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Published March 8, 2011 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

CENP-C Is a Structural Platform for Kinetochore Assembly

Abstract

Centromeres provide a region of chromatin upon which kinetochores are assembled in mitosis [1, 2]. Centromeric protein C (CENP-C) is a core component of this centromeric chromatin [3, 4] that, when depleted, prevents the proper formation of both centromeres and kinetochores [5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]. CENP-C localizes to centromeres throughout the cell cycle via its C-terminal part [6, 8], whereas its N-terminal part appears necessary for recruitment of some but not all components of the Mis12 complex of the kinetochore [8]. We now find that all kinetochore proteins belonging to the KMN (KNL1/Spc105, the Mis12 complex, and the Ndc80 complex) network [1] bind to the N-terminal part of Drosophila CENP-C. Moreover, we show that the Mis12 complex component Nnf1 interacts directly with CENP-C in vitro. To test whether CENP-C's N-terminal part was sufficient to recruit KMN proteins, we targeted it to the centrosome by fusing it to a domain of Plk4 kinase [11]. The Mis12 and Ndc80 complexes and Spc105 protein were then all recruited to centrosomes at the expense of centromeres, leading to mitotic abnormalities typical of cells with defective kinetochores. Thus, the N-terminal part of Drosophila CENP-C is sufficient to recruit core kinetochore components and acts as the principal linkage between centromere and kinetochore during mitosis.

Additional Information

© 2011 Elsevier. Under an Elsevier user license. Received 11 November 2010, Revised 7 January 2011, Accepted 3 February 2011, Available online 25 February 2011. We would like to thank members of D.M.G.'s laboratory for helpful discussions. We are grateful to Nikola Dzhindzhev for the data from the "protein A alone" control experiment and Monica Bettencourt-Dias for the anti-Spd2 antibody. We thank Don Cleveland and David Sharp for kind gifts of antibodies and Ronald Vale for the cDNA clone. This project was financially supported by grants from Cancer Research UK and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council.

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