spindle. This suggests that KIF4 is essential for the organization of central spindles and for midzone formation. In PRC1-deficient cells, no midzone was formed, KIF4 and CENP-E did not localize to the disconnected half-spindle, and MKLP1 and chromosomal passenger proteins localized to discrete subdomains near microtubule plus ends in the half-spindle. Thus, PRC1 is required for interaction of the two half-spindles and for localization of KIF4 and CENP-E. These results suggest that KIF4 and its binding partner PRC1 play essential roles in the organization of central spindles and midzone formation.

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