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Article

A Survivin-Ran Complex Regulates Spindle Formation in Tumor Cells

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Pages 5299-5311 | Received 12 Nov 2007, Accepted 19 Jun 2008, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Aberrant cell division is a hallmark of cancer, but the molecular circuitries of this process in tumor cells are not well understood. Here, we used a high-throughput proteomics screening to identify novel molecular partners of survivin, an essential regulator of mitosis overexpressed in cancer. We found that survivin associates with the small GTPase Ran in an evolutionarily conserved recognition in mammalian cells and Xenopus laevis extracts. This interaction is regulated during the cell cycle, involves Ran-GTP, requires a discrete binding interface centered on Glu65 in survivin, and is independent of the Ran effector Crm1. Disruption of a survivin-Ran complex does not affect the assembly of survivin within the chromosomal passenger complex or its cytosolic accumulation, but it inhibits the delivery of the Ran effector molecule TPX2 to microtubules. In turn, this results in aberrant mitotic spindle formation and chromosome missegregation in tumor, but not normal, cells. Therefore, survivin is a novel effector of Ran signaling, and this pathway may be preferentially exploited for spindle assembly in tumor cells.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by Public Health Service grants HL54131, CA78810, and CA90917 (D.C.A.) and GM62542 (T.M.G.).

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