| Literature DB >> 25926702 |
Abstract
The first centromere was isolated 35 years ago by Louise Clarke and John Carbon from budding yeast. They embarked on their journey with rudimentary molecular tools (by today's standards) and little knowledge of the structure of a chromosome, much less the nature of a centromere. Their discovery opened up a new field, as centromeres have now been isolated from fungi and numerous plants and animals, including mammals. Budding yeast and several other fungi have small centromeres with short, well-defined sequences, known as point centromeres, whereas regional centromeres span several kilobases up to megabases and do not seem to have DNA sequence specificity. Centromeres are at the heart of artificial chromosomes, and we have seen the birth of synthetic centromeres in budding and fission yeast and mammals. The diversity in centromeres throughout phylogeny belie conserved functions that are only beginning to be understood.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25926702 PMCID: PMC4436770 DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E14-11-1512
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Cell ISSN: 1059-1524 Impact factor: 4.138
FIGURE 1:Left, the size relationship between the centromere nuclease-protected region and a single microtubule. The nucleosome is 5 × 11 nm, with 146 base pairs of DNA wrapped around a core of eight histone molecules. Based on the size of the nucleosome, it was estimated that the kinetochore was slightly larger, due to the increase in protected DNA (220-bp centromere vs. 160-bp nucleosome; Bloom and Carbon, 1982; Bloom . Right, the size relationship between centromeric heterochromatin and the 16 kinetochore microtubules in the half-spindle in yeast. The 16 yeast centromeres are clustered at the plus ends of 16 kinetochore microtubules. The sister kinetochores in the other half of the spindle are not shown. The centromeres of all 16 chromosomes are cross-linked via cohesin and condensin, proteins enriched in the 50 kb surrounding each centromere (Stephens , 2013). From a systems biology perspective, one can consider the 50 kb of each of 16 centromeres to be the equivalent of a mammalian centromere (800-kb yeast vs. 1- to 5-Mb mammalian centromere).