iScience (May 2019)

Centrosomal Actin Assembly Is Required for Proper Mitotic Spindle Formation and Chromosome Congression

  • Matthias Plessner,
  • Julian Knerr,
  • Robert Grosse

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
pp. 274 – 281

Abstract

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Summary: Cytoskeletal cross talk between actin filaments and microtubules is a common mechanism governing the assembly of cellular structures, i.e., during filopodia formation or cilia organization. However, potential actin-microtubule interactions during mammalian cell divisions are less well understood. At mitotic entry, centrosomes propagate the formation of the mitotic spindle, thereby aligning individual chromosomes to the metaphase plate, a process coined chromosome congression. Here, we identify actin filament assembly spatially defined at centrosomes contemporaneously with spindle microtubules forming during prometaphase. We show that pharmacological Arp2/3 complex inhibition as well as overexpression of the Arp2/3 complex inhibitory protein Arpin decreased spindle actin. As a consequence, mitotic spindle formation is impaired, which resulted in disorganized chromosome congression and ultimately mitotic defects in non-transformed cells. Thus centrosomal Arp2/3 complex activity plays a role in the maintenance of genomic integrity during mitosis. : Biological Sciences; Cell Biology; Organizational Aspects of Cell Biology; Functional Aspects of Cell Biology Subject Areas: Biological Sciences, Cell Biology, Organizational Aspects of Cell Biology, Functional Aspects of Cell Biology