1. Academic Validation
  2. The CENP-A NAC/CAD kinetochore complex controls chromosome congression and spindle bipolarity

The CENP-A NAC/CAD kinetochore complex controls chromosome congression and spindle bipolarity

  • EMBO J. 2007 Dec 12;26(24):5033-47. doi: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7601927.
Sarah E McClelland 1 Satyarebala Borusu Ana C Amaro Jennifer R Winter Mukta Belwal Andrew D McAinsh Patrick Meraldi
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Chromosome Segregation Laboratory, Marie Curie Research Institute, The Chart, Oxted, Surrey, UK.
Abstract

Kinetochores are complex protein machines that link chromosomes to spindle microtubules and contain a structural core composed of two conserved protein-protein interaction networks: the well-characterized KMN (KNL1/MIND/NDC80) and the recently identified CENP-A NAC/CAD. Here we show that the CENP-A NAC/CAD subunits can be assigned to one of two different functional classes; depletion of Class I proteins (Mcm21R(CENP-O) and Fta1R(CENP-L)) causes a failure in bipolar spindle assembly. In contrast, depletion of Class II proteins (CENP-H, Chl4R(CENP-N), CENP-I and Sim4R(CENP-K)) prevents binding of Class I proteins and causes chromosome congression defects, but does not perturb spindle formation. Co-depletion of Class I and Class II proteins restores spindle bipolarity, suggesting that Class I proteins regulate or counteract the function of Class II proteins. We also demonstrate that CENP-A NAC/CAD and KMN regulate kinetochore-microtubule attachments independently, even though CENP-A NAC/CAD can modulate NDC80 levels at kinetochores. Based on our results, we propose that the cooperative action of CENP-A NAC/CAD subunits and the KMN network drives efficient chromosome segregation and bipolar spindle assembly during mitosis.

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