During cell division, chromosomes build kinetochores that attach to spindle microtubules. Kinetochores usually form at the centromeres, which contain CENP-A nucleosomes. The outer kinetochore, which is the core attachment site for microtubules, is composed of the KMN network (Knl1c, Mis12c, and Ndc80c complexes) and is recruited downstream of CENP-A and its partner CENP-C. In C. elegans oocytes, kinetochores have been suggested to form independently of CENP-A nucleosomes. Yet kinetochore formation requires CENP-C, which acts in parallel to the nucleoporin MEL-28. Here, we used a combination of RNAi and Degron-based depletion of CENP-A (or downstream CENP-C) to demonstrate that both proteins are in fact responsible for a portion of outer kinetochore assembly during meiosis I and are essential for accurate chromosome segregation. The remaining part requires the coordinated action of KNL-2 (ortholog of human M18BP1) and of the nucleoporin MEL-28. Accordingly, co-depletion of CENP-A (or CENP-C) and KNL-2 (or MEL-28) prevented outer kinetochore assembly in oocytes during meiosis I. We further found that KNL-2 and MEL-28 are interdependent for kinetochore localization. Using engineered mutants, we demonstrated that KNL-2 recruits MEL-28 at meiotic kinetochores through a specific N-terminal domain, independently of its canonical CENP-A loading factor activity. Finally, we found that meiosis II outer kinetochore assembly was solely dependent on the canonical CENP-A/CENP-C pathway. Thus, like in most cells, outer kinetochore assembly in C. elegans oocytes depends on centromeric chromatin. However, during meiosis I, an additional KNL-2 and MEL-28 pathway acts in a non-redundant manner and in parallel to canonical centromeric chromatin.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11537844 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2024.09.004 | DOI Listing |
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