Abstract

Aurora-B is the kinase subunit of the Chromosome Passenger Complex (CPC), a key regulator of mitotic progression that corrects improper kinetochore attachments and establishes the spindle midzone. Recent work has demonstrated that the CPC is a microtubule-associated protein complex and that microtubules are able to activate the CPC by contributing to Aurora-B auto-phosphorylation in trans. Aurora-B activation is thought to occur when the local concentration of Aurora-B is high, as occurs when Aurora-B is enriched at centromeres. It is not clear, however, whether distributed binding to large structures such as microtubules would increase the local concentration of Aurora-B. Here we show that microtubules accelerate the kinase activity of Aurora-B by a “reduction in dimensionality.” We find that microtubules increase the kinase activity of Aurora-B toward microtubule-associated substrates while reducing the phosphorylation levels of substrates not associated to microtubules. Using the single molecule assay for microtubule-associated proteins, we show that a minimal CPC construct binds to microtubules and diffuses in a one-dimensional (1D) random walk. The binding of Aurora-B to microtubules is salt-dependent and requires the C-terminal tails of tubulin, indicating that the interaction is electrostatic. We show that the rate of Aurora-B auto-activation is faster with increasing concentrations of microtubules. Finally, we demonstrate that microtubules lose their ability to stimulate Aurora-B when their C-terminal tails are removed by proteolysis. We propose a model in which microtubules act as scaffolds for the enzymatic activity of Aurora-B. The scaffolding activity of microtubules enables rapid Aurora-B activation and efficient phosphorylation of microtubule-associated substrates.

Highlights

  • Aurora-B is a serine/threonine kinase that controls progression through each phase of mitosis, namely the construction of the mitotic spindle, the segregation of chromosomes, and the completion of cytokinesis

  • Aurora-B is part of a protein complex known as the chromosome passenger complex (CPC), so-named because it hitches a ride on chromosomes, which carry the complex to the spindle equator

  • Microtubules restrict Aurora-B activity to MAP substrates The CPC binds to microtubules via the coiled-coil domain of INCENP [28]

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Summary

Introduction

Aurora-B is a serine/threonine kinase that controls progression through each phase of mitosis, namely the construction of the mitotic spindle, the segregation of chromosomes, and the completion of cytokinesis. The core of the CPC is composed of Aurora-B, INCENP (INner CENtromere Protein, the first component identified [5]), Survivin [6], and Borealin ( known as Dasra) [7]. This functional module is conserved from yeast to humans. There, Aurora-B creates a gradient of phosphorylation centered on the midzone [15] that functions in spindle midzone organization and cytokinesis [16,17]

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