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Published May 2014 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Differing requirements for Augmin in male meiotic and mitotic spindle formation in Drosophila

Abstract

Animal cells divide using a microtubule-based, bipolar spindle. Both somatic, mitotic cells and sperm-producing male meiotic spermatocytes use centrosome-dependent and acentrosomal spindle-forming mechanisms. Here, we characterize the largely undefined, centrosome-independent spindle formation pathway used during male meiosis. Our live and fixed cell analyses of Drosophila spermatocytes reveal that acentrosomal microtubules are nucleated at kinetochores and in the vicinity of chromatin and that together these assemble into functional spindles. Mutational studies indicate that γ-tubulin and its extra-centrosomal targeting complex, Augmin, are vital for this process. In addition, Augmin facilitates efficient spindle assembly in the presence of centrosomes. In contrast to the pronounced recruitment of Augmin on spindles in other cell types, the complex is absent from those of spermatocytes but does accumulate on kinetochores. Polo kinase facilitates this kinetochore recruitment while inhibiting Augmin's spindle association, and this in turn dictates γ-tubulin distribution and spindle density. Polo's negative regulation of Augmin in male meiosis contrasts with its requirement in loading Augmin along mitotic spindles in somatic Drosophila cells. Together our data identify a novel mechanism of acentrosomal spindle formation in spermatocytes and reveal its divergence from that used in mitotic cells.

Additional Information

© 2014 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited. Received: 11 March 2014. Accepted: 14 April 2014. We would like to thank the following for their kind gift of reagents: H. Ohkura and J. Wakefield for flies and G. Goshima and P. Somma for providing Dgt5 and Dgt6 antibodies, respectively. We acknowledge the Segal and Glover laboratories for insightful discussions and Zs. Venkei and Y. Ladak for allowing us to use the Aurora B::mCherry flies prior to publication. M.S.S. designed, carried out and analysed the experiments. The authors declare they have no competing financial interests. This work was made possible by a CRUK Programme Grant to D.M.G.

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