Structural Basis for Mitotic Centrosome Assembly in Flies

Zhe Feng, Anna Caballe, Alan Wainman, Steven Johnson, Andreas F.M. Haensele, Matthew A. Cottee, Paul T. Conduit, Susan M. Lea*, Jordan W. Raff

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Articlepeer-review

90 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In flies, Centrosomin (Cnn) forms a phosphorylation-dependent scaffold that recruits proteins to the mitotic centrosome, but how Cnn assembles into a scaffold is unclear. We show that scaffold assembly requires conserved leucine zipper (LZ) and Cnn-motif 2 (CM2) domains that co-assemble into a 2:2 complex in vitro. We solve the crystal structure of the LZ:CM2 complex, revealing that both proteins form helical dimers that assemble into an unusual tetramer. A slightly longer version of the LZ can form micron-scale structures with CM2, whose assembly is stimulated by Plk1 phosphorylation in vitro. Mutating individual residues that perturb LZ:CM2 tetramer assembly perturbs the formation of these micron-scale assemblies in vitro and Cnn-scaffold assembly in vivo. Thus, Cnn molecules have an intrinsic ability to form large, LZ:CM2-interaction-dependent assemblies that are critical for mitotic centrosome assembly. These studies provide the first atomic insight into a molecular interaction required for mitotic centrosome assembly.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1078-1089.e13
JournalCell
Volume169
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2017
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors

Keywords

  • Centrosomin
  • Cnn
  • PCM
  • Plk1
  • centriole
  • centrosome
  • mitosis

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