4.6 Article

Reconstitution of an active human CENP-E motor

Journal

OPEN BIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsob.210389

Keywords

motor; mitosis; microtubule; motility; CENP-E; kinetochore

Funding

  1. Wellcome Senior Reseach Fellowship [207430]
  2. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) [BB/M010996/1]
  3. Wellcome Trust [203149]

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In this study, we characterized the motility of human CENP-E in vitro and found that the full-length form exhibits longer run length and residency times on microtubules compared to motor truncations. We also discovered that the non-motor coiled-coil regions self-regulate the motor activity. These findings provide a useful tool to study the mechanistic basis of how human CENP-E drives chromosome congression and spindle organization.
CENP-E is a large kinesin motor protein which plays pivotal roles in mitosis by facilitating chromosome capture and alignment, and promoting microtubule flux in the spindle. So far, it has not been possible to obtain active human CENP-E to study its molecular properties. Xenopus CENP-E motor has been characterized in vitro and is used as a model motor; however, its protein sequence differs significantly from human CENP-E. Here, we characterize human CENP-E motility in vitro. Full-length CENP-E exhibits an increase in run length and longer residency times on microtubules when compared to CENP-E motor truncations, indicating that the C-terminal microtubule-binding site enhances the processivity when the full-length motor is active. In contrast with constitutively active human CENP-E truncations, full-length human CENP-E has a reduced microtubule landing rate in vitro, suggesting that the non-motor coiled-coil regions self-regulate motor activity. Together, we demonstrate that human CENP-E is a processive motor, providing a useful tool to study the mechanistic basis for how human CENP-E drives chromosome congression and spindle organization during human cell division.

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