4.7 Article

Aurora B kinase controls the targeting of the Astrin-SKAP complex to bioriented kinetochores

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 191, Issue 2, Pages 269-280

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201006129

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Funding

  1. Smith Family Foundation
  2. Massachusetts Life Sciences Center
  3. Searle Scholars Program
  4. National Institute Of General Medical Sciences [GM088313]
  5. Ministry of Education, Culture, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan

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During mitosis, kinetochores play multiple roles to generate interactions with microtubules, and direct chromosome congression, biorientation, error correction, and anaphase segregation. However, it is unclear what changes at the kinetochore facilitate these distinct activities. Here, we describe a complex of the spindle- and kinetochore-associated protein Astrin, the small kinetochore-associated protein (SKAP), and the dynein light chain LC8. Although most dynein-associated proteins localize to unaligned kinetochores in an Aurora B dependent manner, Astrin, SKAP, and LC8 localization is antagonized by Aurora B such that they target exclusively to bioriented kinetochores. Astrin-SKAP-depleted cells fail to maintain proper chromosome alignment, resulting in a spindle assembly checkpoint dependent mitotic delay. Consistent with a role in stabilizing bioriented attachments, Astrin and SKAP bind directly to microtubules and are required for CLASP localization to kinetochores. In total, our results suggest that tension-dependent Aurora B phosphorylation can act to control outer kinetochore composition to provide distinct activities to prometaphase and metaphase kinetochores.

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