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The γ-tubulin-specific inhibitor gatastatin reveals temporal requirements of microtubule nucleation during the cell cycle

Authors :
Judith Pagel
Haruka Takeno
Elmar Schiebel
Tien-chen Lin
Yoshiki Hayashi
Peng Liu
Hideo Kigoshi
Yasushi Okada
Tomohiro Shima
Shuya Shioda
Oliver J. Gruss
Berati Cerikan
Ichiro Hayakawa
Yoshio Hayashi
Takeo Usui
Takumi Chinen
Source :
Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

Inhibitors of microtubule (MT) assembly or dynamics that target α/β-tubulin are widely exploited in cancer therapy and biological research. However, specific inhibitors of the MT nucleator γ-tubulin that would allow testing temporal functions of γ-tubulin during the cell cycle are yet to be identified. By evolving β-tubulin-binding drugs we now find that the glaziovianin A derivative gatastatin is a γ-tubulin-specific inhibitor. Gatastatin decreased interphase MT dynamics of human cells without affecting MT number. Gatastatin inhibited assembly of the mitotic spindle in prometaphase. Addition of gatastatin to preformed metaphase spindles altered MT dynamics, reduced the number of growing MTs and shortened spindle length. Furthermore, gatastatin prolonged anaphase duration by affecting anaphase spindle structure, indicating the continuous requirement of MT nucleation during mitosis. Thus, gatastatin facilitates the dissection of the role of γ-tubulin during the cell cycle and reveals the sustained role of γ-tubulin.<br />Current microtubule inhibitors target α/β-tubulin, but no specific inhibitor of γ-tubulin has been developed. Here the authors present gatastatin as a γ-tubulin inhibitor and use it to probe the role of γ-tubulin during the cell cycle.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41976e7d7a6ba2239a8024867f63f1ab
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9722