학술논문

Architecture of the Dam1 kinetochore ring complex and implications for microtubule-driven assembly and force-coupling mechanisms.
Document Type
Article
Source
Nature Structural & Molecular Biology. Aug2007, Vol. 14 Issue 8, p721-726. 6p. 2 Black and White Photographs, 5 Diagrams.
Subject
*MICROTUBULES
*ORGANELLES
*TUBULINS
*PHOSPHORYLATION
*CHEMICAL reactions
*MOLECULAR biology
Language
ISSN
1545-9993
Abstract
The Dam1 kinetochore complex is essential for chromosome segregation in budding yeast. This ten-protein complex self-assembles around microtubules, forming ring-like structures that move with depolymerizing microtubule ends, a mechanism with implications for cellular function. Here we used EM-based single-particle and helical analyses to define the architecture of the Dam1 complex at 30-Å resolution and the self-assembly mechanism. Ring oligomerization seems to be facilitated by a conformational change upon binding to microtubules, suggesting that the Dam1 ring is not preformed, but self-assembles around kinetochore microtubules. The C terminus of the Dam1p protein, where most of the Aurora kinase Ipl1 phosphorylation sites reside, is in a strategic location to affect oligomerization and interactions with the microtubule. One of Ipl1's roles might be to fine-tune the coupling of the microtubule interaction with the conformational change required for oligomerization, with phosphorylation resulting in ring breakdown. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]