4.5 Article

The centriolar satellite protein Cep131 is important for genome stability

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 125, Issue 20, Pages 4770-4779

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.104059

Keywords

Centrosomal satellite proteins; Cep131; AZI1; Genome stability

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Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK (CR-UK)
  2. Yorkshire Cancer Research (YCR)
  3. Cancer Research UK [11581, 12102] Funding Source: researchfish

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The centrosome acts as a centre for microtubule organisation and plays crucial roles in cell polarity, migration, growth and division. Cep131 has recently been described as a basal body component essential for cilium formation, but its function in non-ciliogenic cells is unknown. We identified human Cep131 (also known as AZI1) in a screen for regulators of genome stability. We show that centrosomal localisation of Cep131 is cell-cycle-regulated and requires both an intact microtubule network and a functional dynein-dynactin transport system. Cep131 is recruited to centriolar satellites by PCM1, and localised to the centriolar core region by both pericentrin and Cep290. Depletion of Cep131 results in a reduction in proliferation rate, centriole amplification, an increased frequency of multipolar mitosis, chromosomal instability and an increase in post-mitotic DNA damage. These data therefore highlight the importance of human Cep131 for maintaining genomic integrity.

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