1. Esperanto for histones: CENP-A, not CenH3, is the centromeric histone H3 variant.
- Author
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Earnshaw, WC, Allshire, RC, Black, BE, Bloom, K, Brinkley, BR, Brown, W, Cheeseman, IM, Choo, KHA, Copenhaver, GP, Deluca, JG, Desai, A, Diekmann, S, Erhardt, S, Fitzgerald-Hayes, M, Foltz, D, Fukagawa, T, Gassmann, R, Gerlich, DW, Glover, DM, Gorbsky, GJ, Harrison, SC, Heun, P, Hirota, T, Jansen, LET, Karpen, G, Kops, GJPL, Lampson, MA, Lens, SM, Losada, A, Luger, K, Maiato, H, Maddox, PS, Margolis, RL, Masumoto, H, McAinsh, AD, Mellone, BG, Meraldi, P, Musacchio, A, Oegema, K, O'Neill, RJ, Salmon, ED, Scott, KC, Straight, AF, Stukenberg, PT, Sullivan, BA, Sullivan, KF, Sunkel, CE, Swedlow, JR, Walczak, CE, Warburton, PE, Westermann, S, Willard, HF, Wordeman, L, Yanagida, M, Yen, TJ, Yoda, K, and Cleveland, DW
- Subjects
Centromere ,Kinetochores ,Humans ,Scleroderma ,Systemic ,Chromosomal Proteins ,Non-Histone ,Histones ,Autoantigens ,Terminology as Topic ,Centromere Protein A ,centromere ,CENP-A ,histone ,kinetochore ,CenH3 ,Developmental Biology ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Genetics - Abstract
The first centromeric protein identified in any species was CENP-A, a divergent member of the histone H3 family that was recognised by autoantibodies from patients with scleroderma-spectrum disease. It has recently been suggested to rename this protein CenH3. Here, we argue that the original name should be maintained both because it is the basis of a long established nomenclature for centromere proteins and because it avoids confusion due to the presence of canonical histone H3 at centromeres.
- Published
- 2013