Original Article

Oncogene (2006) 25, 6901–6914. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1209687; published online 29 May 2006

Hec1 sequentially recruits Zwint-1 and ZW10 to kinetochores for faithful chromosome segregation and spindle checkpoint control

Y-T Lin1,2, Y Chen2, G Wu1 and W-H Lee1

  1. 1Department of Biological Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, CA, USA
  2. 2Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, TX, USA

Correspondence: Dr W-H Lee, Department of Biological Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, 124 Sprague Hall, Irvine, CA 92697-4037, USA. E-mail: whlee@uci.edu

Received 14 December 2005; Revised 3 April 2006; Accepted 12 April 2006; Published online 29 May 2006.

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Abstract

Faithful chromosome segregation is essential for maintaining the genomic integrity, which requires coordination among chromosomes, kinetochores, centrosomes and spindles during mitosis. Previously, we discovered a novel coiled-coil protein, highly expressed in cancer 1 (Hec1), which is indispensable for this process. However, the precise underlying mechanism remains unclear. Here, we show that Hec1 directly interacts with human ZW10 interacting protein (Zwint-1), a binding partner of Zeste White 10 (ZW10) that is required for chromosome motility and spindle checkpoint control. In mitotic cells, Hec1 transiently forms complexes with Zwint-1 and ZW10 in a temporal and spatial manner. Although the three proteins have variable cell cycle-dependent expression profiles, they can only be co-immunoprecipitated during M phase. Immunofluorescent study showed that Hec1 and Zwint-1 co-localize at kinetochores beginning at prophase and that ZW10 joins them later at prometaphase. Depletion of Hec1 impairs the recruitment of both Zwint-1 and ZW10 to kinetochores, while depletion of Zwint-1 abrogates the kinetochore localization of ZW10 but not Hec1. The results suggest that the localization of Hec1 at kinetochores is required for the sequential recruitment of Zwint-1 and ZW10. Disrupting this recruitment by inhibiting the expression of Hec1 or Zwint-1 causes chromosome missegregation, spindle checkpoint failure, and eventually cell death upon cytokinesis. Taken together, these results, at least in part, provide a molecular basis to explain how Hec1 plays a crucial role for spindle checkpoint control and faithful chromosome segregation.

Keywords:

mitosis, kinetochores, spindle checkpoint, chromosome segregation and microtubule

Abbreviations:

Hec1, highly expressed in cancer 1; Zwint-1, human ZW10 interacting protein; ZW10, Zeste White 10; CIN, Chromosome instability; M phase, mitotic phase; Rb, retinoblastoma protein; MT, microtubule; kMT, kinetochore microtubule; RNAi, RNA interference; siRNA, Short interfering RNA; Sc, Saccharomyces cerevisiae; GFP, Green fluorescent protein; GST, glutathione S-tansferase

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