4.6 Article

The Centrosomal Adaptor TACC3 and the Microtubule Polymerase chTOG Interact via Defined C-terminal Subdomains in an Aurora-A Kinase-independent Manner

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 1, Pages 74-88

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.532333

Keywords

Centrosome; Microtubules; Mitosis; Mitotic Spindle; Protein Domains; Aurora-A; Coiled-Coil; Protein Interaction; TACC3; chTOG

Funding

  1. NRW (North Rhine-Westphalia) graduate school BioStruct
  2. Biological Structures in Molecular Medicine and Biotechnology
  3. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 728/TP A5]
  4. research commission of the medical faculty of the Heinrich-Heine-University
  5. strategic research fund of the Heinrich-Heine-University
  6. International Graduate School of Protein Science and Technology (iGRASP)
  7. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (NGFNplus program) [01GS08100]

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The cancer-associated, centrosomal adaptor protein TACC3 (transforming acidic coiled-coil 3) and its direct effector, the microtubule polymerase chTOG (colonic and hepatic tumor overexpressed gene), play a crucial function in centrosome-driven mitotic spindle assembly. It is unclear how TACC3 interacts with chTOG. Here, we show that the C-terminal TACC domain of TACC3 and a C-terminal fragment adjacent to the TOG domains of chTOG mediate the interaction between these two proteins. Interestingly, the TACC domain consists of two functionally distinct subdomains, CC1 (amino acids (aa) 414-530) and CC2 (aa 530-630). Whereas CC1 is responsible for the interaction with chTOG, CC2 performs an intradomain interaction with the central repeat region of TACC3, thereby masking the TACC domain before effector binding. Contrary to previous findings, our data clearly demonstrate that Aurora-A kinase does not regulate TACC3-chTOG complex formation, indicating that Aurora-A solely functions as a recruitment factor for the TACC3-chTOG complex to centrosomes and proximal mitotic spindles. We identified with CC1 and CC2, two functionally diverse modules within the TACC domain of TACC3 that modulate and mediate, respectively, TACC3 interaction with chTOG required for spindle assembly and microtubule dynamics during mitotic cell division.

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