We have employed a novel in vivo approach to study the structure and function of the eukaryotic kinetochore multiprotein complex. RNA interference (RNAi) was used to block the synthesis of centromere protein A (CENP-A) and Clip-170 in human cells. By coexpression, homologous kinetochore proteins from Saccharomyces cerevisiae were then tested for the ability to complement the RNAi-induced phenotypes. Cse4p, the budding yeast CENP-A homolog, was specifically incorporated into kinetochore nucleosomes and was able to complement RNAi-induced cell cycle arrest in CENP-A-depleted human cells. Thus, Cse4p can structurally and functionally substitute for CENP-A, strongly suggesting that the basic features of centromeric chromatin are conserved between yeast and mammals. Bik1p, the budding yeast homolog of human CLIP-170, also specifically localized to kinetochores during mitosis, but Bik1p did not rescue CLIP-170 depletion-induced cell cycle arrest. Generally, the newly developed in vivo complementation assay provides a powerful new tool for studying the function and evolutionary conservation of multiprotein complexes from yeast to humans.Centromeres are eukaryotic cellular structures that are essential for faithful chromosomal segregation during mitotic and meiotic cell division. The kinetochore complex is a defined multiprotein structure on the mitotic chromosome that adheres to the centromere (18, 61). The kinetochore serves as the site of attachment for spindle microtubules, which facilitate the alignment and separation of chromosomes during mitosis (12,13). Although the centromere's function is highly conserved among eukaryotes, centromeric morphology varies significantly, ranging from small, simple kinetochores in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae to complex centromeres in multicellular eukaryotes (14). In mammalian cells, the centromere forms a visible primary constriction during metaphase and the kinetochore is a distinct structure that can be resolved into subregions (45,47,67). Finally, in holokinetic organisms such as the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, multiple centromeres are dispersed throughout the chromosomes (1, 2). The primary nucleotide sequences of centromeric DNAs are also not conserved across phylogenies. The absolute size of the centromeric DNA can vary from ca. 125 bp in S. cerevisiae to tens of megabases in higher eukaryotes (11). Beyond the lack of size and sequence conservation between organisms, the centromere's function may be established not only at predefined sequences, but also at noncentromeric DNA elements, as illustrated by neocentromeres in human (11) and plant (93) cells. Finally, while in budding yeast the centromere DNA alone can nucleate centromere formation de novo, centromeres of metazoan cells strongly depend on epigenetic factors rather than DNA sequences for their activity (90). Thus, there is no primary sequence determinant in centromeric DNA that is conserved among eukaryotic species.At the protein level, a series of kinetochore components show homology to proteins...
DNA segregation in mammalian cells during mitosis is an essential cellular process that is mediated by a specific subchromosomal protein complex, the kinetochore. Malfunction of this complex results in aneuploidy and can cause cancer. A subkinetochore complex, the "inner kinetochore", is present at the centromere during the entire cell cycle. Its location seems to be defined by the settlement of CENP-A (CENH3), which replaces histone H3 in centromeric nucleosomes. This suggests that CENP-A can recruit further inner kinetochore proteins by direct binding. Surprisingly, intense in vitro studies could not identify an interaction of CENP-A with any other inner kinetochore protein. Instead, centromere identity seems to be maintained by a unique nucleosome, which might have a modified structure or epigenetic state that serves to distinguish the centromere from the rest of the chromosome. We investigated the association of CENP-A and CENP-B by fluorescence intensity and lifetime-based FRET measurements in living human HEp-2 cells. We observed Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between CENP-A and CENP-B at centromere locations; this indicates that these proteins are in the molecular vicinity (<10 nm) of each other. In addition, we analysed protein-protein interactions within the centromeric nucleosome. We could detect energy transfer between CENP-A and histone H4 as well as between CENP-A molecules themselves. On the other hand, no FRET was detected between CENP-A and H2A.1 or H3.1. Our data support the view that two CENP-A molecules are packed with H4, but not with H3, in a single centromeric nucleosome.
Inspired by a multi-resolution community detection (MCD) based network segmentation method, we suggest an automatic method for segmenting fluorescence lifetime (FLT) imaging microscopy (FLIM) images of cells in a first pilot investigation on two selected images. The image processing problem is framed as identifying segments with respective average FLTs against the background in FLIM images. The proposed method segments a FLIM image for a given resolution of the network defined using image pixels as the nodes and similarity between the FLTs of the pixels as the edges. In the resulting segmentation, low network resolution leads to larger segments, and high network resolution leads to smaller segments. Further, using the proposed method, the mean-square error (MSE) in estimating the FLT segments in a FLIM image was found to consistently decrease with increasing resolution of the corresponding network. The MCD method appeared to perform better than a popular spectral clustering based method in performing FLIM image segmentation. At high resolution, the spectral segmentation method introduced noisy segments in its output, and it was unable to achieve a consistent decrease in MSE with increasing resolution.
The vertebrate kinetochore complex assembles at the centromere on α-satellite DNA. In humans, α-satellite DNA has a repeat length of 171 bp slightly longer than the DNA in the chromatosome containing the linker histone H1. The centromere-binding protein CENP-B binds specifically to α-satellite DNA with properties of a centromeric-linker histone. Here, we analysed if linker histone H1 is present at or excluded from centromeric chromatin by CENP-B. By immunostaining we detected the presence, but no enrichment or depletion of five different H1 subtypes at centromeric chromatin. The binding dynamics of H1 at centromeric sites were similar to that at other locations in the genome. These dynamics did not change in CENP-B depleted cells, suggesting that CENP-B and H1 co-exist in centromeric chromatin with no or little functional overlap. By bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) and Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET), we revealed that the linker histone H1 subtypes H1° and H1.2 bind to centromeric chromatin in interphase nuclei in direct neighbourhood to inner kinetochore proteins.
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