Mitotic and meiotic spindles differ from one another. Meiotic spindles are short and localized at the cortex to bud off polar bodies, whereas mitotic spindles extend throughout the cell. After fertilization in C. elegans, the oocyte undergoes a rapid meiosis to mitosis transition, in about 10 minutes. Meiotic spindle formation requires katanin, encoded by
mei-1 and
mei-2, a microtubule-severing complex. Katanin is down-regulated after meiosis by parallel pathways to ensure that it is not active in the subsequent mitotic divisions, during which its expression is lethal. My research focuses on HECD-1 and its method of regulating katanin. HECD-1/HectD1 is a ubiquitin ligase known to change the localization of proteins, while other ubiquitin ligases (CUL-2, CUL-3, MEL-26) that regulate katanin mark the protein for degradation 1. Using immunofluorescence of FLAG tagged HECD-1, which I showed to retain wild-type function, I will look for changes in localization of HECD-1 in mutant backgrounds for katanin and its regulators. As HECD-1 also interacts with the STRIPAK complex in mammals2, I will make double mutants of STRIPAK orthologs (
ccm-3, M4.1,
otub-2,
cash-1,
mob-4, C49H3.6,
pptr-1) with katanin regulators to identify new players in the katanin pathway. Preliminary findings using RNAi have shown the two genes,
otub-2/OTUD7A, a deubiquitinase, and M4.1/SMAP, a sarcolemma associated protein, respectively enhance and suppress the lethality caused by ectopic katanin activity during mitosis. Results have been replicated for M4.1 suppression using double mutants. STRIPAK acts in excretory canal formation and germline development in C. elegans 3,4, but its subunit composition varies, for example, HECD-1 does not act in these processes. As a result, our research will show the specific components of the STRIPAK complex participating in katanin regulation, as well as the interplay between ubiquitin ligases that affect protein levels and those that change protein localization. 1. Beard, S.M., et al. (2016) Development. G3 (Bethesda). 6:3257-3268 2. Tran, H., et al. (2013) J Biol Chem. 288:3753-3767 3. Lant, B., et al. (2015) Nat Commun. 6:6449 4. Pal, S., et al. (2017). Curr Biol. 27:868-876