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Katanin is an evolutionarily conserved microtubule (MT)-severing complex implicated in multiple aspects of MT dynamics. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the katanin homologue MEI-1 is required for meiosis, but must be inactivated before mitosis. Here we show that PPFR-1, a regulatory subunit of a trimeric protein phosphatase 4 complex, enhanced katanin MT-severing activity during C. elegans meiosis. Loss of ppfr-1, similarly to the inactivation of MT severing, caused a specific defect in meiosis II spindle disassembly. We show that a fraction of PPFR-1 was degraded after meiosis, contributing to katanin inactivation. PPFR-1 interacted with MEL-26, the substrate recognition subunit of the CUL-3 RING E3 ligase (CRL3(MEL-26)), which also targeted MEI-1 for post-meiotic degradation. Reversible protein phosphorylation of MEI-1 may ensure temporal activation of the katanin complex during meiosis, whereas CRL3(MEL-26)-mediated degradation of both MEI-1 and its activator PPFR-1 ensure efficient katanin inactivation in the transition to mitosis.

Citation

José-Eduardo Gomes, Nicolas Tavernier, Bénédicte Richaudeau, Etienne Formstecher, Thomas Boulin, Paul E Mains, Julien Dumont, Lionel Pintard. Microtubule severing by the katanin complex is activated by PPFR-1-dependent MEI-1 dephosphorylation. The Journal of cell biology. 2013 Aug 05;202(3):431-9

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PMID: 23918937

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