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ZW10: an emerging orchestrator of organelle dynamics during the cell division cycle
Sm Faysal Bellah1 , Fengrui Yang1 , Fangyuan Xiong1 , Zhen Dou1,2 , Xuebiao Yao1,2,* , Xing Liu1,2,*
1MOE Key Laboratory for Membraneless Organelles and Cellular Dynamics, University of Science and Technology of China School of Life Sciences, Hefei 230026, China
2Anhui Key Laboratory for Cellular Dynamics and Chemical Biology, Hefei National Research Center for Interdisciplinary Sciences at the Microscale, Hefei 230027, China
*Correspondence to:Xuebiao Yao , Email:yaoxb@ustc.edu.cn Xing Liu , Email:xing1017@ustc.edu.cn
J Mol Cell Biol, Volume 16, Issue 7, July 2024, mjae026,  https://doi.org/10.1093/jmcb/mjae026
Keyword: ZW10, kinetochore, membrane-bound organelle, membraneless organelle, mitosis

Zeste white 10 (ZW10) was first identified as a centromere/kinetochore protein encoded by the ZW10 gene in Drosophila. ZW10 guides the spindle assembly checkpoint signaling during mitotic chromosome segregation in metazoans. Recent studies have shown that ZW10 is also involved in membrane-bound organelle interactions during interphase and plays a vital role in membrane transport between the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Despite these findings, the precise molecular mechanisms by which ZW10 regulates interactions between membrane-bound organelles in interphase and the assembly of membraneless organelle kinetochore in mitosis remain elusive. Here, we highlight how ZW10 forms context-dependent protein complexes during the cell cycle. These complexes are essential for mediating membrane trafficking in interphase and ensuring the accurate segregation of chromosomes in mitosis.