Abstract

Mammalian Plk1 is critically required for proper M phase progression. Plk1 is self-recruited to prekinetochores/kinetochores by phosphorylating and binding to the Thr-78 motif of a kinetochore scaffold protein, PBIP1 (also called CENP-U/50), which forms a stable complex with another kinetochore component, CENP-Q. However, the mechanism regulating Plk1 localization to this site remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the PBIP1·CENP-Q complex became hyperphosphorylated and rapidly delocalized from kinetochores as cells entered mitosis. Plk1 phosphorylated the CENP-Q subunit of the PBIP1·CENP-Q complex at multiple sites, and mutation of nine Plk1-dependent phosphorylation sites to Ala (9A) enhanced CENP-Q association with chromatin and prolonged CENP-Q localization to kinetochores. Conversely, mutation of the nine sites to phospho-mimicking Asp/Glu (9D/E) residues dissociated CENP-Q from chromatin and kept the CENP-Q(9D/E) mutant from localizing to interphase prekinetochores. Strikingly, both the 9A and 9D/E mutants induced a defect in proper chromosome segregation, suggesting that both timely localization of the PBIP1·CENP-Q complex to prekinetochores and delocalization from kinetochores are critical for normal M phase progression. Notably, although Plk1 did not alter the level of PBIP1 and CENP-Q ubiquitination, Plk1-dependent phosphorylation and delocalization of these proteins from kinetochores appeared to indirectly lead to their degradation in the cytosol. Thus, we propose that Plk1 regulates the timing of the delocalization and ultimate destruction of the PBIP1·CENP-Q complex and that these processes are important not only for promoting Plk1-dependent mitotic progression, but also for resetting the timing of Plk1 recruitment to prekinetochores in the next cell cycle.

Highlights

  • Plk[1] is a protein kinase that localizes to subcellular structures called kinetochores to promote mitotic progression

  • Cell Cycle-dependent Regulation of the PBIP11⁄7CENP-Q Complex—It has been suggested that PBIP1 forms a complex with other centromeric components, such as CENP-O, CENP-P, CENP-Q, and CENP-R (15, 18)

  • The results showed that CENP-Q efficiently interacted with PBIP1 (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Background

Plk[1] is a protein kinase that localizes to subcellular structures called kinetochores to promote mitotic progression. Mutation of the nine sites to phospho-mimicking Asp/ Glu (9D/E) residues dissociated CENP-Q from chromatin and kept the CENP-Q(9D/E) mutant from localizing to interphase prekinetochores Both the 9A and 9D/E mutants induced a defect in proper chromosome segregation, suggesting that both timely localization of the PBIP11⁄7CENP-Q complex to prekinetochores and delocalization from kinetochores are critical for normal M phase progression. We show that the PBIP11⁄7CENP-Q complex localizes to early interphase prekinetochores, but precipitously delocalizes from late interphase/early mitotic kinetochores Subsequent investigation of this process revealed that Plk[1] that is self-recruited to the phospho-Thr-78 motif of PBIP1 phosphorylates the CENP-Q subunit of the PBIP11⁄7CENP-Q complex at multiple sites to induce the complex’s dissociation from kinetochores without disassembling the complex. The level of Plk1-dependent CENP-Q phosphorylation regulates the dynamic localization/delocalization of the PBIP11⁄7CENP-Q complex to/from kinetochores, and deregulating this process results in chromosome missegregation, which may lead to aneuploidy, a hallmark of cancer

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