Vertebrate centromeres in mitosis are functionally bipartite structures stabilized by cohesin

Publication date

2024-06-06

Authors

Sacristan, Carlos
Samejima, Kumiko
Ruiz, Lorena Andrade
Deb, Moonmoon
Lambers, Maaike L.A.
Buckle, Adam
Brackley, Chris A.
Robertson, Daniel
Hori, Tetsuya
Webb, Shaun

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Centromeres are scaffolds for the assembly of kinetochores that ensure chromosome segregation during cell division. How vertebrate centromeres obtain a three-dimensional structure to accomplish their primary function is unclear. Using super-resolution imaging, capture-C, and polymer modeling, we show that vertebrate centromeres are partitioned by condensins into two subdomains during mitosis. The bipartite structure is found in human, mouse, and chicken cells and is therefore a fundamental feature of vertebrate centromeres. Super-resolution imaging and electron tomography reveal that bipartite centromeres assemble bipartite kinetochores, with each subdomain binding a distinct microtubule bundle. Cohesin links the centromere subdomains, limiting their separation in response to spindle forces and avoiding merotelic kinetochore-spindle attachments. Lagging chromosomes during cancer cell divisions frequently have merotelic attachments in which the centromere subdomains are separated and bioriented. Our work reveals a fundamental aspect of vertebrate centromere biology with implications for understanding the mechanisms that guarantee faithful chromosome segregation.

Keywords

centromere, chromatin organization, chromosomal instability, cohesin, condensin, kinetochore, mitosis, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology

Citation

Sacristan, C, Samejima, K, Ruiz, L A, Deb, M, Lambers, M L A, Buckle, A, Brackley, C A, Robertson, D, Hori, T, Webb, S, Kiewisz, R, Bepler, T, van Kwawegen, E, Risteski, P, Vukušić, K, Tolić, I M, Müller-Reichert, T, Fukagawa, T, Gilbert, N, Marenduzzo, D, Earnshaw, W C & Kops, G J P L 2024, 'Vertebrate centromeres in mitosis are functionally bipartite structures stabilized by cohesin', Cell, vol. 187, no. 12, pp. 3006-3023.e26. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2024.04.014