Regulation of midzone microtubule dynamics and abscission in human cells by CAMSAP2 and Kif2a

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Regulation of midzone microtubule dynamics and abscission in human cells by CAMSAP2 and Kif2a

Authors

Fermino do Rosario, C.; Walsh, E.; Stephens, A. D.; Wadsworth, P.

Abstract

The spindle midzone, an array of overlapping, antiparallel microtubules, contributes to chromosome segregation and cytokinesis. As cells exit mitosis, midzone microtubules reorganize to form the midbody, the location of cell abscission. The mechanisms governing microtubule dynamics during this transition remain incompletely understood. The microtubule depolymerase, Kif2a, has been shown to contribute to midzone microtubule length control (Uehara et al., 2013), but how the depolymerase is regulated is not understood. Since CAMSAPs govern minus-end microtubule dynamics, we examined their role in midzone microtubule behavior. CAMSAP2, the major CAMSAP in HeLa cells, localized to the minus-ends of midzone microtubules and cells depleted of CAMSAP2, showed similar phenotypes as cells depleted of Kif2a, including elongated and bent midzones and enlarged asters. Next, we localized Kif2a in CAMSAP2-depleted cells and vice versa. CAMSAP2 remained present and extended along elongated midzone microtubules in Kif2a-depleted cells. In contrast, Kif2a localization was no longer present at microtubule minus-ends but retained at plus-ends in CAMSAP2-depleted cells. In long-term live-cell movies of CAMSAP2-depleted cells abscission at the midbody was not detected, although two daughter cells formed. Markers for abscission including ESCRT-III component CHMP2A and Spastin were mislocalized, and midzone overlap zones, marked by PRC1, were extended. Together, our results demonstrate that CAMSAP2 is essential for midzone microtubule organization and dynamics, ultimately impacting cell abscission.

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