| Literature DB >> 19704018 |
Abstract
Every chromosome needs a centromere for proper segregation during cell division. Centromeric chromatin wraps around histones, providing an anchor for kinetochore proteins and spindle attachment. It is clear why cells need centromeres, but how they form and what they look like is less so. Recent reports extend our understanding of chaperones involved in centromere formation. And other accounts of half-sized, right-handed nucleosomes have created an unexpected twist.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19704018 PMCID: PMC2733755 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200908012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Figure 1.Human metaphase cell showing spindle microtubules (red) that connect to the chromosomes (blue) at the array of CENP-A nucleosomes at the centromere (CENP-A stained green).
IMAGE COURTESY OF BEN BLACK (PENN) AND PAUL MADDOX (MONTREAL).
Figure 2.Canonical H3-containing octameric nucleosome is depicted wrapped with left-handed, negative supercoiling DNA. Henikoff's new study infers a hemisomal CENP-A nucleosome with right-handed, positive supercoiling DNA.
(Structural representations were created using Chimera and PDBID: 1aoi (1). Left side shows the DNA as ribbons, with one strand colored by rainbow; the right side shows the nucleosome wrapped with DNA. The nucleosome is colored by histone: the two H3 components are colored in red and orange, H4 is represented in dark green and light green, H2A is dark blue and cyan, H2B is purple and pink.)