Abstract

CLIP-170, the founding member of microtubule "plus ends tracking" proteins, is involved in many critical microtubule-related functions, including recruitment of dynactin to the microtubule plus ends and formation of kinetochore-microtubule attachments during metaphase. Although it has been reported that CLIP-170 is a phosphoprotein, neither have individual phosphorylation sites been identified nor have the associated kinases been extensively studied. Herein, we identify Cdc2 as a kinase that phosphorylates CLIP-170. We show that Cdc2 interacts with CLIP-170 mediating its phosphorylation on Thr(287) in vivo. Significantly, expression of CLIP-170 with a threonine 287 to alanine substitution (T287A) results in its mislocalization, accumulation of Plk1 and cyclin B, and block of the G2/M transition. Finally, we found that depletion of CLIP-170 leads to centrosome reduplication and that Cdc2 phosphorylation of CLIP-170 is required for the process. These results demonstrate that Cdc2-mediated phosphorylation of CLIP-170 is essential for the normal function of this protein during cell cycle progression.

Highlights

  • A variety of organisms have demonstrated that Cytoplasmic linker protein (CLIP)-170 plays an important role in microtubule dynamics [6, 7]

  • We provide evidence that Cdc2 phosphorylates CLIP-170 at Thr287, and the Cdc2-mediated phosphorylation of CLIP-170 is essential for its localization at microtubule plus ends in the G2 phase and the G2/M transition

  • Metabolic Labeling and Phosphopeptide Mapping—HEK293T cells were transfected with GFP-CLIP-170 (WT or T287A) and treated with 100 ng mlϪ1 of nocodazole for 10 h to arrest cells in mitosis

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Summary

Introduction

A variety of organisms have demonstrated that CLIP-170 plays an important role in microtubule dynamics [6, 7]. The increased level of GFP-CLIP-170 that co-immunoprecipitates with Cdc2 in nocodazole-treated cells suggests a substrate/kinase partnership in mitosis.

Results
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