The Dynamics of the ESCRT Machinery in Open Mitosis from Physiology to Pathology.
Mattia La Torre, Federica Cannistrà, Romina Burla, Isabella Saggio
Abstract
Open AccessThe Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport (ESCRT) is a highly conserved machinery best known for its role in endosomal trafficking and membrane remodeling. Increasing evidence shows that ESCRT components are also key regulators during open mitosis, where precise membrane dynamics are essential for nuclear envelope reformation and spindle disassembly. In this review, we explore how the ESCRT machinery coordinates mitotic processes under physiological conditions and how their dysregulation contributes to genomic instability, altered cell division, and disease. We highlight recent findings on the spatiotemporal control of ESCRT recruitment at mitotic membranes, the interplay with chromatin and nuclear envelope-associated factors, and the consequences of defective ESCRT function in pathological contexts such as cancer and neurodegeneration. By connecting molecular mechanisms with cellular outcomes, we provide an integrated view of how the ESCRT machinery acts as critical guardian of mitotic fidelity and offer some routes for the identification of potential therapeutic targets in human disease.