4.4 Article

Regulation of spindle pole body assembly and cytokinesis by the centrin-binding protein Sfi1 in fission yeast

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 25, Issue 18, Pages 2735-2749

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E13-11-0699

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Funding

  1. Pelotonia Graduate Fellowship
  2. Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology
  3. Beijing Municipal Government
  4. National Institutes of Health [GM31006, GM086546]

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Centrosomes play critical roles in the cell division cycle and ciliogenesis. Sfi1 is a centrin-binding protein conserved from yeast to humans. Budding yeast Sfi1 is essential for the initiation of spindle pole body (SPB; yeast centrosome) duplication. However, the recruitment and partitioning of Sfi1 to centrosomal structures have never been fully investigated in any organism, and the presumed importance of the conserved tryptophans in the internal repeats of Sfi1 remains untested. Here we report that in fission yeast, instead of doubling abruptly at the initiation of SPB duplication and remaining at a constant level thereafter, Sfi1 is gradually recruited to SPBs throughout the cell cycle. Like an sfi1 Delta mutant, a Trp-to-Arg mutant (sfi1-M46) forms monopolar spindles and exhibits mitosis and cytokinesis defects. Sfi1-M46 protein associates preferentially with one of the two daughter SPBs during mitosis, resulting in a failure of new SPB assembly in the SPB receiving insufficient Sfi1. Although all five conserved tryptophans tested are involved in Sfi1 partitioning, the importance of the individual repeats in Sfi1 differs. In summary, our results reveal a link between the conserved tryptophans and Sfi1 partitioning and suggest a revision of the model for SPB assembly.

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