On the inscrutable role of Inscuteable: structural basis and functional implications for the competitive binding of NuMA and Inscuteable to LGN

Alignment of the mitotic spindle to the cellular polarity axis is a prerequisite for asymmetric cell divisions. The protein network coordinating the spindle position with cortical polarity includes the molecular machinery pulling on astral microtubules, which is assembled on conserved NuMA:LGN:Gαi complexes, the polarity proteins Par3:Par6:aPKC and an adaptor molecule known as Inscuteable (Insc). To date, all these components were assumed to enter a macromolecular complex localized at polarity sites in mitosis. However, recent structural studies revealed the Insc and NuMA are mutually exclusive interactors of LGN, implying that the molecular mechanism of spindle coupling to polarity is more sophisticated than has been believed to date.


Introduction
The asymmetric outcome of a cell division relies on the tight coordination between cortical polarity and the orientation of the mitotic spindle. During asymmetric mitoses, membrane-associated proteins distribute in discrete cortical domains, establishing a cellular polarity axis. In this configuration, the position of the mitotic spindle, and hence of the cytokinesis plane, determines whether the two daughter cells will (i) inherit the same set of cellular components, (ii) retain analogous contacts to the external tissue and (iii) have the same size (figure 1a).
Our understanding of the basic mechanisms underlying spindle coupling to cortical polarity in asymmetric divisions greatly benefited from genetic studies conducted in the late 1980s in model systems such as Drosophila neuroblasts (the stem cells of the central nervous system in flies) and Caenorhabditis elegans zygotes [1]. In particular, fly neuroblasts undergo self-renewing asymmetric divisions, generating one neuroblast and one ganglion mother cell destined for differentiation. After delamination from the neuroepithelium, mitotic neuroblasts organize an apical cortical domain where the polarity pro- A prerequisite for asymmetric cell divisions is the establishment of a cellular polarity axis (black arrow), which entails the recruitment and maintenance at restricted cortical sites of defined sets of membrane-associated proteins (blue and pink crescent). Polarity establishment can be either a self-autonomous process occurring in early mitosis, as is the case for Drosophila neuroblasts and Caenorhabditis elegans zygotes, or it can be instructed from the tissue in which the cell is embedded. As mitosis proceeds, the proteins organized in distinct cortical domains (including the conserved Par3, Par6 and aPKC polarity proteins) coordinate the asymmetric distribution of fate determinants (i.e. components able to impart differential fate to daughter cells such as transcription factors and mRNAs-brown dots). In this configuration, if the mitotic spindle (in green) aligns parallel to the polarity axis, sibling cells will inherit a differential set of components (top panel). Furthermore, if one of the mother cell's cortical domains is in contact with a specific microenvironment (generally referred to as a niche), only one of the daughters will retain a similar contact. In addition, if the spindle is not central to the cell but displaced towards one side, the cytokinesis furrow will not ingress at the equatorial section, and upon cytokinesis daughters with different sizes will be generated (top panel). Conversely, if the spindle orients perpendicularly to the polarity axis, the division will be symmetrical, giving rise to two identical siblings (bottom panel). (b) Distribution of polarity proteins (Par3:Par6:aPKC), spindle orientation machinery (dynein-bound Mud:Pins:Gai complexes) and of the bridging molecule dInsc in fruitfly neuroblasts at metaphase. Before division, neuroblasts delaminate from a neuroepithelium (top cell layer), to which they remain attached with a membrane region organizing the apical domain. Par proteins restrict the localization of fate determinants such as Prospero and Numb at the basal site.
Despite the known force-generating complexes localizing apically, in neuroblasts the spindle is displaced towards the basal site in such a way that the cleavage plane ( purple dotted line) parts the cytoplasm unequally. (c) During epidermal development, progenitors organized in a monolayered epithelium divide vertically to stratify the skin. mInsc mediates the recruitment of NuMA: LGN:Gai at the apical site in order to properly orient the mitotic spindle. (d ) Vertebrate neural stem cells, known as radial glial cells, undergo planar symmetric divisions (left) and semiplanar asymmetric divisions (right), with a proportion that is finely regulated throughout neurogenesis. Planar divisions occur with the spindle axis parallel to the ventricular surface, and the cleavage plane bisecting both the apical end-foot and the basal process. A minor tilt in the spindle axis is sufficient for the asymmetric segregation of the basal process and the apical end-foot between daughters. In radial glial cells, NuMA: LGN:Gai complexes localize in an equatorial belt, away from Par proteins, which are found in the apical end-foot. Although mInsc regulates the balance between planar and semiplanar divisions of radial glia, its compartmentalization in mitosis is not yet clear.
generators, able to capture astral microtubules emanating from the spindle poles and to establish pulling forces. Genetic screens combined with imaging studies in developing fly embryos and larval brains revealed that force generators are assembled on Mud:Pins:Gai complexes brought at sites of polarization by an adaptor named Inscuteable (hereafter referred to as dInsc, where 'd' stands for Drosophila) that directly interacts with Bazooka (the fly Par3) [2][3][4][5]. The traction force exerted on microtubules is generated by the minusend-directed movement of Dynein/Dynactin that directly interacts with Mud [6]. As a result of the directional pulling forces exerted by force generators, the spindle aligns parallel to the polarity axis, slightly displaced towards the basal site. Upon cytokinesis, the fate determinants partition only to the smaller ganglion mother cell, which is positioned away from the neuroepithelium. Genetic studies revealed that the size difference between the neuroblast and the ganglion mother cell, and the unequal segregation of Prospero, are fundamental events in setting the correct lineage length and progeny fate [7]. Insights into the mechanistic basis of spindle coupling to cortical polarity in vertebrates have lagged behind those in flies and worms, mainly due to technical difficulties in isolating and studying stem cells. Yet recent evidence supports the notion that the spindle orientation machinery active in neuroblasts is conserved in mouse skin and neural progenitors, and is responsible for vertical divisions in lung distal epithelium [8]. At about day E12.5 of embryonic mouse development, progenitors of the epidermis start dividing vertically to promote skin stratification. Such vertical asymmetric divisions are promoted by the apical recruitment of NuMA:LGN:Gai complexes (the vertebrate counterpart of Mud:Pins:Gai) by Par6:Par3:aPKC via mInsc (where 'mInsc' indicates the mammalian orthologue of dInsc), which results in apico-basal spindle alignment and generates one daughter cell placed above the epidermal layer (figure 1c) [9,10]. The situation is more sophisticated in neural stem cells, called radial glial cells in vertebrates. Radial glial cells are attached to the ventricular zone through a tiny apical end-foot, accounting for only about 2 to 3 per cent to the total cellular membrane, where Par proteins localize [11,12]. Seminal studies from the Huttner and Ffrench-Constant laboratories [13,14] revealed that in early embryogenesis apical neural progenitors mostly divide planarly, with the spindle parallel to the ventricular surface (figure 1d, left panel). Between E13 and E18, when mouse neurogenesis peaks, radial glial cells divide semi-planarly with a minor tilt in the spindle axis that is sufficient to determine the unequal inheritance of the apical foot domain and the basal process (figure 1d, right panel). Imaging analysis in the developing chicken neocortex revealed that NuMA:LGN:Gai are distributed in an equatorial belt above the spindle poles, and do not seem to colocalize with Par proteins [15]. No clear evidence is available for the precise cortical localization of mInsc in radial glial cells, although it has been shown that its overexpression in mice at day E8.5 increases tilted neurogenic divisions, whereas its ablation causes radial glial expansion [16]. The prominent role of planar divisions in maintaining the population of apical neural progenitors in the developing central nervous system is also supported by knock-down experiments of LGN in chicken and mouse neuroepithelial cells, which result in randomization of the spindle axis and premature exit from the neuroepithelium, but do not compromise the replicative potential [17,18].
What do we know about the molecular mechanisms accounting for spindle coupling to cortical polarity? As briefly sketched earlier, for years, the simple model that was pushed forward to explain spindle orientation was that Par proteins, mInsc, NuMA, LGN and Gai would be part of the same macromolecular complex, apically localized in polarized asymmetric divisions, and capable of generating pulling forces on astral microtubules via the direct interaction between NuMA and the microtubule motor Dynein/Dynactin [19]. This model stems from imaging analyses showing that this set of proteins localizes in a crescent above the apical spindle pole, and was further corroborated by coimmunoprecipitation experiments in which LGN:Gai were found in association with Par3:mInsc [20] and NuMA [21].
Recent biochemical and structural data revealed that mInsc and NuMA are in fact competitive interactors of LGN [22,23]. This evidence challenges the notion that they belong to the same complex, and imposes its revision on the basis of the newly acquired knowledge. Here, we review the organizational and functional principles of the interactions of mInsc and NuMA with LGN, and explain the molecular basis for their competition, emphasizing similarities and differences between Drosophila and vertebrate proteins. We also advance new hypotheses for the working principles of these proteins truly reflecting their biochemical properties.

Conserved architecture of LGN:Insc and Pins:Insc complexes
LGN and Pins share a homologous domain structure comprising eight tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs) at the Nterminus and multiple GoLoco motifs at the C-terminus joined by a linker region of about 100 residues. TPRs consist of a couple of antiparallel a-helices, and are usually arranged in contiguous arrays forming superhelical scaffolds that mediate protein -protein interactions. Indeed, LGN TPR has been shown to be responsible for the interaction with NuMA [21,24] and Lgl2 [25], and Pins TPR associates with Mud [26 -29], dInsc [4] and Canoe [30]. Recently, the topologies of binding of LGN TPR /Pins TPR to mInsc/dInsc [22,31] and NuMA [23] have been unveiled. The direct interaction of Pins/LGN with dInsc/mInsc is required for apico-basal spindle alignment in neuroblasts [2] and in mouse skin progenitors [9]. Deletion analysis revealed that the portion of fruitfly dInsc encompassing residues 252-615, termed asymmetric-domain or dInsc ASYM , is sufficient to recapitulate dInsc functions during neuroblast asymmetric divisions [4,32]. The poor sequence similarity among Insc homologues makes it difficult to identify in silico a corresponding portion on the vertebrate proteins. Nonetheless, comparison of the crystallographic structures of Drosophila Pins TPR :dInsc [22] with human and mouse LGN TPR :mInsc [23,31] revealed that the interface between the 40-residue peptide of Insc (Insc PEPT hereafter) containing the high-affinity LGN-binding site and LGN TPR is conserved throughout species ( figure 2a,b). For clarity, we will use hInsc when referring to the human protein. The crystallographic structures revealed that Insc PEPT adopts an extended conformation lining within the inner groove of the superhelical TPR scaffold of LGN/Pins with an opposite orientation. This arrangement defines a modular interface. The first 12 residues of Insc PEPT fold as an a-helix that packs perpendicular to the TPRs and contribute to the binding strength primarily via rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 2: 120102 hydrophobic interaction mediated by Trp313 dInsc /Trp31 hInsc (figure 3a,b, left panels). The central portion of Insc PEPT is anchored on Pins TPR /LGN TPR by bidentate hydrogen bonds between Asn residues of the Leu-Gly-Asn (LGN) triplets of TPR4-5 and main chain carbonyls and nitrogen of Insc. In this region, the interaction is further strengthened by polar interactions between the negatively charged Glu-X-Glu motif of Insc PEPT and invariant Arg side chains of Pins/LGN (figure 3a,b, central panels). The C-terminal portion of Insc PEPT inserts Lys332 dInsc /Lys50 hInsc and Ile334 dInsc /Ile52 hInsc into two adjacent pockets formed by TPR1-2-3 (figure 3a,b, right panels). Although these lysine and isoleucine residues are fully conserved, their substitution does not affect the binding affinity. Interestingly, the structure of human LGN TPR :hInsc PEPT , which has been determined with a longer Insc fragment than the fly one, shows that the hInsc chain folds back into a b-hairpin ( figure 2b, top panel), though this C-terminal extension does not seem to make specific contacts with LGN TPR . This C-terminal stretch is poorly conserved in Drosophila dInsc and was not protected by trypsin cleavage of Pins TPR :dInsc ASYM [22], raising the question as to whether it adopts the same fold in the fly complex. In all species, the extended interaction surface accounts for the nanomolar binding affinity.

Ubiquitous functions of NuMa:LGN:Gai in mitotic spindle orientation
In all mitoses, the placement of the mitotic spindle relies on the interaction between NuMA and cortically localized LGN:Gai complexes [33]. In Hela cells, NuMA:LGN:Gai are distributed above both poles to stabilize the spindle and assist sister chromatid separation in anaphase. Myristoylated Gai subunits recruit the complex at the cortex [21], while its restricted localization above the poles relies on a Ran GTPdependent gradient precluding membrane association in the proximity of the metaphase plate [34]. In this system as well as in skin progenitors, Abl-1 kinase orchestrates the coordination of LGN crescents with the spindle axis by phosphorylating NuMA on Tyr1774, with molecular details that are still unclear [35]. In oriented symmetrical divisions of epithelial cells, NuMA: LGN:Gai complexes are restricted baso-laterally in order to keep the spindle horizontal, and do not localize with Par proteins. The mechanism that has been put forward to account for the apical exclusion of NuMA: LGN: Gai in this system is the phosphorylation of Ser401 LGN by apical aPKC that primes the association of LGN with 14-3-3, thus precluding the binding to cortical Gai [36].
In polarized asymmetric mitosis, the NuMA: LGN:Gai complex is thought to be recruited apically with Par3/ Par6/aPKC via mInsc to unequally partition fate determinants. As previously outlined, this mechanism has been pushed forward to explain the spindle alignment to cortical polarity in fly neuroblasts and mouse skin progenitors, whereas radial glial cells seem to constitute an exception to this simplistic view. In our opinion, this apparent discrepancy can be reconciled, envisioning that a few mInsc-coordinated NuMA: LGN:Gai complexes localized with Par proteins at the apical end-foot, but not detectable by immunostaining, might be sufficient to tilt the spindle axis even if the bulk Interestingly, in asymmetrically dividing Drosophila neuroblasts, the phosphorylation of Ser436 Pins (corresponding to Ser401 LGN ) by Aurora-A has been reported to trigger a secondary microtubule-dependent spindle orientation pathway sustained by the phospho-specific association of Pins with membrane-associated Dlg [23,37,38], an association that can also occur when Pins is in complex with dInsc [39]. There is no clear evidence as to whether the pathway is conserved in vertebrates. In fruitflies' neuroblasts, an additional player LGN TPR :hInsc rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 2: 120102 of the spindle orientation network is the actin-binding protein Canoe [40], which directly binds Pins, and has been implicated in Mud recruitment at the cortex in a Ran GTPdependent manner [30]. In vitro Canoe interacts directly with Ran GTP ; however, how this association may favour the localization of Mud is still unclear. It will be extremely interesting to test whether the orthologue Afadin plays an analogous role in vertebrates' asymmetric divisions, as this interaction represents the first direct link between the acto-myosin cortex and the spindle-tethering machinery.

Structural organization of the NuMa:LGN assembly
It has long been known from biochemical studies that a 20 kDa C-terminal fragment of NuMA contains the LGN TPR -binding site [24], which partly overlaps with the microtubule-binding site [41], thus implying that the microtubule-organizing activity of NuMA and its function in spindle orientation are mutually exclusive. Recent structural evidence revealed that NuMA contacts the internal concave surface of LGN TPR with a short amino acidic stretch spanning residues 1886 -1914 of the human protein (which we will refer to as NuMA PEPT ), roughly occupying the same surface recognized by Insc PEPT (figure 2c) [23]. At the molecular level, NuMA PEPT runs parallel to the TPR superhelical axis, forming with its C-terminus a three-helix bundle with aA1-aA2 of LGN (figure 3c). At first glance, the only conserved motif between Insc PEPT and NuMA PEPT sequences is the central Glu-X-Glu motif. However, a careful inspection of the dimeric interface shows that several residues of the two peptides with analogous interacting potential are engaged in the same type of chemical bonds, and that their contributions sum up to create a substantially identical interaction network with LGN TPR (figure 3c). In particular, the Phe1888 NuMA ring is positioned as Trp31 hInsc /Trp313 dInsc , whereas Arg1905 NuMA and Ile1906 NuMA insert into negatively charged and hydrophobic cavities of LGN TPR in much the same way as Lys50 hInsc /Lys332 dInsc and Ile52 hInsc /Ile334 dInsc . Notably, the Glu-Pro-Glu motif of NuMA PEPT is two residues out of register when compared with the Glu-X-Glu Insc , which structurally aligns with the upstream Gln-Asp-Glu NuMA triplet (figure 3c,d). As Insc PEPT and NuMA PEPT occupy the same position on LGN TPR , we expect that designing LGN TPR mutants selectively impairing the binding either to mInsc or to NuMA will be a challenging exercise. It is worth pointing out that the common molecular signature described for the recognition of mInsc/dInsc and NuMA by LGN TPR /Pins TPR has not allowed the identification of a corresponding Pins-binding peptide on Mud. Consistent with the structural analysis, NuMA also binds LGN TPR .

NuMa and mInsc bind competitively to LGN TPR
The evidence that mInsc and NuMA share the same binding surface on LGN TPR depicts them as competitive interactors. Indeed, in several experimental settings, it has been proved that in vitro and in living cells the two proteins do not enter the same complex [22,23,39]. Measurements with human proteins suggest that Insc PEPT associates with LGN TPR with a fivefold to tenfold higher affinity than NuMA PEPT [22,31], whereas mouse proteins display similar binding strengths [23]. Although no quantification is available, full-length LGN:Gai also displays a preferential association with fulllength mInsc than with NuMA [22]. The relation seems to be opposite for Drosophila proteins as Pins binds Mud better [39]. How the relative affinities impinge on the crosstalk between the mInsc-bound and the NuMA-bound LGN:Gai pools in living cells remains to be determined.

Opening of the LGN conformational switch
Besides competing with one another for the binding to LGN TPR , both NuMA and mInsc are capable of displacing the C-terminal portion of LGN, which has been shown to interact with the TPR domain in unliganded LGN [21,22,29]. The precise fragment of LGN C-terminus required for this intra-molecular interaction has not been mapped; what it is known is that the GoLoco23 of Pins [29] and GoLoco34 of LGN (M. Mapelli 2011, unpublished data) form a complex with LGN TPR . On the basis of recent biochemical and structural data, we suspect LGN TPR has an inherent conformational flexibility that needs to be stabilized by association with an extended ligand, and therefore we expect the LGN C-terminus to bind LGN TPR with modalities similar to the those described for mInsc and NuMA. The affinity between separately purified LGN TPR and GoLocos is in the micromolar range [29] (M. Mapelli 2011, unpublished data), suggesting that substoichiometric concentrations of NuMA and mInsc might be sufficient for the LGN switch conversion. Intriguingly, in vivo the activation of full-length LGN and Pins requires the synergistic binding of NuMA/ Mud and several Gai subunits [42,43], implying an active role of the linker region in maintaining LGN in the closed state. It is not known whether mInsc can trigger the LGN conformational transition in the absence of Gai. As the release of the intra-molecular interaction holding LGN in an inhibited closed conformation is a prerequisite for force generators' assembly, we believe that elucidating the structural role of the linker region in closed LGN will be instrumental in figuring out the LGN activation mechanism.

A revised model for force generators' assembly in asymmetric cell divisions
The competitive association of NuMA and mInsc with LGN contrasts with the notion that mInsc is the molecular bridge recruiting NuMA: LGN:Gai to polarity sites during asymmetric mitoses, and imposes a major revision of the current view for force generators' localization and maintenance at the cortex. The more simplistic model that has been advanced [22,23] envisions the sequential binding of LGN first to Par3bound mInsc and subsequently to NuMA (figure 4). In this view, in the early phases of mitosis, the higher affinity interaction with mInsc will be dominant in instructing the cortical distribution of LGN, and concomitantly will catalyse the conformational rearrangement required for the binding to several Gai subunits. If so, the functional role of mInsc would be to cluster and activate LGN at the membrane, a known mechanism able to trigger localized signalling pathways [44]. How rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org Open Biol 2: 120102 the transfer of LGN:Gai complexes from mInsc to NuMA during mitosis might be achieved remains totally unclear.
Biochemical measurements indicate that there is about a fivefold difference in the binding strength of mInsc and NuMA to LGN, which we suggest could be overcome by addition of a few phospho-groups either to NuMA or LGN. None of the mitotic phosphorylations of NuMA recently reported affects the interaction with LGN [34,35,45,46], though a clear function has been assigned only to a few of them. An inherent question of the sequential-binding model is how the NuMA: LGN:Gai complexes that are assembled in the proximity of Par proteins are retained long enough at the correct sites to pull on astral microtubules with the proper direction. As mentioned, in fly neuroblasts, cortical Dlg binds to the phosphorylated linker region of Pins, providing an anchoring mechanism independent of Par proteins [38]. We believe that newly identified Pins/LGN interactors (such as the earliermentioned Canoe, as well as yet undiscovered effectors) may serve a similar purpose. Interestingly, ablation of a-catenin and b-integrin in skin progenitors causes misoriented divisions, implying that other signalling pathways not directly regulated by Par3:aPKC contribute to spindle positioning in this system. Alternatively, NuMA: LGN:Gai can be transient complexes, briefly pulling in the direction of Par proteins where they are assembled, and then dissociating before diffusing away by spontaneous drift of the Gai myristoyl groups inserted in the plasma membrane. It is known that LGN binds exclusively to GDP-loaded Gai [47], and that the conserved GEF Ric-8 catalyses the GDP exchange of Gai, which is essential to the spindle orientation process [48 -51]. In the context of the sequential-binding model, the function of Ric-8 could be to assist the disruption of the NuMA: LGN:Gai GDP to start a new mInsc-binding cycle, a molecular mechanism already observed in vitro [52]. An additional role for the non-canonical G-protein signalling pathway underlying spindle orientation has been recently described in Drosophila neuroblasts, where Pins has been reported to bind not only Gai GDP but also Goa GDP [53].
In this system, the regulation of the Pins:Goa GDP association by the G-protein coupled receptor Tre1 constitutes an extrinsic cue coordinating cortical polarity with tissue architecture as it instructs the organization of the apical domain at the site in contact with the neuroepithelium. The validation of this sequential/transient-binding model in living cells would greatly benefit from the availability of LGN mutants selectively impaired for mInsc or NuMA binding. The model predicts that LGN mutants unable to bind mInsc would phenocopy the spindle misorientation observed in dInsc/mInsc-deficient neuroblasts or radial glia cells, whereas mutants deficient in NuMA binding would be recruited to Par proteins but fail to pull on astral microtubules. Furthermore, these selective mutations could be introduced into FRET sensors (such as the already-used YFP-LGN/Pins-CFP sensors [21,29]) to check whether the opening of the switch occurs upon Insc or NuMA binding. Given the major overlap between mInsc and NuMA binding sites, we anticipate that generating such LGN mutants will be a rather daunting task.

Conclusions
In the past few years, the prominent role of the spindle alignment in setting the balance between symmetric and asymmetric divisions of stem cells has fuelled intense research activities aimed at understanding the molecular mechanisms underpinning the process in several cellular systems. It is now clear that in fly neuroblasts, intrinsic and extrinsic cues synergize in positioning an asymmetric spindle, and this is a prerequisite for the correct fate and placement of daughter cells [7,53]. Attempts have been made to recapitulate in vertebrates what is known from genetic and imaging studies in fly neuroblasts, and this effort led to the conclusion that randomizing the progenitors' spindle orientation impacts on neurogenetic programmes also in vertebrates [16][17][18]. Recent biochemical and structural evidence  Figure 4. A sequential model for force generators' recruitment and maintenance at polarized cortical sites. (a) In early mitosis, Par3:Par6:aPKC localize in an apical cortical domain together with mInsc that binds directly to Par3. Cytosolic LGN is in the inactive closed conformation, and hetero-trimeric G-protein complexes are uniformly distributed all around the plasma membrane. (b) As mitosis proceeds, LGN is recruited to Par proteins by the high-affinity interaction with mInsc, which triggers the switch-like conformational transition enabling the binding of four Gai GDP subunits previously disengaged from Gbg. Ga dissociation from Gbg may be assisted by a specific G-protein coupled receptor such as the Drosophila Tre1. (c) At metaphase, most of the membrane-associated LGN:Gai GDP is released from mInsc and enters a complex with dimeric NuMA, which in turn interacts with the minus-end-directed motor Dynein to pull on astral microtubules (MTs). At this stage, cortical anchoring of NuMA: LGN:Gai GDP complexes can be strengthened by interactions between Ser406-phosphorylated LGN and Dlg, or between LGN and actinbound Afadin. On the basis of the sequential model, NuMA: LGN:Gai GDP assemble near Par complexes, but do not retain any positional information. To prevent misdirectional MT pulling caused by membrane-diffusion of NuMA: LGN:Gai GDP , it is possible that these complexes are short-lived and disassemble under the action of the Gai GEF Ric-8, and that new cycles of LGN recruitment by mInsc start until the spindle is properly aligned (dotted arrow).
indicated an inconsistency in the established molecular model for spindle orientation, requiring more analyses to clarify the mechanistic interplay between mInsc and NuMA. Meanwhile, the number of interactors of the NuMA: LGN:Gai complex and the way they regulate the spindle orientation in different cellular systems starts to become clear. This sets the stage for further investigations in vivo and in vitro aimed at delivering a coherent picture of how they function.