The asymmetry of Kar9 (green) ensures only one set of spindle microtubules enters the bud.

Barral/Elsevier

Alignment of the mitotic spindle with the axis of cell division in budding yeast ensures that one and only one chromatid set is pulled into the bud. Microtubule interactions with the cortex set this arrangement by capturing one spindle pole at the bud site. Now, Kimitris Liakopoulos, Justine Kusch, Yves Barral (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Zürich, Switzerland), and colleagues find that polarity is achieved because only one set of microtubules is marked for this interaction with the cortex.

The Swiss group identified a protein that distinguishes microtubules from the two spindle poles. This myosin- interacting protein, Kar9, localized specifically to the spindle pole destined for the bud (daughter-bound pole). Kar9 polarity depended on the cell cycle kinase Cdk1. Kar9 phosphorylation correlated with its decreased interaction with the microtubule-...

You do not currently have access to this content.