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First published online October 27, 2004
doi: 10.1242/10.1242/jcs.01536
Commentary |
1 Laboratory of Cell Regulation, NYSDHDivision of Molecular Medicine, Wadsworth Center, Empire State Plaza, PO Box 509, Albany, NY 12201-0509, USA
2 Department of Biology, CB#3280, 607 Fordham Hall, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
3 Chromosome Structure Group, Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell Biology, Institute of Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Edinburgh, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3JR, UK
* Authors for correspondence (e-mail: tsalmon{at}email.unc.edu; bill.earnshaw{at}ed.ac.uk)
| Summary |
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Key words: Kinetochore, Microtubule, CENP proteins, Ndc80, Dynein, Centromere, Chromosomal passengers, Aurora B, Ran
| Introduction |
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Microtubules are metastable polymers of
- and ß-tubulin that switch between phases of growth and shrinkage, a phenomenon known as `dynamic instability' (Mitchison and Kirschner, 1984
). We discuss below how the highly dynamic nature of microtubule behaviour is integrated with kinetochore function to move and segregate chromosomes. More details about spindle checkpoint function, spindle assembly mechanisms and the dynamics and mechanics of the microtubule plus end are reviewed elsewhere (Musacchio and Hardwick, 2002
; Sharp et al., 2000
; Compton, 2000
; Kapoor and Compton, 2002
; Howard and Hyman, 2003
). Here we focus on the animal kinetochore and in particular the interface between the outer kinetochore domain and spindle microtubules (for reviews, see Fukagawa, 2004
; Amor et al., 2004
). [For reviews of budding and fission yeast kinetochores and plant kinetochores, see Yu et al. and others (Yu et al., 2000
; Kitagawa and Hieter, 2001
; Cheeseman et al., 2002b
; Biggins and Walczak, 2003
; McAinsh et al., 2003
; Cleveland et al., 2003
; Westermann et al., 2003
; Houben and Schubert, 2003
; Hall et al., 2004
).]
| Animal kinetochore structure |
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Animal kinetochores form by the assembly of proteins onto a (usually) repetitive DNA sequence, yielding a modular structure that forms a single inner plate as a consequence of chromatin higher-order folding (Zinkowski et al., 1991
) (reviewed by Brinkley et al., 1992
). Duplicated kinetochores of sister chromatids are first seen to separate from one another during mid-late G2 phase in mammalian cultured cells (Brenner et al., 1981
) and at the beginning of prophase in Caenorhabditis elegans (Moore and Roth, 2001
). These pre-kinetochores acquire a mature laminar structure after nuclear envelope breakdown (Moroi et al., 1981
; Roos, 1973
) in a process that requires components of the inner plate (Tomkiel et al., 1994
) (reviewed by Pluta et al., 1995
).
The molecular pathway of kinetochore assembly in higher eukaryotes has been studied in work using gene knockouts in mice and in cultured chicken cells, as well as RNA interference (RNAi) in C. elegans, Drosophila and human cells. No simple linear pathway can describe the data obtained to date (Fig. 2). The network of interactions shown in Fig. 2 represents a work in progress; many linkages remain to be discovered and details are likely to change.
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The earliest protein known to bind during kinetochore assembly, CENP-A (Cse4 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae), is a specialized isoform of histone H3 (Palmer et al., 1991
). CENP-A is required for the recruitment of the inner kinetochore proteins CENP-C, CENP-H and CENP-I/MIS6 (Howman et al., 2000
; Oegema et al., 2001
; Van Hooser et al., 2001
; Fukagawa et al., 2001
; Goshima et al., 2003
). The relative positions of these proteins in the CENP-A-dependent pathway are not yet clear. CENP-C targeting requires CENP-H in chicken cells, but is independent of CENP-I/MIS6 in human cells (Fig. 2).
In C. elegans, CENP-A and CENP-C direct the assembly of KNL-1 and KNL-3, which colocalize with CENP-C in the inner kinetochore starting during prophase (Desai et al., 2003
; Cheeseman et al., 2004
). The KNL proteins are required for assembly of multiple components of the outer kinetochore, and the formation of a functional kinetochore-microtubule interface. C. elegans proteins whose targeting depends on KNL-1 include outer plate proteins of the Ndc80 complex (Ndc80/Hec1, Nuf2, Spc24 and Spc25), KNL-binding proteins KBP-1 to KBP-5, MIS12, CENP-F and the checkpoint protein BUB1 (Desai et al., 2003
; Cheeseman et al., 2004
).
In metazoans, the recruitment of many outer kinetochore proteins is also under the control of the CENP-A-dependent pathway. A homologue of KNL-1, AF15q14, has recently been identified in human cells (Cheeseman et al., 2004
), which suggests that the assembly pathway is likely to be conserved. Interestingly, AF15q14 is a fusion partner for MLL in human leukaemias (Hayette et al., 2000
). Other vertebrate and Drosophila kinetochore proteins known to require the CENP-A-dependent pathway for targeting include Polo-like kinase (PLK), ROD, ZW10, ZWINT-1, the microtubule motor dynein, the kinesin motor CENP-E, the spindle checkpoint proteins (MPS1, BUBR1, MAD1 and MAD2) and the non-motor microtubule-associated proteins (MAPs) CLASPs (Wordeman et al., 1996
; Blower and Karpen, 2001
; Van Hooser et al., 2001
; Liu et al., 2003
; Desai et al., 2003
; Stucke et al., 2004
). The spindle checkpoint proteins BUBR1 and BUB1 seem to play a central role as recruiters of the other checkpoint components, but their position in the assembly pathway remains controversial (Sharp-Baker and Chen, 2001
; Chen, 2002
; Johnson et al., 2004
).
Also controversial is the position of MIS12 in the pathway (Goshima et al., 1999
). MIS12 binds CENP-A/Cse4 and is required for chromosome biorientation (see below) and the generation of centromere tension in budding yeast (Pinsky et al., 2003
). In humans, MIS12 and CENP-A targeting appears to be mutually independent, and MIS12 is required for the subsequent assembly of CENP-I/MIS6 and CENP-H (Goshima et al., 2003
). By contrast, C. elegans MIS12 functions downstream of CENP-A (Cheeseman et al., 2004
). In human cells, MIS12 is an essential kinetochore component; however, in C. elegans, kinetochores ultimately assemble in the absence of MIS12, although the protein is required for the process to be timely and efficient (Goshima et al., 2003
; Cheeseman et al., 2004
).
Incorporation of the inner centromeric KinI kinesin MCAK (also known as XKCM1) is dependent on CENP-A and CENP-C but not on KNL-1 in C. elegans, indicating an early bifurcation of the pathway (Desai et al., 2003
). Also within the inner centromere before anaphase are the chromosomal passenger proteins, which include the aurora B kinase and its binding partners INCENP, survivin and borealin/dasra B (reviewed by Carmena and Earnshaw, 2003
; Gassmann et al., 2004
). These inner centromere proteins assemble through a pathway independent of CENP-A (Oegema et al., 2001
).
Kinetochore components can be grouped into three classes on the basis of their localization throughout the cell cycle. Constitutive components, such as CENP-A, CENP-C, CENP-H and CENP-I, are bound to kinetochore-associated chromatin throughout the cell cycle. Other components associate with kinetochores only starting in prophase. Kinetochore proteins can also be grouped by whether their kinetochore concentrations remain constant or vary during mitosis and by whether they turnover slowly (stable) or rapidly (dynamic) at their kinetochore binding sites. Proteins that remain nearly constant in level from prophase through late anaphase include the constitutive components of the inner plate and the stable outer kinetochore components, such as the Ndc80 complex (Wigge and Kilmartin, 2001
; DeLuca et al., 2002
), KNL/KBP proteins (Cheeseman et al., 2004
), MIS proteins (Cheeseman et al., 2004
) and CENP-F (Rattner et al., 1993
; Liao et al., 1995
). Together with the constitutive components, these proteins appear to form the core kinetochore inner- and outer-plate structures. Cheeseman et al. have recently isolated large multiprotein complexes containing CENP-C, members of the Ndc80 complex, plus KNL, KBP and MIS proteins from both C. elegans and human cultured cells (Cheeseman et al., 2004
). This promises to be an exciting breakthrough in characterization of the animal kinetochore.
Dynamic components that change in concentration at kinetochores during mitosis include the microtubule motors CENP-E and dynein (plus its targeting components ZW10 and ROD), and the spindle checkpoint proteins (e.g. MAD1, MAD2, BUBR1 and Cdc20). These proteins assemble at high concentrations at kinetochores in the absence of microtubules and are reduced in concentration by interactions with spindle microtubules and in particular by kMT formation (Hoffman et al., 2001
). By metaphase, CENP-E, BUB3 and BUB1 levels are decreased 3-4-fold relative to those at unattached kinetochores, whereas dynein/dynactin, MAD1, MAD2 and BUBR1 levels fall >10-100-fold (King et al., 2000
; Hoffman et al., 2001
; Howell et al., 2004
; Shah et al., 2004
).
The dynamics of protein turnover at kinetochores has been measured by fluorescent recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) of green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion proteins expressed in cells. CENP-A, CENP-I, CENP-H, Nuf2, MAD1, BUB1 and about 50% of MAD2 are relatively stable components that turn over very slowly over 10 minutes. By contrast, 50% of MAD2 and most of BUB3, BUBR1, Mps1 and Cdc20 are very dynamic components with residence half-lifes of 30 seconds or less (Howell et al., 2000
; Kallio et al., 2002a
; Howell et al., 2004
; Shah et al., 2004
). This fast turnover might have a role in the ability of unattached kinetochores to inhibit activation of the anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C) in the cytoplasm (Musacchio and Hardwick, 2002
; Cleveland et al., 2003
). Importantly, such studies must always be interpreted cautiously and with the caveat that the tagged proteins have typically not been shown to have full biological function.
The above changes in protein concentration and dynamics at kinetochores are partially mediated by microtubules and probably also depend on interactions with the core CENP antigens. Injection of anti-centromere antibodies (ACAs) during G2 phase results in the assembly of kinetochores that look near normal in the presence of colcemid (which blocks spindle assembly) but lack a defined laminar structure if microtubules are present (Bernat et al., 1991
). These disrupted kinetochores can still bind to microtubules but appear unable to support chromosome movement. Cytoplasmic dynein associates with kinetochores following the injection of ACA only if microtubule assembly is prevented: in the presence of microtubules, kinetochores of ACA-injected cells lack dynein (Wordeman et al., 1996
). Subsequent work has shown that, when ATP is partially depleted in cells, the proteins of the dynamic component, but not members of the core kinetochore structure, are stripped from kinetochores by dynein-mediated transport along microtubules to the spindle poles (Howell et al., 2001
). This suggests that there is constant streaming of dynamic components between kinetochores and centrosomes along spindle microtubules. When detectable at kinetochores, MAD1/MAD2 and ROD are seen to cycle continuously between kinetochores and spindle poles in a dynein-dependent manner (Howell et al., 2001
; Wojcik et al., 2001
; Basto et al., 2004
).
Whereas the dynamic outer kinetochore proteins are depleted from the kinetochore when microtubules attach (Hoffman et al., 2001
), other components, including EB1, APC and the Ran pathway proteins RanGap1 and RanBP2 (see below), associate with kinetochores only when microtubules are attached (Tirnauer et al., 2002
; Kaplan et al., 2001
; Fodde et al., 2001
; Joseph et al., 2002
; Salina et al., 2003
). This might be part of a kinetochore mechanism that recognizes the plus ends of microtubules, ensures they are properly attached and regulates their dynamics while they remain attached (see below).
| Initial encounters between kinetochores and microtubules |
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The high concentrations of dynein at unattached kinetochores correlate with the need for the kinetochore to recruit kMTs. Dynein is released from kinetochores as they acquire their full complement of kMTs (Hoffman et al., 2001
; King et al., 2000
) and, in mammalian tissue culture cells, is required for inactivation of the spindle checkpoint, but not for chromosome alignment at the spindle equator, normal numbers of kMTs, or anaphase A chromosome segregation (Howell et al., 2001b). There is no evidence for dynein occurring in higher plants or within the nucleus of yeast, but minus-end-directed kinesins might compensate for the lack of dynein function.
CENP-E is a very large kinesin-like protein that is associated with the fibrous corona of mammalian kinetochores from prometaphase through anaphase and is also implicated in the initial encounters with microtubules (Cooke et al., 1997
; Yao et al., 1997
). Chromosomes lacking CENP-E at their kinetochores often show defects in alignment and a few remain chronically mono-oriented (attached to a single pole) even though most eventually align successfully at a metaphase plate (Schaar et al., 1997
; Wood et al., 1997
; McEwen et al., 2001
; Putkey et al., 2002
; Weaver et al., 2003
). CENP-E is involved in anchoring kinetochores to shortening microtubules in vitro (Lombillo et al., 1995
), and CENP-E-depleted chromosomes have reduced numbers of microtubules bound to their kinetochores (McEwen et al., 2001
; Putkey et al., 2002
).
Although it is now widely accepted that the kMT fibre (the bundle of kMTs terminating in a single kinetochore) initially forms by capture of microtubules nucleated at centrosomes and spindle poles mammalian tissue culture cells (Kirschner and Mitchison, 1986
), microtubule nucleation at kinetochores might also make important contributions. Khodjakov et al. recently reported that infrequently kinetochore fibres are initiated from the centromere/kinetochore region, elongate away from the chromosome, and subsequently have their minus ends captured and pulled into the spindle pole/centrosome region by interactions with polar spindle microtubules (Khodjakov et al., 2003
). Although we have known for many years that kinetochores (or their proximal centromere regions) have the potential to nucleate microtubules in vitro and in vivo after recovery from microtubule poisons (Telzer et al., 1975
; Witt et al., 1980
; De Brabander et al., 1981
; Mitchison and Kirschner, 1985a
), the significance of these results had been questioned. How the kinetochore/centromere region initiates kinetochore fibre formation and how frequently this occurs are important issues to be addressed since this mechanism may contribute significantly not only to initial kMT formation but also to how kinetochores correct attachment errors and regulate movement along kMTs (see below).
| The role of the Ndc80 complex in interactions between kinetochores and microtubules |
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Once it became clear that dynein and CENP-E are not essential for kMT formation, the search for other proteins crucial for stable kMT attachment began. Pioneering genetic studies in budding and fission yeast revealed the importance of the Ndc80 protein complex for kMT attachment (Wigge and Kilmartin, 2001
; He et al., 2001
; Westermann et al., 2003
; De Wulf et al., 2003
). The budding yeast Ndc80 complex has four components: Ndc80p, Nuf2p, Spc24p and Spc25p. Yeast mutants lacking components of the Ndc80 complex exhibit loss of kinetochore-microtubule attachment without a complete loss of kinetochore structure (Wigge and Kilmartin, 2001
; He et al., 2001
). By contrast, mutants that completely abolish kinetochore assembly, such as Ndc10 mutants in budding yeast (Goh and Kilmartin, 1993
), are deficient not only in microtubule attachment but also in their checkpoint response, presumably because kinetochores serve as a platform for organizing the response. The Ndc80 complex is highly conserved and has been identified in S. pombe, C. elegans, Xenopus, chickens and humans (Wigge and Kilmartin, 2001
; He et al., 2001
; Nabetani et al., 2001
; Howe et al., 2001
; DeLuca et al., 2002
; Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
; McCleland et al., 2003
). The human homologue of Ndc80, Hec1 (for `highly enhanced in cancer cells 1'), has been shown to be important for chromosome alignment and mitotic progression and to interact with components of the cohesin and condensin complexes (Zheng et al., 1999
).
Several recent studies have shown that the Ndc80 complex is crucial for the stable kinetochore-microtubule attachments that are needed to sustain the centromere tensions involved in achieving proper chromosome alignment in higher eukaryotic cells (Howe et al., 2001
; DeLuca et al., 2002
; Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
; McCleland et al., 2003
; Hori et al., 2003
; Desai et al., 2003
; Bharadwaj et al., 2004
; McCleland et al., 2004
; Cheeseman et al., 2004
). Cells that have impaired Ndc80 complex function (induced by RNAi, gene disruption, or antibody microinjection) have elongated spindles, exhibit loss of tension across sister kinetochores, fail to align their chromosomes (Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
; DeLuca et al., 2002
; McCleland et al., 2003
; Hori et al., 2003
; Desai et al., 2003
; Bharadwaj et al., 2004
; McCleland et al., 2004
) and have few or no kMTs at temperatures low enough to depolymerize non-kMTs selectively (DeLuca et al., 2002
; McCleland et al., 2004
).
Microinjection of antibodies to Nuf2, Spc24 or Spc25 disrupts or prevents metaphase chromosome alignment, but kinetochores exhibit transient movements along the spindle axis (McCleland et al., 2003
; McCleland et al., 2004
), as do chromosomes in cultured cells in which levels of Nuf2 or Ndc80/Hec1 are reduced >90% by short interfering (si)RNA (J.D., Y. Dong, P. Hergert, J. Strauss, J. Hickey, E.D.S. and B. McEwen, unpublished). Either transient end-on attachments or lateral microtubule interactions with the kinetochore may produce these transient movements or move chromosomes towards one or the other pole in anaphase (McCleland et al., 2003
). In support of this interpretation, electron microscopy studies have found rare microtubule plus-end binding by kinetochores in HeLa cells in which hNuf2 is knocked down by RNAi (J.D. et al., unpublished).
Several studies have also revealed a role for the Ndc80 complex in regulating the stable association of MAD1/MAD2 and dynein with kinetochores (DeLuca et al., 2002
; Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
; McCleland et al., 2003
; Hori et al., 2003
; Bharadwaj et al., 2004
; McCleland et al., 2004
). The prolonged prometaphase arrest observed in cells depleted of Ndc80/Hec1 is MAD2 dependent, despite the fact that the Ndc80/Hec1-depleted kinetochores exhibit levels of MAD1, MAD2 and dynein that are less than 10-15% of those seen at unattached kinetochores in control prometaphase cells (Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
; DeLuca et al., 2003
; McCleland et al., 2003
; Hori et al., 2003
; Bharadwaj et al., 2004
; McCleland et al., 2004
). By contrast, kinetochore-associated CENP-A, CENP-C, CENP-E, CENP-H and BUBR1 remain at high levels. This result indicates either that the sum of the MAD1 and MAD2 present at low levels at all kinetochores in these Nuf2 or Ndc80/Hec1-depleted cells is equivalent for blocking the spindle checkpoint to the high level at a single kinetochore in a normal cell (DeLuca et al., 2003
) or that the checkpoint can still be active in the absence of MAD1 and MAD2 at kinetochores (Martin-Lluesma et al., 2002
). In this regard, microinjection of antibodies to components of the Ndc80 complex inactivates the spindle assembly checkpoint, which contrasts with most RNAi and gene-knockout studies. Also, a recent report indicates that, if Nuf2 is more efficiently depleted by improved RNAi procedures, then MAD1 and MAD2 are completely lost from kinetochores and the spindle checkpoint is inactivated (Meraldi et al., 2004
).
Disassembly of spindle microtubules by nocodazole results in a substantial recovery of MAD1, MAD2 and dynein at Ndc80/Hec1-depleted kinetochores (DeLuca et al., 2003
; Bharadwaj et al., 2004
). We hypothesize that interactions with the Ndc80 complex might prevent protein stripping from non-attached kinetochores by dynein-mediated transport along kMTs (Howell et al., 2001
; DeLuca et al., 2003
; Basto et al., 2004
).
The vertebrate Ndc80 complex clearly plays roles in chromosome alignment, kinetochore-microtubule attachment and microtubule-dependent control of MAD1/MAD2 and dynein complexes at kinetochores. Interestingly, there is no evidence that the Ndc80 complex itself directly interacts with microtubules. In yeast, kinetochore-microtubule attachment requires the Dam1-DASH-DDD complex. Some members of this complex bind directly to microtubules, whereas others bind to the Ndc80 complex (Westermann et al., 2003
; Courtwright and He, 2002
; De Wulf et al., 2003
). Thus, the Dam1-DASH-DDD complex could be an essential adaptor between kinetochores and microtubules. However, no animal equivalent of this complex has been identified, and this remains a focus of active investigation.
| The role of Ran in kinetochore assembly and function |
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Ran can also have an important role in mitotic spindle assembly (Nachury et al., 2001
; Wiese et al., 2001
), particularly in cells such as Xenopus oocytes, which lack centrosomes. During interphase, importins bind to and sequester several proteins, including TPX2 and NuMA, which are essential for spindle microtubule assembly and spindle pole formation. In mitosis, Ran-GTP binds to the importins, thereby releasing TPX2 and NuMA to function in spindle assembly. In this case, Ran-GTP is generated in the vicinity of chromosomes by RCC1 bound to the chromatin.
Recent work has revealed that Ran has other essential roles in reassembly of the nuclear envelope, regulation of centriole pairing, and kinetochore assembly and function (Dasso, 2001
; Sazer and Dasso, 2000
; Clarke and Zhang, 2001
; Di Fiore et al., 2004
). Thus, Ran acts as a master regulator of cell-cycle-correlated macromolecular assembly processes, presumably by releasing key components that have been sequestered by binding to importins or related molecules.
Interest in the role of the Ran system at kinetochores was ignited when Dasso and coworkers found that, during mitosis, a nuclear pore-associated complex of RanGAP1 (a GTPase-activating protein that stimulates the conversion of Ran-GTP to Ran-GDP) and the Ran-binding protein RanBP2/Nup358 can be detected at kinetochores (Joseph et al., 2002
). This appears to be functionally significant because a variety of treatments that raise the levels of Ran-GTP inhibit kinetochore function, causing the checkpoint components BUB1, BUB3, MAD2 and CENP-E to leave kinetochores (Arnaoutov and Dasso, 2003
). Similarly, Salina et al. have found that mitosis is disrupted when levels of RanBP2/Nup358 are lowered by RNAi (Salina et al., 2003
). The most common phenotype observed is one in which some chromosomes align at the metaphase plate but others remain near the spindle poles. Importantly, this group also found that the morphology of the kinetochore is abnormal in RanBP2/Nup358-depleted cells and that MAD1, MAD2, ZW10, CENP-E and CENP-F fail to concentrate at kinetochores (Salina et al., 2003
). Binding of Ndc80/Hec1, hNuf2, CENP-I, BUB1 and BUBR1 is not affected by RanBP2/Nup358 depletion (Joseph et al., 2004
). Thus, RanBP2/Nup358 appears to have an essential role in the behaviour of some but not all kinetochore components.
The targeting of the RanGAP1-RanBP2/Nup358 complex to kinetochores requires kMT formation (Joseph et al., 2002
; Salina et al., 2003
) and the Ndc80 complex (Joseph et al., 2004
). Furthermore, microtubules bound to kinetochores in RanBP2/Nup358-depleted cells appear to be less stable than normal, at least as defined by resistance to lowered temperatures (Joseph et al., 2004
). Interestingly, the targeting of a subfraction of a second nuclear-pore-associated complex (containing hNup107 plus eight other nucleoporins) to kinetochores does not require microtubules (Belgareh et al., 2001
; Loïodice et al., 2004
), prompting the suggestion that this complex is involved in docking of RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358 (Joseph et al., 2004
). Why nuclear pore proteins would be associated with the kinetochore is not clear, but it is interesting that, in the primitive dinoflagellate Gyrodinium cohnii, in which the nuclear envelope remains intact at mitosis, chromosomes are connected to spindle microtubules outside the nucleus through modified nuclear pores (Kubai and Ris, 1969
; Kubai, 1975
).
How can the binding of RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358 be required for binding of MAD1 to kinetochores, particularly if MAD1 binds before RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358, and MAD1 and RanGAP1 cannot be detected on the same kinetochores (Joseph et al., 2004
)? One possibility is that RanBP2/Nup358 acts on MAD1 earlier at nuclear pores to render it capable of binding to kinetochores. RanBP2/Nup358 is located in filaments on the outer face of the nuclear pore (Wu et al., 1995
), and MAD1 appears to be localized to the inner face of the pore during interphase (Campbell et al., 2001
). Another possibility is that RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358 somehow stabilize the kinetochore against the forces exerted by microtubules. When RanBP2/Nup358 is depleted, the force exerted by microtubule-associated motors could then disrupt kinetochore structure and cause components of the outer kinetochore to dissociate. Remember that injection of ACA during G2 phase results in the assembly of kinetochores that appear normal in the presence of colcemid but are disrupted if microtubules are present (Bernat et al., 1991
). It will be very interesting to determine whether the various kinetochore components whose binding depends upon RanBP2/Nup358 (this includes dynein) are localized normally following RanBP2/Nup358 depletion in cells that enter mitosis in the absence of microtubules.
What do RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358 do at kinetochores? The complex should convert Ran-GTP to Ran-GDP, which cannot displace cargo from importin. Thus, kinetochore-associated RanGAP1 and RanBP2/Nup358 might promote the sequestration of particular importin target molecules in the vicinity of kinetochores. This could explain recent results suggesting that kinetochores control at least some aspects of spindle formation (Khodjakov et al., 2003
). Alternatively, the entire Ran cycle might run in the vicinity of kinetochores. A long-neglected study showed convincingly that RCC1, the Ran GEF, is located at centromeres (Bischoff et al., 1990
), where it was termed CENP-D (Kingwell and Rattner, 1987
). At kinetochores, this cycle could be part of an uncharacterized switching mechanism that is required for kinetochore stability, microtubule nucleation, or modulation of the dynamic instability of kinetochore-associated microtubules.
| Chromosomal passengers and the correction of kinetochore attachment errors in mitosis |
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The spindle assembly checkpoint detects kinetochores on mono-oriented chromosomes that are either unattached or have syntelic attachment, delaying activation of the APC/C and therefore the onset of anaphase (reviewed by Musacchio and Hardwick, 2002
). The checkpoint is sensitive to the level of kinetochore occupancy by microtubules (Fig. 3B). Whether it can also detect tension exerted by the spindle on kinetochores is still actively debated, in part because the tension generated by bi-orientation stabilizes microtubule attachment (Nicklas and Koch, 1969
; Nicklas et al., 2001
). However, what is clear is that merotelic attachments of bi-oriented chromosomes, in which kinetochores are attached incorrectly but are under tension, are not detected by the checkpoint (Cimini et al., 2001
; Cimini et al., 2002
). Nevertheless, most, but not all, merotelic attachments are either corrected before anaphase or are prevented by spindle mechanics from producing inaccurate anaphase chromosome segregation (Cimini et al., 2003
).
One key factor in attachment error correction before anaphase appears to be the chromosomal passenger complex (Fig. 1 and Fig. 3B), which consists of the kinase aurora B, its targeting and activation subunit INCENP, and two other subunits whose role is unclear survivin and borealin/dasra B (Adams et al., 2001a
; Gassmann et al., 2004
; Sampath et al., 2004
). Cells that have chromosome attachment errors accumulate when the function of this complex is disrupted by dominant-negative mutants, RNAi, antibody microinjection, or selective drug targeting (Mackay et al., 1998
; Adams et al., 2001b
; Kaitna et al., 2002
; Honda et al., 2003
; Gassmann et al., 2004
; Kallio et al., 2002b
; Murata-Hori and Wang, 2002
; Carvalho et al., 2003
; Ditchfield et al., 2003
; Hauf et al., 2003
; Lampson et al., 2004
).
The chromosomal passengers are required for operation of the spindle assembly checkpoint under certain conditions. The checkpoint mechanism functions normally in the absence of survivin or aurora B function if microtubules are completely disassembled by drugs such as nocodazole. By contrast, survivin is required for cells to delay mitotic progression when spindle dynamics are dampened by taxol (Carvalho et al., 2003
; Lens et al., 2003
), or when formation of monopolar spindles is induced by treatment with the drug monastrol (Lens et al., 2003
), both of which reduce centromere tension. Studies using small molecule inhibitors of aurora kinases have yielded similar results (Hauf et al., 2003
; Ditchfield et al., 2003
), and the budding yeast aurora kinase, Ipl1p, is required for checkpoint signalling specifically when centromere tension is abolished by blocking DNA replication prior to mitotic entry (Biggins and Murray, 2001
). The chromosomal passenger complex is required for the stable targeting of checkpoint proteins BUBR1 and MAD2 to kinetochores (Carvalho et al., 2003
; Lens et al., 2003
; Ditchfield et al., 2003
; Murata-Hori and Wang, 2002
). Aurora B is also required for the stable targeting of CENP-E, dynein and MCAK to centromeres, but only in the presence of microtubules (Murata-Hori and Wang, 2002
; Andrews et al., 2004
). This suggests that the chromosomal passenger complex promotes and stabilizes protein recruitment to kinetochores, antagonizing the dynein-driven stripping discussed above.
In contrast to the above results, the checkpoint response induced by loss of microtubules is lost in S. pombe aurora/Ark1 mutants (Petersen and Hagan, 2003
) and in human cells expressing dominant-negative aurora B (Murata-Hori and Wang, 2002
) or injected with specific antibody (Kallio et al., 2002b
). The reason for these differences is not known.
Many studies have shown that aurora B kinase is required to destabilize improper kinetochore microtubule attachments (Fig. 3B) so that chromosomes can achieve an amphitelic orientation and metaphase alignment (reviewed by Adams et al., 2001a
; Carmena and Earnshaw, 2003
). A clue to the underlying mechanism has emerged from studies in budding yeast, in which Ipl1p mutants (Chan and Botstein, 1993
) undergo massive chromosome mis-segregation because they cannot release kinetochore-microtubule attachments normally (Tanaka et al., 2002
). To explain this, it has been proposed that Ipl1p is normally located in the inner centromere beneath the kinetochore and that, when sister kinetochores are stretched apart by spindle tension, the kinase can no longer phosphorylate key targets in the kinetochore as the two become physically separated.
Ipl1p phosphorylates several yeast kinetochore proteins, including the constitutive kinetochore component Ndc10p (Biggins et al., 1999
), as well as members of the Ndc80 and Dam1-DASH-DDD complexes (Cheeseman et al., 2002a
; Kang et al., 2001
). Phosphorylation of components of the Ndc80 complex has been shown to destabilize kMT attachment, whereas dephosphorylation produces stabilization (Shang et al., 2003
).
Aurora B kinase also appears to influence kMT attachments by a different mechanism. The KinI kinesin MCAK (Wordeman and Mitchison, 1995
) (reviewed by Walczak, 2003
) is required both for spindle assembly (Walczak et al., 1996
; Kline-Smith and Walczak, 2002
) and for correction of attachment errors during chromosome alignment (Walczak et al., 2002
; Kline-Smith et al., 2004
). Phosphorylation of MCAK by aurora B inhibits its ability to promote microtubule disassembly (Andrews et al., 2004
; Lan et al., 2004
; Ohi et al., 2004
). High-resolution light microscopy suggests that aurora B and MCAK largely colocalize in centromeres that are not under tension but that MCAK becomes more closely associated with kinetochores (thereby moving away from the aurora B in the inner centromere) as chromosomes achieve bi-orientation and their centromeres are stretched towards opposite poles (Andrews et al., 2004
). Because PP1, the phosphatase that counterbalances aurora B, resides within the kinetochore outer domain (Murnion et al., 2001
; Trinkle-Mulcahy et al., 2003
), this would be expected to promote the activation of MCAK. The consequences of this observed movement appear to be counter-intuitive. One might imagine that MCAK should be most active during prometaphase, when the largest number of errors is being made in chromosome attachment. Therefore, the colocalization of aurora B and MCAK at this time, which would be expected to result in inactivation of MCAK, is unexpected. However, it could be that the principal function of MCAK is to correct merotelic attachments, and since these persist following the establishment of spindle tension, the spatial segregation of MCAK and the chromosomal passengers might have the expected result.
Another factor that might regulate kMT attachments is ICIS (the `inner centromere KinI stimulator'), an activator of MCAK that forms a complex with INCENP and aurora B in Xenopus eggs (Ohi et al., 2003
). How MCAK activity is regulated during the various phases of mitosis by the combination of ICIS and aurora B remains an important area of investigation.
| Kinetochore movement |
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Most chromosome movements relative to spindle poles are associated with the lengthening and shortening of kMTs. One of the most intriguing properties of kinetochores is their ability to switch their associated bundle of up to 20 (or more) kMTs from a state of plus-end depolymerization to polymerization. This enables kinetochores in prometaphase mammalian cultured cells (Skibbens et al., 1993
) and budding yeast (He et al., 2001
; Pearson et al., 2001
) to exhibit `directional instability' (Skibbens et al., 1993
), switching between persistent phases of polewards and anti-polewards movements that are coupled to alternating states of kMT depolymerization and polymerization, respectively. This kinetochore bi-stability appears to be part of the mechanism for aligning chromosomes at the spindle equator during prometaphase without the loss of mechanical linkage between sister kinetochores and the spindle poles.
It is thought that kinetochore bi-stability is based on the dynamic instability of microtubule plus ends and it is partly controlled by tension at the kinetochore. In mammalian cultured cells, low tension promotes the switch to kMT depolymerization and high tension promotes switching to kMT polymerization (Rieder and Salmon, 1994
; Skibbens et al., 1995
; Skibbens and Salmon, 1997
). At high tension, kinetochores appear to act like a `slip-clutch' mechanism, switching to polymerization to prevent detachment of depolymerizing ends (Fig. 4A) (Rieder and Salmon, 1994
; Maddox et al., 2003
). Switching between states of polymerization or depolymerization probably depends on structural changes associated with the dynamic instability of microtubule plus ends (Fig. 4B). Polymerizing ends are typically blunt or slightly flared into open sheets because their protofilaments are straight or slightly curved inside-out as they incorporate tubulin-GTP (Fig. 4B, polymerization state). By contrast, protofilaments are highly curved inside-out at depolymerizing ends that have lost their stabilizing cap of tubulin-GTP (Fig. 4B, depolymerization state). The hydrolysis of GTP bound to tubulin following assembly into the microtubule lattice is thought to provide the energy that drives this inside-out curvature of the tubulin dimer that is seen when tubulin-GDP protofilaments loose their lateral attachments at the microtubule tip (Arnal et al., 2000
; Howard and Hyman, 2003
). A fundamental unanswered question is how switching between these polymerization and depolymerization states of dynamic instability is controlled by tension or other chemical mechanisms within the kinetochore or gradients within the spindle (Inoue and Salmon, 1995
; Kapoor and Compton, 2002
; Sprague et al., 2003
). Switching probably depends on regulation of depolymerases and +TIP proteins within the kinetochore (Fig. 4B), as discussed in the next section. Another model (Joglekar and Hunt, 2002
) proposes that high tension induces the switch from depolymerization to polymerization by causing the loss of all depolymerizing ends from the kinetochore while a sub-population of attached kMTs is still undergoing polymerization and maintaining anchorage within the Hill sleeve (Hill, 1985
; Joglekar and Hunt, 2002
). This model makes several testable predictions, including the notion that polymerizing and depolymerizing ends coexist within single kMT fibres.
|
In vertebrate cultured cells, two mechanisms combine to move chromosomes polewards during metaphase oscillations and anaphase A segregation (Fig. 4): `Pac-Man' motility, which is coupled to depolymerization of the plus ends of kMTs within the attachment site at the kinetochore; and poleward microtubule flux, produced by microtubule translocation forces within the spindle and coupled to depolymerization of microtubule minus ends near the spindle poles. Sorting out contributions from Pac-Man and flux-based mechanisms to poleward movement has been made possible by the development of fluorescence photoactivation (Mitchison, 1989
) and, more recently, by fluorescence speckle microscopy methods. If one microinjects or transfects cells with fluorescent tubulin subunits at low (<1%) fractions of the endogenous unlabelled tubulin pool, microtubules acquire random distributions of fluorescent subunits. Stochastic clustering during polymerization produces fluorescent speckles of 1-5 fluorophores along the microtubule lattice; these can be imaged relative to fluorescently labelled kinetochores and poles with high resolution and sensitivity using cooled charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras and spinning-disk confocal microscopy (Waterman-Storer et al., 1998
; Maddox et al., 2000
; Maddox et al., 2002
).
The relative contributions of Pac-Man and flux mechanisms to anaphase chromosome movement vary between different cell types, Pac-Man contributing 100% in budding yeast and about 70% in vertebrate tissue culture cells (Mitchison and Salmon, 1992
; Zhai et al., 1995
). By contrast, flux makes an important contribution in meiotic oocyte spindles and early embryonic spindles (Maddox et al., 2002
; Brust-Mascher and Scholey, 2002
; Maddox et al., 2003
), and apparently accounts for 100% of the movement in grasshopper and crane fly meiosis I spermatocytes (Wilson et al., 1994
; LaFountain et al., 2001
; Chen and Zhang, 2004
).
Although significant progress has been made, it is not yet known how the state of kMT polymerization/depolymerization is coupled to kinetochore tension, or what reads the tension, or how this signal is transduced to the microtubules. These issues are important for advancing our understanding of how kinetochores function along with spindle mechanisms such as poleward microtubule flux and polar ejection forces on the chromosome arms to align chromosomes in prometaphase, a problem that has been recently discussed elsewhere (Kapoor and Compton, 2002
).
| Proteins influencing kinetochore movement |
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