A Cohesin-Based Partitioning Mechanism Revealed upon Transcriptional Inactivation of Centromere

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Abstract

Transcriptional inactivation of the budding yeast centromere has been a widely used tool in studies of chromosome segregation and aneuploidy. In haploid cells when an essential chromosome contains a single conditionally inactivated centromere (GAL-CEN), cell growth rate is slowed and segregation fidelity is reduced; but colony formation is nearly 100%. Pedigree analysis revealed that only 30% of the time both mother and daughter cell inherit the GAL-CEN chromosome. The reduced segregation capacity of the GAL-CEN chromosome is further compromised upon reduction of pericentric cohesin (mcm21∆), as reflected in a further diminishment of the Mif2 kinetochore protein at GAL-CEN. By redistributing cohesin from the nucleolus to the pericentromere (by deleting SIR2), there is increased presence of the kinetochore protein Mif2 at GAL-CEN and restoration of cell viability. These studies identify the ability of cohesin to promote chromosome segregation via kinetochore assembly, in a situation where the centromere has been severely compromised.

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Tsabar, M., Haase, J., Harrison, B., Snider, C. E., Eldridge, B., Kaminsky, L., … Bloom, K. (2016). A Cohesin-Based Partitioning Mechanism Revealed upon Transcriptional Inactivation of Centromere. PLoS Genetics, 12(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006021

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