|
Centromere-associated protein-E (CENP-E) is
an essential mitotic kinesin that is required for efficient, stable microtubule
capture at kinetochores. It also directly binds to BubR1, a kinetochore-associated
kinase implicated in the mitotic checkpoint, the major cell cycle control
pathway in which unattached kinetochores prevent anaphase onset. Here, we
show that single unattached kinetochores depleted of CENP-E cannot block entry
into anaphase, resulting in aneuploidy in 25% of divisions in primary mouse
fibroblasts in vitro and in 95% of regenerating hepatocytes in vivo. Without
CENP-E, diminished levels of BubR1 are recruited to kinetochores and BubR1
kinase activity remains at basal levels. CENP-E binds to and directly stimulates
the kinase activity of purified BubR1 in vitro. Thus, CENP-E is required
for enhancing recruitment of its binding partner BubR1 to each unattached
kinetochore and for stimulating BubR1 kinase activity, implicating it as an
essential amplifier of a basal mitotic checkpoint signal.
[BROWSE ALL CENTROMERE
PROTEINS]
|