Mammalian kinetochores count attached microtubules in a sensitive and switch-like manner

Author:

Kuhn Jonathan12,Dumont Sophie123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tetrad Graduate Program, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

2. Department of Cell and Tissue Biology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

3. Department of Cell and Molecular Pharmacology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA

Abstract

The spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) prevents anaphase until all kinetochores attach to the spindle. Each mammalian kinetochore binds many microtubules, but how many attached microtubules are required to turn off the checkpoint, and how the kinetochore monitors microtubule numbers, are not known and are central to understanding SAC mechanisms and function. To address these questions, here we systematically tune and fix the fraction of Hec1 molecules capable of microtubule binding. We show that Hec1 molecules independently bind microtubules within single kinetochores, but that the kinetochore does not independently process attachment information from different molecules. Few attached microtubules (20% occupancy) can trigger complete Mad1 loss, and Mad1 loss is slower in this case. Finally, we show using laser ablation that individual kinetochores detect changes in microtubule binding, not in spindle forces that accompany attachment. Thus, the mammalian kinetochore responds specifically to the binding of each microtubule and counts microtubules as a single unit in a sensitive and switch-like manner. This may allow kinetochores to rapidly react to early attachments and maintain a robust SAC response despite dynamic microtubule numbers.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Rita Allen Foundation

Searle Scholars’ Program

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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