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The Journal of Neuroscience, 2001, 21:RC187:1-7
RAPID COMMUNICATION
NudC Associates with Lis1 and the Dynein Motor at the Leading
Pole of Neurons
Jonathan P.
Aumais1,
James R.
Tunstead3, 4,
Robert S.
McNeil2,
Bruce T.
Schaar5,
Susan K.
McConnell5,
Sue-Hwa
Lin4,
Gary D.
Clark2, and
Li-yuan
Yu-Lee1, 3
Departments of 1 Molecular and Cellular Biology,
2 Pediatrics, Neurology and Neuroscience, and
3 Medicine and Immunology, Baylor College of
Medicine, and 4 Department of Molecular Pathology,
M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030, and
5 Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University,
Stanford, California 94305
NUDC is a highly conserved protein important for nuclear
migration and viability in Aspergillus nidulans.
Mammalian NudC interacts with Lis1, a neuronal migration protein
important during neocorticogenesis, suggesting a conserved mechanism of
nuclear movement in A. nidulans and neuronal migration
in the developing mammalian brain (S. M. Morris et al., 1998). To
further investigate this possibility, we show for the first time that
NudC, Lis1, and cytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain (CDIC) colocalize
at the microtubule organizing center (MTOC) around the nucleus in a
polarized manner facing the leading pole of cerebellar granule cells
with a migratory morphology. In neurons with stationary morphology,
NudC is distributed throughout the soma and colocalizes with CDIC and
tubulin in neurites as well as at the MTOC. At the subcellular level,
NudC, CDIC, and p150 dynactin colocalize to the interphase microtubule
array and the MTOC in fibroblasts. The observed colocalization is
confirmed biochemically by coimmunoprecipitation of NudC with CDIC and
cytoplasmic dynein heavy chain (CDHC) from mouse brain extracts.
Consistent with its expression in individual neurons, a high level of
NudC is detected in regions of the embryonic neocortex undergoing
extensive neurogenesis as well as neuronal migration. These data
suggest a biochemical and functional interaction of NudC with Lis1 and the dynein motor complex during neuronal migration in
vivo.
Key words:
NudC; Lis1; dynein; dynactin; centrosome; neuronal
migration
Copyright © Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474//$05.00/0
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