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An anillin-CIN85-SEPT9 complex promotes intercellular bridge maturation required for successful cytokinesis

Thomas C. Panagiotou, Anan Chen, Andrew Wilde

2022Cell Reports19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cleavage of one cell into two is the most dramatic event in the life of a cell. Plasma membrane fission occurs within a narrow intercellular bridge (ICB) between the daughter cells, but the mechanisms underlying ICB formation and maturation are poorly understood. Here we identify CIN85 as an ICB assembly factor and demonstrate its requirement for robust and timely cytokinesis. CIN85 interacts directly with the N-terminal region of anillin and SEPT9 and thereby facilitates SEPT9-containing filament localization to the plasma membrane of the ICB. In contrast, the C-terminal pleckstrin homology (PH) domain of anillin binds to septin units lacking SEPT9 but enriched in SEPT11. Anillin's interactions with distinct septin units are required to promote ICB elongation and maturation that, we propose, generate the physical space into which the abscission machinery is recruited to drive the final membrane scission event releasing two independent daughter cells.

Topics & Concepts

CytokinesisCell biologyBridge (graph theory)IntracellularSeptinChemistryBiologyCellAnatomyCell divisionBiochemistryPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsMitochondrial Function and Pathology
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