Skip to content
Li Tao
Reading time: 2 minutes
Li Tao (photo by Claudia Hagan/UH Hilo Stories)

Li Tao, an assistant professor of biology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo is doing research into the mechanisms of cell division that will provide clues for cancer treatment. The results of his work were published in Nature Communication on April 19.

Tao is a biochemist and a cell biologist with expertise in using a combination of in vitro biochemistry and in vivo cell biology to understand the regulation of cell division, thus providing insights into the fundamental mechanism to control the growth of cancer cells.

Li Tao’s team uses molecular cloning to engineer new kinesin constructs. (photo by Claudia Hagan/UH Hilo Stories)

“Understanding the mechanism of cell division and its control is the key to find cures for cancer,” Tao explains. “Cells use kinesins, a subfamily of mitotic motors, to drive cell division. My research is primarily centered on various kinesins and explores how these motors regulate cell division. By developing conditions to stably express full-length kinesin motor proteins, we explore the mechanisms driving the formation and functioning of the mitotic spindle.”

Cytokinesis is the final stage of cell division, hence, says Tao, it is the last chance for the cell to perform “quality control.” Any mistakes that escape from cytokinesis will cause severe human diseases including cancer. Recently, Tao found that a key motor protein for cytokinesis, kinesin-6, is regulated by Rho-family protein RacGAP.

“Originally, the widely accepted concept in the field is that all kinesins can move along microtubules by themselves,” he says. “However, we found that kinesin-6 alone is not active, meaning it cannot move on microtubules. Kinesin-6 has to bind to another protein RacGAP to activate its function. This finding provides a novel mechanism on the regulation of cytokinesis.”

Currently, Tao and his research team are continuing their study on kinesin-6 and other motor proteins.

“We want to perform structural analysis on these kinesins and identify the potential molecular targets for anti-cancer drugs,” he says.

Tao’s ultimate goal is to have a greater understanding of how mitotic motors regulate cell division, and to find an effective way to cure cancer.

For more on Tao’s research read the UH Hilo Stories article.

From UH Hilo Stories

—By Susan Enright

Back To Top