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Spindle-localized F-actin regulates polar MTOC organization and the fidelity of meiotic spindle formation

Nature Communications. 2025-09; 
Edgar J. Soto-Moreno, Nourhan N. Ali, Florian Küllmer, Veselin Nasufovic, Michaela Frolikova, Olga Tepla, Jaromir Masata, Dirk Trauner, Amanda A. Patterson, Hans-Dieter Arndt, Katerina Komrskova, Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz, David M. Glover & Ahmed Z. Balboula Division of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia
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Abstract

Mammalian oocytes are notoriously prone to chromosome segregation errors leading to aneuploidy. The spindle provides the machinery for accurate chromosome segregation during cell division. Mammalian oocytes lack centrioles and, therefore, mouse meiotic spindle relies on the organization of numerous acentriolar microtubule organizing centers into two poles (polar microtubule organizing centers, pMTOCs). The traditional view is that, in mammalian oocytes, microtubules are the sole cytoskeletal component responsible for regulating pMTOC organization and spindle assembly. We identify a previously unrecognized F-actin pool that surrounds pMTOCs, forming F-actin cage-like structure. We demonstrate that F-actin locali... More

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