CDK1-dependent N-terminal NuMA phosphorylation promotes dynein-dynactin-NuMA assembly for accurate chromosome segregation

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The microtubule-based motor dynein and its cofactor dynactin fulfil essential functions throughout the cell cycle, including organelle transport and mitotic spindle assembly. To achieve these diverse functions, dynein-dynactin associates with different activating adaptors. Nuclear Mitotic Apparatus (NuMA) is a mitosis-specific adaptor that connects dynein-dynactin with microtubules to focus mitotic spindle poles. NuMA’s C-terminal microtubule-binding activity is promoted by mitotic phosphorylation, but regulation of NuMA’s N-terminal interaction with dynein-dynactin remains unclear. Here, we combine a membrane-tethering assay, quantitative proteomics, and live functional analyses in human cells to show that the interaction between NuMA’s N-terminus and dynein-dynactin is cell cycle-regulated and driven by mitotic phosphorylation. We identify highly conserved CDK1 consensus sites proximal to NuMA’s dynein heavy chain-binding site, which are phosphorylated by CDK1-Cyclin B1 in cells and in vitro . This CDK1-dependent phosphorylation, together with NuMA’s Spindly-like motif, is crucial for stable dynein-dynactin-NuMA (DDN) complex formation. Replacement of endogenous NuMA with phosphorylation-deficient NuMA mutants leads to aberrant dynein distribution on mitotic spindles, resulting in chromosome mis-segregation and micronucleus formation. Together, our results highlight CDK1-dependent N-terminal NuMA phosphorylation as a crucial mitotic switch that constitutes a regulatable core of multivalent interactions with dynein-dynactin to assemble stable DDN complexes for accurate chromosome segregation.

Article activity feed