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Inheritance of the Golgi Apparatus and Cytokinesis Are Controlled by Degradation of GBF1
Author(s) -
Roberto Magliozzi,
Zunamys I. Carrero,
Teck Yew Low,
Laurensia Yuniati,
Christian ValdesQuezada,
Flore Kruiswijk,
Koen van Wijk,
Albert J. R. Heck,
Catherine Jackson,
Daniele Guardavaccaro
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.05.031
Subject(s) - cytokinesis , golgi apparatus , microbiology and biotechnology , inheritance (genetic algorithm) , biology , genetics , cell , endoplasmic reticulum , cell division , gene
Although much is known about how chromosome segregation is coupled to cell division, how intracellular organelles partition during mitotic division is poorly understood. We report that the phosphorylation-dependent degradation of the ARFGEF GBF1 regulates organelle trafficking during cell division. We show that, in mitosis, GBF1 is phosphorylated on Ser292 and Ser297 by casein kinase-2 allowing recognition by the F-box protein βTrCP. GBF1 interaction with βTrCP recruits GBF1 to the SCF βTrCP ubiquitin ligase complex, triggering its degradation. Phosphorylation and degradation of GBF1 occur along microtubules at the intercellular bridge of telophase cells and are required for Golgi membrane positioning and postmitotic Golgi reformation. Indeed, expression of a non-degradable GBF1 mutant inhibits the transport of the Golgi cluster adjacent to the midbody toward the Golgi twin positioned next to the centrosome and results in defective Golgi reassembly and cytokinesis failure. These findings define a mechanism that controls postmitotic Golgi reassembly and inheritance.

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