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Bub1, Sgo1, and Mps1 mediate a distinct pathway for chromosome biorientation in budding yeast

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TLDR
Members of chromosome passenger complex BIR1 and SLI15 suppress the chromosome segregation defect of bub1Δ and sgo1Γ and Mps1 governs localization of Sgo1, which functions in parallel to the CPC in correction of syntelic attachments.
Abstract
The conserved mitotic kinase Bub1 performs multiple functions that are only partially characterized. Besides its role in the spindle assembly checkpoint and chromosome alignment, Bub1 is crucial for the kinetochore recruitment of multiple proteins, among them Sgo1. Both Bub1 and Sgo1 are dispensable for growth of haploid and diploid budding yeast, but they become essential in cells with higher ploidy. We find that overexpression of SGO1 partially corrects the chromosome segregation defect of bub1Δ haploid cells and restores viability to bub1Δ tetraploid cells. Using an unbiased high-copy suppressor screen, we identified two members of the chromosomal passenger complex (CPC), BIR1 (survivin) and SLI15 (INCENP, inner centromere protein), as suppressors of the growth defect of both bub1Δ and sgo1Δ tetraploids, suggesting that these mutants die due to defects in chromosome biorientation. Overexpression of BIR1 or SLI15 also complements the benomyl sensitivity of haploid bub1Δ and sgo1Δ cells. Mutants lacking SGO1 fail to biorient sister chromatids attached to the same spindle pole (syntelic attachment) after nocodazole treatment. Moreover, the sgo1Δ cells accumulate syntelic attachments in unperturbed mitoses, a defect that is partially corrected by BIR1 or SLI15 overexpression. We show that in budding yeast neither Bub1 nor Sgo1 is required for CPC localization or affects Aurora B activity. Instead we identify Sgo1 as a possible partner of Mps1, a mitotic kinase suggested to have an Aurora B–independent function in establishment of biorientation. We found that Sgo1 overexpression rescues defects caused by metaphase inactivation of Mps1 and that Mps1 is required for Sgo1 localization to the kinetochore. We propose that Bub1, Sgo1, and Mps1 facilitate chromosome biorientation independently of the Aurora B–mediated pathway at the budding yeast kinetochore and that both pathways are required for the efficient turnover of syntelic attachments.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Bub3 reads phosphorylated MELT repeats to promote spindle assembly checkpoint signaling

TL;DR: Bub3, a 7-bladed β-propeller, is the MELTP reader, providing the first detailed mechanistic insight into how phosphorylation promotes recruitment of checkpoint proteins to kinetochores.
Journal ArticleDOI

The composition, functions, and regulation of the budding yeast kinetochore.

TL;DR: Progress in understanding the composition and overall architecture of the kinetochore, as well as its properties in making and regulating microtubule attachments and the spindle checkpoint, is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The MPS1 Family of Protein Kinases

TL;DR: The kinase domain of the human enzyme has been crystallized, revealing an unusual ATP-binding pocket and the activity, level, and subcellular localization of Mps1 family members are tightly regulated during cell-cycle progression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural analysis reveals features of the spindle checkpoint kinase Bub1–kinetochore subunit Knl1 interaction

TL;DR: Structure–function studies reveal that the tetratricopeptide repeats of Bub1 and BubR1 are important for interaction with Kln1, but a distinct Bub3-binding domain is critical for kinetochore recruitment of Bub 1.
Journal ArticleDOI

A small-molecule inhibitor of Haspin alters the kinetochore functions of Aurora B

TL;DR: A chemical biology study characterizes the role of Haspin kinase in centromere recruitment of the chromosome passenger complex and in spindle assembly checkpoint function.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Global analysis of protein expression in yeast

TL;DR: A Saccharomyces cerevisiae fusion library is created where each open reading frame is tagged with a high-affinity epitope and expressed from its natural chromosomal location, and it is found that about 80% of the proteome is expressed during normal growth conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The spindle-assembly checkpoint in space and time.

TL;DR: Recent molecular analyses have begun to shed light on the complex interaction of the checkpoint proteins with kinetochores — structures that mediate the binding of spindle microtubules to chromosomes in mitosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The distribution of the numbers of mutants in bacterial populations.

TL;DR: Statistical calculations are made of the distribution numbers of mutants in a culture of bacteria in which the number of mutants increases on account of new mutations and of division of old mutants, which enable the mutation rate to be inferred from experiments with parallel cultures.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Mechanism Linking Extra Centrosomes to Chromosomal Instability

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cells with multiple centrosomes rarely undergo multipolar cell divisions, and the progeny of these divisions are typically inviable, and it is proposed that this mechanism may be a common underlying cause of CIN in human cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

S. cerevisiae genes required for cell cycle arrest in response to loss of microtubule function.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identified mutant strains of S. cerevisiae that fail to properly arrest their cell cycles at mitosis in response to the loss of microtubule function.
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