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Abstract
We have isolated a human homolog of Xenopus Eg5, a kinesin-related motor protein implicated
in the assembly and dynamics of the mitotic spindle. We report that microinjection
of antibodies against human Eg5 (HsEg5) blocks centrosome migration and causes HeLa
cells to arrest in mitosis with monoastral microtubule arrays. Furthermore, an evolutionarily
conserved cdc2 phosphorylation site (Thr-927) in HsEg5 is phosphorylated specifically
during mitosis in HeLa cells and by p34cdc2/cyclin B in vitro. Mutation of Thr-927
to nonphosphorylatable residues prevents HsEg5 from binding to centrosomes, indicating
that phosphorylation controls the association of this motor with the spindle apparatus.
These results indicate that HsEg5 is required for establishing a bipolar spindle and
that p34cdc2 protein kinase directly regulates its localization.