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Fam96b recruits brain-type creatine kinase to fuel mitotic spindle formation

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DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2022.119410

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ATP homeostasis; Brain-type creatine kinase; Fam96b; Mitosis; Spindle apparatus; Phosphocreatine-creatine kinase shuttle

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This study uncovered the molecular mechanism of cytosolic CK recruitment by the mitotic apparatus, showing that Fam96b acts as a scaffold protein to coordinate ATP supply and Fe/S cluster homeostasis during mitosis. Depletion of Fam96b or CKB resulted in mitotic defects, impaired cell proliferation, increased cell death, and aberrant cell cycle progression.
Mitosis is a complicated and ordered process with high energy demands and metabolite fluxes. Cytosolic creatine kinase (CK), an enzyme involved in ATP homeostasis, has been shown to be essential to chromosome movement during mitotic anaphase in sea urchin. However, it remains elusive for the molecular mechanism underlying the recruitment of cytosolic CK by the mitotic apparatus. In this study, Fam96b/MIP18, a component of the MMXD complex with a function in Fe/S cluster supply, was identified as a brain-type CK (CKB)-binding protein. The binding of Fam96b with CKB was independent of the presence of CKB substrates and did not interfere with CKB activity. Fam96b was prone to oligomerize via the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds, while the binding of enzymatically active CKB could modulate Fam96b oligomerization. Oligomerized Fam96b recruited CKB and the MMXD complex to associate with the mitotic spindle. Depletion of Fam96b or CKB by siRNA in the HeLa cells led to mitotic defects, which further resulted in retarded cell proliferation, increased cell death and aberrant cell cycle progression. Rescue experiments indicated that both Fam96b oligomerization and CKB activity were essential to the proper formation of mitotic spindle. These findings suggest that Fam96b may act as a scaffold protein to coordinate the supply and homeostasis of ATP and Fe/S clusters during mitosis.

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