An Auxin Inducible Degradation System to Study Mklp2 Functions in MDCK Epithelial Cells.

利用生长素诱导降解系统研究 MDCK 上皮细胞中 Mklp2 的功能

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作者:Rodriguez Morgane, Simon Valérie, Delaval Bénédicte, Vitre Benjamin
The auxin inducible degradation (AID) system, which allows for rapid and inducible degradation of a protein of interest, is an efficient technology to study protein function in cells. This system proves particularly useful to study cellular motors that can be involved in different mechanisms depending on the cell cycle stage. Mitotic kinesin-like protein 2 (Mklp2) is a member of the kinesin-6 family involved in intracellular trafficking both in interphase and mitosis. In mitosis, at anaphase onset, it relocates the chromosomal passenger complex (CPC), from the chromatin to the spindle midzone and equatorial cortex. Inhibition or knockdown of Mklp2 therefore leads to CPC re-localization defects and cytokinesis failure. Existing tools used to study Mklp2 functions in cells, including antibodies, siRNA, and small molecule inhibitors, allowed the identification of the general function of Mklp2 in mitosis. However, these tools induce different intermediate phenotypes during the course of mitosis, highlighting the need for an alternative Mklp2 perturbation approach. We report here a new tool to study the discrete localization of endogenous Mklp2 at different stages of the cell cycle combined with an AID tag that allows the study of the kinesin with high specificity, high efficiency, and high temporal resolution in MDCK (Madin-Darby canine kidney) epithelial cells. We show that upon auxin treatment, the acute and rapid degradation of Mklp2 results in delayed re-localization of CPC component Aurora-B to the spindle midzone during anaphase, cytokinesis failure, and cell binucleation. We validate the specificity of the system by rescuing Mklp2 expression and reversing the phenotypes. Overall, this new tool facilitates the study of endogenous Mklp2 localization and function at specific stages of the cell cycle and offers a highly specific method for exploring its roles in a nontransformed mammalian model cell line widely used to study epithelial organization and dynamics.

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