Litcius/Paper detail

The regulation of actin dynamics during cell division and malignancy.

Paulius Gibieža, Vilma Petrikaitė

2021PubMed34 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Actin is the most abundant protein in almost all the eukaryotic cells. Actin amino acid sequences are highly conserved and have not changed a lot during the progress of evolution, varying by no more than 20% in the completely different species, such as humans and algae. The network of actin filaments plays a crucial role in regulating cells' cytoskeleton that needs to undergo dynamic tuning and structural changes in order for various functional processes, such as cell motility, migration, adhesion, polarity establishment, cell growth and cell division, to take place in live cells. Owing to its fundamental role in the cell, actin is a prominent regulator of cell division, a process, whose success directly depends on morphological changes of actin cytoskeleton and correct segregation of duplicated chromosomes. Disorganization of actin framework during the last stage of cell division, known as cytokinesis, can lead to multinucleation and formation of polyploidy in post-mitotic cells, eventually developing into cancer. In this review, we will cover the principles of actin regulation during cell division and discuss how the control of actin dynamics is altered during the state of malignancy.

Topics & Concepts

CytokinesisCell biologyCell divisionBiologyMitosisActinActin remodelingActin cytoskeletonCell polarityCytoskeletonMotilityCellActin remodeling of neuronsGeneticsCellular Mechanics and InteractionsCancer Cells and MetastasisMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics