Abstract

Src family non-receptor-type tyrosine kinases regulate a wide variety of cellular events including cell cycle progression in G(2)/M phase. Here, we show that Src signaling regulates the terminal step in cytokinesis called abscission in HeLa cells. Abscission failure with an unusually elongated intercellular bridge containing the midbody is induced by treatment with the chemical Src inhibitors PP2 and SU6656 or expression of membrane-anchored Csk chimeras. By anti-phosphotyrosine immunofluorescence and live cell imaging, completion of abscission requires Src-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation during early stages of mitosis (before cleavage furrow formation), which is subsequently delivered to the midbody through Rab11-driven vesicle transport. Treatment with U0126, a MEK inhibitor, decreases tyrosine phosphorylation levels at the midbody, leading to abscission failure. Activated ERK by MEK-catalyzed dual phosphorylation on threonine and tyrosine residues in the TEY sequence, which is strongly detected by anti-phosphotyrosine antibody, is transported to the midbody in a Rab11-dependent manner. Src kinase activity during the early mitosis mediates ERK activation in late cytokinesis, indicating that Src-mediated signaling for abscission is spatially and temporally transmitted. Thus, these results suggest that recruitment of activated ERK, which is phosphorylated by MEK downstream of Src kinases, to the midbody plays an important role in completion of abscission.

Highlights

  • Overlapped region of plus ends of microtubules forms a dense structure called the midbody matrix [2, 3]

  • Phase of Mitosis Is Required for Abscission—There is emerging evidence that Src-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation signaling is involved in cell division, especially at the G2-M transition, cleavage furrow progression, and completion of cytokinesis [18, 43, 44]

  • Recruitment of activated ERK1/2, which are phosphorylated by MEK1/2 downstream of SFKs, to the midbody plays an important role in completion of abscission

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Summary

Introduction

Overlapped region of plus ends of microtubules forms a dense structure called the midbody matrix [2, 3]. We suggest that abscission is dependent on tyrosine phosphorylation signaling at the midbody, which is regulated by SFK kinase activity at the early phase of mitosis.

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