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The careful control of Polo kinase by APC/C-Ube2C ensures the intercellular transport of germline centrosomes during Drosophila oogenesis
Authors:Alexis Leah Braun,Francesco Meghini,Gema Villa-Fombuena,Morgane Guermont,Elisa Fernandez-Martinez,Zhang Qian,Maria Dolores Martí  n-Bermudo,Acaimo Gonz  lez-Reyes,David Moore Glover,Yuu Kimata
Affiliation:1. Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EH, UK ; 2. Centro Andaluz de Biología del Desarrollo, CSIC/Universidad Pablo de Olavide/JA, Carretera de Utrera km 1, 41013 Sevilla, Spain ; 3. School of Life Science and Technology, ShanghaiTech University, 393 Middle Huaxia Road, Shanghai 201210, People''s Republic of China
Abstract:A feature of metazoan reproduction is the elimination of maternal centrosomes from the oocyte. In animals that form syncytial cysts during oogenesis, including Drosophila and human, all centrosomes within the cyst migrate to the oocyte where they are subsequently degenerated. The importance and the underlying mechanism of this event remain unclear. Here, we show that, during early Drosophila oogenesis, control of the Anaphase Promoting Complex/Cyclosome (APC/C), the ubiquitin ligase complex essential for cell cycle control, ensures proper transport of centrosomes into the oocyte through the regulation of Polo/Plk1 kinase, a critical regulator of the integrity and activity of the centrosome. We show that novel mutations in the APC/C-specific E2, Vihar/Ube2c, that affect its inhibitory regulation on APC/C cause precocious Polo degradation and impedes centrosome transport, through destabilization of centrosomes. The failure of centrosome migration correlates with weakened microtubule polarization in the cyst and allows ectopic microtubule nucleation in nurse cells, leading to the loss of oocyte identity. These results suggest a role for centrosome migration in oocyte fate maintenance through the concentration and confinement of microtubule nucleation activity into the oocyte. Considering the conserved roles of APC/C and Polo throughout the animal kingdom, our findings may be translated into other animals.
Keywords:Drosophila   germline   centrosomes   Polo kinase   APC/C   fertility
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