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Excess TPX2 Interferes with Microtubule Disassembly and Nuclei Reformation at Mitotic Exit

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Naso, Francesco D. 
Sterbini, Valentina 
Crecca, Elena 
Asteriti, Italia A. 
Russo, Alessandra D. 

Abstract

The microtubule-associated protein TPX2 is a key mitotic regulator that contributes through distinct pathways to spindle assembly. A well-characterised function of TPX2 is the activation, stabilisation and spindle localisation of the Aurora-A kinase. High levels of TPX2 are reported in tumours and the effects of its overexpression have been investigated in cancer cell lines, while little is known in non-transformed cells. Here we studied TPX2 overexpression in hTERT RPE-1 cells, using either the full length TPX2 or a truncated form unable to bind Aurora-A, to identify effects that are dependent—or independent—on its interaction with the kinase. We observe significant defects in mitotic spindle assembly and progression through mitosis that are more severe when overexpressed TPX2 is able to interact with Aurora-A. Furthermore, we describe a peculiar, and Aurora-A-interaction-independent, phenotype in telophase cells, with aberrantly stable microtubules interfering with nuclear reconstitution and the assembly of a continuous lamin B1 network, resulting in daughter cells displaying doughnut-shaped nuclei. Our results using non-transformed cells thus reveal a previously uncharacterised consequence of abnormally high TPX2 levels on the correct microtubule cytoskeleton remodelling and G1 nuclei reformation, at the mitosis-to-interphase transition.

Description

Keywords

TPX2, mitosis, spindle, nuclear envelope

Journal Title

Cells

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2073-4409

Volume Title

9

Publisher

MDPI
Sponsorship
Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (IG-17390)
Royal Society (IES/RE/170195)
Regione Lazio (85-2017-15348)