4.8 Article

The Plant TPX2 Protein Regulates Prospindle Assembly before Nuclear Envelope Breakdown

Journal

PLANT CELL
Volume 20, Issue 10, Pages 2783-2797

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1105/tpc.107.056796

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Ministere de l'Enseignement Supe rieur et de la Recherche
  2. COMBIO European Commission STREP Program [STREP 503568]
  3. Spanish grants [HF-2006-0067, BFU2006-04694, CSD2006-00023]
  4. European Union [MRTN/CT2004 512348]
  5. ICREA Funding Source: Custom

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Targeting Protein for Xklp2 (TPX2) is a central regulator of spindle assembly in vertebrate cells. The absence or excess of TPX2 inhibits spindle formation. We have defined a TPX2 signature motif that is present once in vertebrate sequences but twice in plants. Plant TPX2 is predominantly nuclear during interphase and is actively exported before nuclear envelope breakdown to initiate prospindle assembly. It localizes to the spindle microtubules but not to the interdigitating polar microtubules during anaphase or to the phragmoplast as it is rapidly degraded during telophase. We characterized the Arabidopsis thaliana TPX2-targeting domains and show that the protein is able to rescue microtubule assembly in TPX2-depleted Xenopus laevis egg extracts. Injection of antibodies to TPX2 into living plant cells inhibits the onset of mitosis. These results demonstrate that plant TPX2 already functions before nuclear envelope breakdown. Thus, plants have adapted nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of TPX2 to maintain proper spindle assembly without centrosomes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available