# Annexin A2 and lamin B join membrane recycling compartments for the assembly of biomolecular condensates operating in mitotic partitioning

**Authors:** Ann Kari Grindheim, Hege Dale, Josef Novák, Sudarshan Shantinath Patil, Anni Vedeler, Jaakko Saraste

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2025.1744307 · 2026-01-15

## TL;DR

This study identifies biomolecular condensates in dividing cells that help organize and partition endomembranes during mitosis.

## Contribution

The paper reveals a novel role for Annexin A2 and lamin B in forming mitotic condensates that may regulate membrane recycling and partitioning.

## Key findings

- AnxA2 forms large spherical condensates during mitosis that align with microtubules and change in number and size.
- Propylene glycol treatment disrupts the condensates, supporting their identity as biomolecular condensates.
- The condensates contain membrane recycling compartments and lamin B, suggesting a role in mitotic partitioning.

## Abstract

Localization of the actin-, lipid- and mRNA-binding protein Annexin A2 (AnxA2) in dividing cells revealed its presence in large spherical structures which are confined to the cell periphery and frequently co-align with astral microtubules. These structures appear during prometaphase and disappear at telophase, coinciding with the mitotic breakdown and subsequent reformation of the nuclear lamina and envelope. Their size increases as cells progress to anaphase, while their number decreases, suggesting that they are capable of fusion. Treatment of cells with the aliphatic alcohol propylene glycol led to rapid and reversible disassembly of the structures, providing further evidence that they correspond to biomolecular condensates. Notably, the condensates enclose compartments involved in biosynthetic or endocytic membrane recycling – defined by Rab1, Rab11, or endocytosed transferrin–but lack other membrane organelles, indicating that they may serve as mitotic reservoirs for selected endomembranes. Additionally, the condensates incorporate lamin B, which connects with the pericentrosomal membrane recycling compartments during prometaphase, when the nuclear lamina disassembles in conjunction with centrosome separation. These findings show similarities between the peripheral mitotic condensates and the membranous lamin B spindle matrix which has been proposed to act in spindle organization and organelle inheritance. The separating daughter cells at late anaphase contain equal numbers of the condensates, in accordance with their potential role in mitotic partitioning of endomembranes and other cytoplasmic components.

## Linked entities

- **Genes:** ANXA2 (annexin A2) [NCBI Gene 302], Lam (Lamin) [NCBI Gene 33782], RAB1A (RAB1A, member RAS oncogene family) [NCBI Gene 5861], Rab11 (Rab11) [NCBI Gene 42501]
- **Proteins:** ANNAT2 (annexin 2), Lam (Lamin)
- **Chemicals:** propylene glycol (PubChem CID 1030)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TF (transferrin) [NCBI Gene 7018] {aka HEL-S-71p, PRO1557, PRO2086, TFQTL1}, ANXA2 (annexin A2) [NCBI Gene 302] {aka ANX2, ANX2L4, CAL1H, HEL-S-270, LIP2, LPC2}, RAB11A (RAB11A, member RAS oncogene family) [NCBI Gene 8766] {aka YL8}, RAB1A (RAB1A, member RAS oncogene family) [NCBI Gene 5861] {aka RAB1, YPT1}
- **Chemicals:** aliphatic alcohol propylene glycol (-), lipid (MESH:D008055)

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12852427/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12852427