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  5. Cyclophilin A Isomerisation of Septin 2 Mediates Abscission during Cytokinesis
 
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Cyclophilin A Isomerisation of Septin 2 Mediates Abscission during Cytokinesis

Author(s)
Gorry, Rebecca L.  
Brennan, Kieran  
Lavin, Paul T. M.  
Mazurski, Tayler  
Mary, Charline  
Matallanas, David  
Guichou, Jean-François  
Mc Gee, Margaret M.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/27835
Date Issued
2023-07-04
Date Available
2025-04-01T11:06:23Z
Abstract
The isomerase activity of Cyclophilin A is important for midbody abscission during cell division, however, to date, midbody substrates remain unknown. In this study, we report that the GTP-binding protein Septin 2 interacts with Cyclophilin A. We highlight a dynamic series of Septin 2 phenotypes at the midbody, previously undescribed in human cells. Furthermore, Cyclophilin A depletion or loss of isomerase activity is sufficient to induce phenotypic Septin 2 defects at the midbody. Structural and molecular analysis reveals that Septin 2 proline 259 is important for interaction with Cyclophilin A. Moreover, an isomerisation-deficient EGFP-Septin 2 proline 259 mutant displays defective midbody localisation and undergoes impaired abscission, which is consistent with data from cells with loss of Cyclophilin A expression or activity. Collectively, these data reveal Septin 2 as a novel interacting partner and isomerase substrate of Cyclophilin A at the midbody that is required for abscission during cytokinesis in cancer cells.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
University College Dublin
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
MDPI AG
Journal
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume
24
Issue
13
Copyright (Published Version)
2023 the Authors
Subjects

Humans

Cyclophilin A

Cytokinesis

Septins

Cell division

Hela cells

DOI
10.3390/ijms241311084
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1661-6596
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
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Cyclophilin A Isomerisation of Septin 2 Mediates Abscission during Cytokinesis.pdf

Size

2.85 MB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

8b38a4d0d935d7d8454d0b8130b3874e

Owning collection
Medicine Research Collection
Mapped collections
Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Research Collection•
Conway Institute Research Collection•
SBI Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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