The core centromere and Sgo1 establish a 50-kb cohesin-protected domain around centromeres during meiosis I

  1. Brendan M. Kiburz1,
  2. David B. Reynolds2,
  3. Paul C. Megee3,
  4. Adele L. Marston1,
  5. Brian H. Lee1,
  6. Tong Ihn Lee2,
  7. Stuart S. Levine2,
  8. Richard A. Young2, and
  9. Angelika Amon1,4
  1. 1Center for Cancer Research, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA; 2Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA; 3University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, Colorado 80010, USA

Abstract

The stepwise loss of cohesins, the complexes that hold sister chromatids together, is required for faithful meiotic chromosome segregation. Cohesins are removed from chromosome arms during meiosis I but are maintained around centromeres until meiosis II. Here we show that Sgo1, a protein required for protecting centromeric cohesins from removal during meiosis I, localizes to cohesin-associated regions (CARs) at the centromere and the 50-kb region surrounding it. Establishment of this Sgo1-binding domain requires the 120-base-pair (bp) core centromere, the kinetochore component Bub1, and the meiosis-specific factor Spo13. Interestingly, cohesins and the kinetochore proteins Iml3 and Chl4 are necessary for Sgo1 to associate with pericentric regions but less so for Sgo1 to associate with the core centromeric regions. Finally, we show that the 50-kb Sgo1-binding domain is the chromosomal region where cohesins are protected from removal during meiosis I. Our results identify the portions of chromosomes where cohesins are protected from removal during meiosis I and show that kinetochore components and cohesins themselves are required to establish this cohesin protective domain.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1373005.

  • Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.

  • 4 Corresponding author.

    4 E-MAIL angelika{at}mit.edu; FAX (617) 258-6558.

    • Accepted November 7, 2005.
    • Received September 8, 2005.
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