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First published online 24 July 2007
doi: 10.1242/jcs.007690


Journal of Cell Science 120, 2807-2818 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
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Research Article

Rapid effects of acute anoxia on spindle kinetochore interactions activate the mitotic spindle checkpoint

Rahul Pandey*, Sebastian Heeger{ddagger} and Christian F. Lehner§

Department of Genetics, BZMB, University of Bayreuth, 95440 Bayreuth, Germany

Author for correspondence (e-mail: christian.lehner{at}zool.uzh.ch)

Accepted 20 June 2007

The dramatic chromosome instability in certain tumors might reflect a synergy of spindle checkpoint defects with hypoxic conditions. In Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster, spindle checkpoint activation has been implicated in the response to acute anoxia. The activation mechanism is unknown. Our analyses in D. melanogaster demonstrate that oxygen deprivation affects microtubule organization within minutes. The rapid effects of anoxia are identical in wild-type and spindle checkpoint-deficient Mps1 mutant embryos. Therefore, the anoxia effects on the mitotic spindle are not a secondary consequence of spindle checkpoint activation. Some motor, centrosome and kinetochore proteins (dynein, Kin-8, Cnn, TACC, Cenp-C, Nuf2) are rapidly relocalized after oxygen deprivation. Kinetochores congress inefficiently into the metaphase plate and do not experience normal pulling forces. Spindle checkpoint proteins accumulate mainly within the spindle midzone and inhibit anaphase onset. In checkpoint-deficient embryos, mitosis is still completed after oxygen deprivation, although accompanied by massive chromosome missegregation. Inhibitors of oxidative phosphorylation mimic anoxia effects. We conclude that oxygen deprivation impairs the chromosome segregation machinery more rapidly than spindle checkpoint function. Although involving adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-consuming kinases, the spindle checkpoint can therefore be activated by spindle damage in response to acute anoxia and protect against aneuploidies.

Key words: Hypoxia, Spindle checkpoint, Mps1, BubR1, Bub3, Cenp-C, Nuf2







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007