The mitotic spindle kinase MSK co-ordinates segregation of the nucleus and kinetoplast in Leishmania mexicana
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Replication and segregation of the nucleus and kinetoplast, the mitochondrial DNA, are tightly coordinated in trypanosomatid parasites, but the signalling pathways that govern this process are unknown. Here, we characterise the mitotic spindle kinase (MSK), a key regulator of this coordination in Leishmania . Using chemical genetics, we engineered an analog-sensitive MSK to inhibit its activity. We show that inhibition of MSK impairs mitotic spindle elongation and blocks both nuclear and kinetoplast segregation, halting cell cycle progression and leading to cell death. We combined chemical genetics with proximity-based phosphoproteomics to identify four substrates: two GTPase-activating proteins, a nuclear segregation protein, and a hypothetical protein. We demonstrate that MSK co-localises with these four proteins in the nucleus, mitotic spindle, kinetoplast, and cytoplasm. Our findings establish MSK as a critical kinase that controls the co-ordinated segregation of the nucleus and kinetoplast, providing a new avenue for understanding cell cycle regulation in Leishmania .