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Publication : Microtubule minus-end regulation at spindle poles by an ASPM-katanin complex.

First Author  Jiang K Year  2017
Journal  Nat Cell Biol Volume  19
Issue  5 Pages  480-492
PubMed ID  28436967 Mgi Jnum  J:242409
Mgi Id  MGI:5905207 Doi  10.1038/ncb3511
Citation  Jiang K, et al. (2017) Microtubule minus-end regulation at spindle poles by an ASPM-katanin complex. Nat Cell Biol 19(5):480-492
abstractText  ASPM (known as Asp in fly and ASPM-1 in worm) is a microcephaly-associated protein family that regulates spindle architecture, but the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that ASPM forms a complex with another protein linked to microcephaly, the microtubule-severing ATPase katanin. ASPM and katanin localize to spindle poles in a mutually dependent manner and regulate spindle flux. X-ray crystallography revealed that the heterodimer formed by the N- and C-terminal domains of the katanin subunits p60 and p80, respectively, binds conserved motifs in ASPM. Reconstitution experiments demonstrated that ASPM autonomously tracks growing microtubule minus ends and inhibits their growth, while katanin decorates and bends both ends of dynamic microtubules and potentiates the minus-end blocking activity of ASPM. ASPM also binds along microtubules, recruits katanin and promotes katanin-mediated severing of dynamic microtubules. We propose that the ASPM-katanin complex controls microtubule disassembly at spindle poles and that misregulation of this process can lead to microcephaly.
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