4.6 Article

Dimerization of CPAP Orchestrates Centrosome Cohesion Plasticity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 285, Issue 4, Pages 2488-2497

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.042614

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK-56292, CA89019, CA92080, CA118948, G12RR03034]
  2. Chinese Academy of Science [KSCX1YW-R65, KSCX2-YW-H10]
  3. Chinese 973 Project [2002CB713700, 2006CB943600, 2007CB914503, 2010CB912103, 2006AA02A247]
  4. Chinese Natural Science Foundation [30270654, 30070349, 90508002, 30121001, 30871236, 90813008, 30870990]
  5. China National Key Projects for Infectious Disease [2008ZX10002-021]
  6. American Cancer Society [RPG-99-173-01]
  7. Georgia Cancer Coalition Breast Cancer
  8. Atlanta Clinical and Translational Science Award Chemical Biology [P20RR011104]

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Centrosome cohesion and segregation are accurately regulated to prevent an aberrant separation of duplicated centrosomes and to ensure the correct formation of bipolar spindles by a tight coupling with cell cycle machinery. CPAP is a centrosome protein with five coiled-coil domains and plays an important role in the control of brain size in autosomal recessive primary microcephaly. Previous studies showed that CPAP interacts with tubulin and controls centriole length. Here, we reported that CPAP forms a homodimer during interphase, and the fifth coiled-coil domain of CPAP is required for its dimerization. Moreover, this self-interaction is required for maintaining centrosome cohesion and preventing the centrosome from splitting before the G2/M phase. Our biochemical studies show that CPAP forms homodimers in vivo. In addition, both monomeric and dimeric CPAP are required for accurate cell division, suggesting that the temporal dynamics of CPAP homodimerization is tightly regulated during the cell cycle. Significantly, our results provide evidence that CPAP is phosphorylated during mitosis, and this phosphorylation releases its intermolecular interaction. Taken together, these results suggest that cell cycle-regulated phosphorylation orchestrates the dynamics of CPAP molecular interaction and centrosome splitting to ensure genomic stability in cell division.

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