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Novel interactors and a role for supervillin in early cytokinesis
Author(s) -
Smith Tara C.,
Fang Zhiyou,
Luna Elizabeth J.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
cytoskeleton
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.95
H-Index - 86
eISSN - 1949-3592
pISSN - 1949-3584
DOI - 10.1002/cm.20449
Subject(s) - cytokinesis , biology , midbody , microbiology and biotechnology , mitosis , cell division , asymmetric cell division , genetics , cell
Supervillin, the largest member of the villin/gelsolin/flightless family, is a peripheral membrane protein that regulates each step of cell motility, including cell spreading. Most known interactors bind within its amino (N)‐terminus. We show here that the supervillin carboxy (C)‐terminus can be modeled as supervillin‐specific loops extending from gelsolin‐like repeats plus a villin‐like headpiece. We have identified 27 new candidate interactors from yeast two‐hybrid screens. The interacting sequences from 12 of these proteins (BUB1, EPLIN/LIMA1, FLNA, HAX1, KIF14, KIFC3, MIF4GD/SLIP1, ODF2/Cenexin, RHAMM, STARD9/KIF16A, Tks5/SH3PXD2A, TNFAIP1) co‐localize with and mis‐localize EGFP‐supervillin in mammalian cells, suggesting associations in vivo. Supervillin‐interacting sequences within BUB1, FLNA, HAX1, and MIF4GD also mimic supervillin over‐expression by inhibiting cell spreading. Most new interactors have known roles in supervillin‐associated processes, e.g. cell motility, membrane trafficking, ERK signaling, and matrix invasion; three (KIF14, KIFC3, STARD9/KIF16A) have kinesin motor domains; and five (EPLIN, KIF14, BUB1, ODF2/cenexin, RHAMM) are important for cell division. GST fusions of the supervillin G2‐G3 or G4‐G6 repeats co‐sediment KIF14 and EPLIN, respectively, consistent with a direct association. Supervillin depletion leads to increased numbers of bi‐ and multi‐nucleated cells. Cytokinesis failure occurs predominately during early cytokinesis. Supervillin localizes with endogenous myosin II and EPLIN in the cleavage furrow, and overlaps with the oncogenic kinesin, KIF14, at the midbody. We conclude that supervillin, like its interactors, is important for efficient cytokinesis. Our results also suggest that supervillin and its interaction partners coordinate actin and microtubule motor functions throughout the cell cycle. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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