Abstract

The chromosome passenger complex (CPC) is a master regulator of mitosis. Inner centromere protein (INCENP) acts as a scaffold regulating CPC localization and activity. During early mitosis, the N-terminal region of INCENP forms a three-helix bundle with Survivin and Borealin, directing the CPC to the inner centromere where it plays essential roles in chromosome alignment and the spindle assembly checkpoint. The C-terminal IN box region of INCENP is responsible for binding and activating Aurora B kinase. The central region of INCENP has been proposed to comprise a coiled coil domain acting as a spacer between the N- and C-terminal domains that is involved in microtubule binding and regulation of the spindle checkpoint. Here we show that the central region (213 residues) of chicken INCENP is not a coiled coil but a ∼ 32-nm-long single α-helix (SAH) domain. The N-terminal half of this domain directly binds to microtubules in vitro. By analogy with previous studies of myosin 10, our data suggest that the INCENP SAH might stretch up to ∼ 80 nm under physiological forces. Thus, the INCENP SAH could act as a flexible "dog leash," allowing Aurora B to phosphorylate dynamic substrates localized in the outer kinetochore while at the same time being stably anchored to the heterochromatin of the inner centromere. Furthermore, by achieving this flexibility via an SAH domain, the CPC avoids a need for dimerization (required for coiled coil formation), which would greatly complicate regulation of the proximity-induced trans-phosphorylation that is critical for Aurora B activation.

Highlights

  • Inner centromere protein (INCENP) is predicted to have a coiled coil domain

  • The INCENP SAH could act as a flexible “dog leash,” allowing Aurora B to phosphorylate dynamic substrates localized in the outer kinetochore while at the same time being stably anchored to the heterochromatin of the inner centromere

  • GgINCENP503–715 Has Properties Expected of a Stable SAH Domain and Is Not a Coiled Coil—The middle region of INCENP links the N-terminal centromere/microtubule-targeting domains with the C-terminal Aurora B regulatory domain

Read more

Summary

Background

INCENP is predicted to have a coiled coil domain. Results: The coil is a stable single ␣-helix (SAH) domain that is highly extendable and directly binds microtubules. The INCENP SAH could act as a flexible “dog leash,” allowing Aurora B to phosphorylate dynamic substrates localized in the outer kinetochore while at the same time being stably anchored to the heterochromatin of the inner centromere By achieving this flexibility via an SAH domain, the CPC avoids a need for dimerization (required for coiled coil formation), which would greatly complicate regulation of. The central portion of INCENP is predicted to form a coiled coil spacer between the localization and activation modules [3] and has been proposed to act as a “dog leash,” allowing Aurora B tethered to chromatin to phosphorylate substrates within a constrained region [9] This tethering of Aurora B is critical for the regulation of chromosome alignment and the correction of kinetochore attachment errors. By using an SAH rather than a coiled coil to achieve this flexibility, INCENP avoids the requirement for dimerization, which would significantly complicate the currently accepted mechanism of proximity/clustering-induced activation of the CPC [12, 22,23,24]

Experimental Procedures
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call