Welburn Lab - Current Biology Authors Weber, J., Legal, T., Perez Lezcano, A., Barisic, M., Davies, O.R., and Welburn, J.P.I. Image The Welburn lab reveals the molecular mechanism for the targeting of the CENP-E motor, to mediate kinetochore-microtubule attachment through both the checkpoint protein BubR1 and the outer corona in a dynein-dependent fashion to kinetochores. CENP-E also facilitates the recruitment of the corona proteins Spindly, Mad1 and the RZZ complex and is important for Dynein accumulation at kinetochores. This implicates CENP-E as a platform to stabilize the outer kinetochore to allow chromosome congression. Summary of Paper by Natalia Kochanova, Earnshaw Lab Proper chromosomal alignment is essential to healthy cell division. In vertebrates, this alignment is mediated by a centromeric motor protein CENP-E, which brings misaligned chromosomes to plus-ends of microtubules. Although this is a well-studied process, until recently the mechanisms of CENP-E recruitment to unattached kinetochores remained controversial. The Welburn lab discovered that CENP-E is recruited to kinetochores by two independent pathways. One recruitment mechanism is mediated by BubR1 protein, a component of the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC), which prevents chromosomal segregation until all kinetochores are attached to microtubules. The other pathway includes the outer kinetochore corona and dynein, another motor protein important for cell division. Indeed, depletion of BubR1, dynein heavy chain or both lead to a reduction of kinetochore CENP-E levels, having a synergistic effect. In agreement with this, a disruption of the RZZ complex, core component of the outer corona, also decreased CENP-E levels at kinetochores. The team showed that the corona-targeting domain of CENP-E is distinct from the BubR1 targeting domain. The scientists also determined the X-ray structure of the part of this minimal corona-targeting domain and predicted BubR1-interacting domain structure by Alphafold. While the BubR1-interacting domain was predicted to be a four-helical bundle, the corona-targeting domain fragment was organized as a dimeric coiled-coil structure. Further modelling showed that the whole corona-targeting domain has a structure of two homodimeric coiled coils flanking a central conserved segment which is essential for its recruitment to the outer corona. The team then identified minimal requirement for CENP-E recruitment to unattached kinetochores in cells. Overall, the lab carefully dissected two pathways contributing to the CENP-E recruitment to kinetochores, having shown that CENP-E requires structurally distinct domains for differing targeting. Related Links Journal URL Welburn Lab Website DOI This article was published on 2024-06-17