Bicaudal D2, Dynein, and Kinesin-1 Associate with Nuclear Pore Complexes and Regulate Centrosome and Nuclear Positioning during Mitotic Entry

Daniël Splinter(Erasmus MC), Marvin E. Tanenbaum(Utrecht University), Arne Lindqvist(University Medical Center Utrecht), Dick Jaarsma(Erasmus MC), Annette Flotho, Ka Lou Yu(Erasmus MC), Ilya Grigoriev(Erasmus MC), Dieuwke Engelsma(Oncode Institute), Elize D. Haasdijk(Erasmus MC), Nanda Keijzer(Erasmus MC), Jeroen Demmers(Erasmus MC), Maarten Fornerod(The Netherlands Cancer Institute), Frauke Melchior, Casper C. Hoogenraad(Erasmus MC), René H. Medema(University Medical Center Utrecht), Anna Akhmanova(Erasmus MC)
PLoS Biology
April 6, 2010
Cited by 339Open Access
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Abstract

BICD2 is one of the two mammalian homologues of the Drosophila Bicaudal D, an evolutionarily conserved adaptor between microtubule motors and their cargo that was previously shown to link vesicles and mRNP complexes to the dynein motor. Here, we identified a G2-specific role for BICD2 in the relative positioning of the nucleus and centrosomes in dividing cells. By combining mass spectrometry, biochemical and cell biological approaches, we show that the nuclear pore complex (NPC) component RanBP2 directly binds to BICD2 and recruits it to NPCs specifically in G2 phase of the cell cycle. BICD2, in turn, recruits dynein-dynactin to NPCs and as such is needed to keep centrosomes closely tethered to the nucleus prior to mitotic entry. When dynein function is suppressed by RNA interference-mediated depletion or antibody microinjection, centrosomes and nuclei are actively pushed apart in late G2 and we show that this is due to the action of kinesin-1. Surprisingly, depletion of BICD2 inhibits both dynein and kinesin-1-dependent movements of the nucleus and cytoplasmic NPCs, demonstrating that BICD2 is needed not only for the dynein function at the nuclear pores but also for the antagonistic activity of kinesin-1. Our study demonstrates that the nucleus is subject to opposing activities of dynein and kinesin-1 motors and that BICD2 contributes to nuclear and centrosomal positioning prior to mitotic entry through regulation of both dynein and kinesin-1.


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