| Literature DB >> 33202170 |
Abstract
The kinetochore is a complex structure whose function is absolutely essential. Unlike the centromere, the kinetochore at first appeared remarkably well conserved from yeast to humans, especially the microtubule-binding outer kinetochore. However, recent efforts towards biochemical reconstitution of diverse kinetochores challenge the notion of a similarly conserved architecture for the constitutively centromere-associated network of the inner kinetochore. This review briefly summarizes the evidence from comparative genomics for interspecific variability in inner kinetochore composition and focuses on novel biochemical evidence indicating that even homologous inner kinetochore protein complexes are put to different uses in different organisms.Entities:
Keywords: CENP-A; centromere; genome; kinetochore; mitosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 33202170 PMCID: PMC7729030 DOI: 10.1098/rsob.200284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biol ISSN: 2046-2441 Impact factor: 6.411
Distribution and importance (if known) of inner kinetochore proteins in organisms with relatively well-characterized kinetochores. Grey shading indicates that no homologue has yet been identified in this organism. Blue shading indicates that a homologue has been identified, but not yet been shown to be essential. Green shading indicates that a homologue is both present and essential for viability. Orange shading indicates the primary path of outer kinetochore recruitment. Yellow shading indicates a secondary path(s) of outer kinetochore recruitment. Future biochemical characterization of diverse inner kinetochores will necessitate updating this table with novel findings about each protein's homologues, essentiality and function.
| fungus | fungus | fungus | nematode | insect | mammal | bird | insect | amphibian | mammal | plant | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CENP- | |||||||||||
| Cse4 | Cnp1 | HCP-3 | CENP-A | CenpA | CID | CENP-A | Cenpa | cenH3/HTR12 | |||
| Mif2 | Cnp3 | HCP-4 | CENP-C | CENPC | CENP-C | CENP-C | Cenpc1 | atCENP-C | |||
| Mcm16 | Fta3 | CENP-H | GSSPFG00011797001? | CENP-H | CENPH | CENP-H | Cenph | ||||
| Ctf3 | Mis6 | CENP-I | KWMTBOMO02221 | CENP-I | CENPI | CENP-I | Cenpi | ||||
| Mcm22 | Sim4 | CENP-K | LOC101741561 | CENP-K | CENPK | CENP-K | Cenpk | ||||
| Iml3 | Fta1 | CENP-L | KMWTBOMO11447 | CENP-L | CENPL | CENP-L | Cenpl | ||||
| CENP-M | LOC101745870 | CENP-M | CENPM | CENP-M | Cenpm | ||||||
| Chl4 | Mis15 | CENP-N | KWMTBOMO06206 | CENP-N | CENPN | CENP-N | Cenpn | ||||
| Mcm21 | Mal2 | CENP-O | KWMTBOMO14835? | CENP-O | CENPO | CENP-O | Cenpo | NP_568235.1 | |||
| Ctf19 | Fta2 | CENP-P | KWMTBOMO09290? | CENP-P | CENPP | CENP-P | Cenpp | ||||
| Okp1 | Fta7 | CENP-Q | CENPQ | Cenpq | |||||||
| Ame1 | Mis17 | CENP-U | CENPU | CENP-U | Cenpu | ||||||
| CENP-R | CENP-R | Cenpr | |||||||||
| Mhf1 | Mhf1 | CENP-S | Y48E1C.1 | CENP-S | CENPS | CENP-S | Cenps | NP_199906.1 | |||
| Cnn1 | Cnp20 | CENP-T | CENP-T | CENP-T | CENPT | CENP-T | Cenpt | ||||
| Wip1 | Wip1 | CENP-W | CENP-W | CENPW | CENP-W | Cenpw | |||||
| Mhf2 | Mhf2 | CENP-X | F35H10.5 | CENP-X | CENPX | CENP-X | NP_001323102 | ||||
| Nkp1 | Fta4 | ||||||||||
| Nkp2 | Cnl2 |
Figure 1.Three strategies of Ndc80c recruitment have been described biochemically in different organisms. Some organisms, notably ascomycetes, recruit Ndc80c primarily through CENP-QU homologues. In others, such as D. melanogaster, the CENP-C-based recruitment pathway dominates. Another set of organisms, including G. gallus, relies most heavily on CENP-TW for Ndc80c recruitment. CENP-QU and CENP-C bind centromeric nucleosomes directly and recruit Ndc80c through Mis12cMIND. CENP-TW, on the other hand, can bind Ndc80c both directly and through Mis12cMIND. CENP-TW is recruited to the kinetochore by upstream components of the CCAN (although it has been posited that CENP-TWSX could bind DNA directly in some organisms).