A cooperative mechanism drives budding yeast kinetochore assembly downstream of CENP-A

Author:

Hornung Peter1,Troc Paulina1,Malvezzi Francesca1,Maier Michael1,Demianova Zuzana1,Zimniak Tomasz2,Litos Gabriele1,Lampert Fabienne1,Schleiffer Alexander13,Brunner Matthias1345,Mechtler Karl1,Herzog Franz2,Marlovits Thomas C.1345,Westermann Stefan1

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute of Molecular Pathology, Vienna Biocenter, 1030 Vienna, Austria

2. Department of Biochemistry, Gene Center, Ludwig-Maximilians Universität München, 81377 Munich, Germany

3. Institute of Molecular Biotechnology GmbH, Austrian Academy of Sciences, 1030 Vienna, Austria

4. Center for Structural Systems Biology, University Medical Center Eppendorf-Hamburg, 20246 Hamburg, Germany

5. Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, 22607 Hamburg, Germany

Abstract

Kinetochores are megadalton-sized protein complexes that mediate chromosome–microtubule interactions in eukaryotes. How kinetochore assembly is triggered specifically on centromeric chromatin is poorly understood. Here we use biochemical reconstitution experiments alongside genetic and structural analysis to delineate the contributions of centromere-associated proteins to kinetochore assembly in yeast. We show that the conserved kinetochore subunits Ame1CENP-U and Okp1CENP-Q form a DNA-binding complex that associates with the microtubule-binding KMN network via a short Mtw1 recruitment motif in the N terminus of Ame1. Point mutations in the Ame1 motif disrupt kinetochore function by preventing KMN assembly on chromatin. Ame1–Okp1 directly associates with the centromere protein C (CENP-C) homologue Mif2 to form a cooperative binding platform for outer kinetochore assembly. Our results indicate that the key assembly steps, CENP-A recognition and outer kinetochore recruitment, are executed through different yeast constitutive centromere-associated network subunits. This two-step mechanism may protect against inappropriate kinetochore assembly similar to rate-limiting nucleation steps used by cytoskeletal polymers.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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