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  • Autophagy can promote both cancer cell survival and death, and the mechanisms by which it mediates these disparate processes are under intense investigation. Autophagosomes are now shown to entrap and promote degradation of the active tyrosine kinase Src, enabling tumour cell survival. The E3 ubiquitin ligase c-Cbl acts as an autophagosome cargo receptor for Src.

    • Francesco Cecconi
    News & Views
  • The endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated protein degradation (ERAD) pathway, which orchestrates the degradation of ER proteins by the proteasome, involves a plethora of proteins with diverse functions. Using a combination of proteomic and genetic approaches, a recent study provides fresh insights into the organization of the mammalian ERAD interaction network and the functions of its components.

    • Thibault Mayor
    News & Views
  • To establish and maintain their internal organization, living cells must move molecules to their correct locations. Long-range intracellular movements are often driven by motor molecules moving along microtubules, similarly to trucks driving along a highway. Recent work demonstrates that some randomly dispersed cargos can generate actin filaments that form a connected network whose contraction drives collective cargo movement.

    • Dyche Mullins
    News & Views
  • The establishment and maintenance of cell polarity requires targeted recruitment of polarity regulators to the plasma membrane. Phosphatidylserine is now shown to have a key role in polarization of yeast cells and the localization of the central polarity regulator Cdc42.

    • Tina Freisinger
    • Roland Wedlich-Söldner
    News & Views
  • In mitotic spindles, each sister chromatid is directly attached to a spindle pole through microtubule bundles known as kinetochore fibres. Microspherule protein 1 (MCRS1) is now shown to support spindle assembly by localizing to the minus ends of kinetochore fibres and protecting them from depolymerization.

    • Sabine Petry
    • Ronald D. Vale
    News & Views
  • The activity state of integrins is crucial for cell adhesion, migration and differentiation, and is regulated predominantly by protein interactions of the integrin β cytoplasmic domain. SHARPIN is now shown to negatively regulate integrin activation by binding the α-integrin subunit and interfering with the association of the β cytodomain with activating proteins.

    • Mark D. Bass
    News & Views
  • Misfolded proteins are potentially toxic and are therefore subjected to highly selective degradation by the ubiquitin–proteasome system. The identification of the Hul5 ubiquitin ligase as a major mediator of such 'quality-control' ubiquitylation following heat shock raises new questions about the design of these pathways.

    • Daniel Finley
    News & Views
  • Successful completion of meiosis in vertebrate oocytes requires the localization and maintenance of the meiotic spindle at the cell cortex. Arp2/3-nucleated actin filaments are now shown to flow away from the cortex overlying the spindle, resulting in cytoplasmic streaming, which maintains the spindle in its asymmetric position.

    • Marie-Hélène Verlhac
    News & Views
  • A potential role for glycosphingolipids and lipid rafts in apical sorting was initially met with enthusiasm, but genetic analysis has since provided little support for it. A report now establishes that glycosphingolipids mediate apical sorting, and specifically help maintain apicobasal polarity in Caenorhabditis elegans.

    • Vincent Hyenne
    • Michel Labouesse
    News & Views
  • A precise role for the canonical Wnt pathway in maintaining pluripotency in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) has been debated. Four recent reports add pieces to the puzzle and together these results may help establish a robust model.

    • Hitoshi Niwa
    News & Views