1. Cell cycle-specific loading of condensin I is regulated by the N-terminal tail of its kleisin subunit
- Author
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Shoji Tane, Keishi Shintomi, Kazuhisa Kinoshita, Yuko Tsubota, Makoto M Yoshida, Tomoko Nishiyama, and Tatsuya Hirano
- Subjects
mitotic chromosome assembly ,condensin ,kleisin ,Xenopus egg extracts ,cell cycle regulation ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Condensin I is a pentameric protein complex that plays an essential role in mitotic chromosome assembly in eukaryotic cells. Although it has been shown that condensin I loading is mitosis specific, it remains poorly understood how the robust cell cycle regulation of condensin I is achieved. Here, we set up a panel of in vitro assays to demonstrate that cell cycle-specific loading of condensin I is regulated by the N-terminal tail (N-tail) of its kleisin subunit CAP-H. Deletion of the N-tail accelerates condensin I loading and chromosome assembly in Xenopus egg mitotic extracts. Phosphorylation-deficient and phosphorylation-mimetic mutations in the CAP-H N-tail decelerate and accelerate condensin I loading, respectively. Remarkably, deletion of the N-tail enables condensin I to assemble mitotic chromosome-like structures even in interphase extracts. Together with other extract-free functional assays in vitro, our results uncover one of the multilayered mechanisms that ensure cell cycle-specific loading of condensin I onto chromosomes.
- Published
- 2022
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