Kinesins to the core: The role of microtubule-based motor proteins in building the mitotic spindle midzone.

Semin Cell Dev Biol

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Robert H. Lurie Cancer Center, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.

Published: May 2010

In mammalian cultured cells the initiation of cytokinesis is regulated - both temporally and spatially - by the overlapping, anti-parallel microtubules of the spindle midzone. This region recruits several key central spindle components: PRC-1, polo-like kinase 1 (Plk-1), the centralspindlin complex, and the chromosome passenger complex (CPC), which together serve to stabilize the microtubule overlap, and also to coordinate the assembly of the cortical actin/myosin cytoskeleton necessary to physically cleave the cell in two. The localization of these crucial elements to the spindle midzone requires members of the kinesin superfamily of microtubule-based motor proteins. Here we focus on reviewing the role played by a variety of kinesins in both building and operating the spindle midzone machinery during cytokinesis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3951275PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.semcdb.2010.01.017DOI Listing

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