4.8 Article

The Greatwall kinase safeguards the genome integrity by affecting the kinome activity in mitosis

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 39, Issue 44, Pages 6816-6840

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-020-01470-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Biomedical Research Council (BMRC), Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR)
  2. Bomedial Research Council-Young investigator Grant 2016 [1610151039]
  3. Bomedial Research Council-Young investigator Grant 2015
  4. MSCA-IF-2018 [843107]
  5. Innoviris BB2B-Attract [RBC/BFB1]
  6. Biomedical Research Council-Joint Council Office Grant [1231AFG031]
  7. National Medical Research Council Singapore, NMRC [NMRC/CBRG/0091/2015]
  8. National Research Foundation Singapore [NRF2016-CRP001-103]
  9. Faculty of Medicine, Lund University
  10. Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research [IRC15-0067]
  11. Swedish Research Council, Strategic Research Area EXODIAB [2009-1039]

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Progression through mitosis is balanced by the timely regulation of phosphorylation and dephosphorylation events ensuring the correct segregation of chromosomes before cytokinesis. This balance is regulated by the opposing actions of CDK1 and PP2A, as well as the Greatwall kinase/MASTL. MASTL is commonly overexpressed in cancer, which makes it a potential therapeutic anticancer target. Loss ofMastlinduces multiple chromosomal errors that lead to the accumulation of micronuclei and multilobulated cells in mitosis. Our analyses revealed that loss ofMastlleads to chromosome breaks and abnormalities impairing correct segregation. Phospho-proteomic data forMastlknockout cells revealed alterations in proteins implicated in multiple processes during mitosis including double-strand DNA damage repair. In silico prediction of the kinases with affected activity unveiled NEK2 to be regulated in the absence ofMastl. We uncovered that, RAD51AP1, involved in regulation of homologous recombination, is phosphorylated by NEK2 and CDK1 but also efficiently dephosphorylated by PP2A/B55. Our results suggest thatMastlKOdisturbs the equilibrium of the mitotic phosphoproteome that leads to the disruption of DNA damage repair and triggers an accumulation of chromosome breaks even in noncancerous cells.

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