<HashMap><database>biostudies-literature</database><scores><citationCount>0</citationCount><reanalysisCount>0</reanalysisCount><viewCount>58</viewCount><searchCount>0</searchCount></scores><additional><submitter>Vitre B</submitter><funding>NINDS NIH HHS</funding><funding>NIGMS NIH HHS</funding><pagination>2272-81</pagination><full_dataset_link>https://www.ebi.ac.uk/biostudies/studies/S-EPMC4116301</full_dataset_link><repository>biostudies-literature</repository><omics_type>Unknown</omics_type><volume>25(15)</volume><pubmed_abstract>Centromere protein E (CENP-E) is a highly elongated kinesin that transports pole-proximal chromosomes during congression in prometaphase. During metaphase, it facilitates kinetochore-microtubule end-on attachment required to achieve and maintain chromosome alignment. In vitro CENP-E can walk processively along microtubule tracks and follow both growing and shrinking microtubule plus ends. Neither the CENP-E-dependent transport along microtubules nor its tip-tracking activity requires the unusually long coiled-coil stalk of CENP-E. The biological role for the CENP-E stalk has now been identified through creation of "Bonsai" CENP-E with significantly shortened stalk but wild-type motor and tail domains. We demonstrate that Bonsai CENP-E fails to bind microtubules in vitro unless a cargo is contemporaneously bound via its C-terminal tail. In contrast, both full-length and truncated CENP-E that has no stalk and tail exhibit robust motility with and without cargo binding, highlighting the importance of CENP-E stalk for its activity. Correspondingly, kinetochore attachment to microtubule ends is shown to be disrupted in cells whose CENP-E has a shortened stalk, thereby producing chromosome misalignment in metaphase and lagging chromosomes during anaphase. Together these findings establish an unexpected role of CENP-E elongated stalk in ensuring stability of kinetochore-microtubule attachments during chromosome congression and segregation.</pubmed_abstract><journal>Molecular biology of the cell</journal><pubmed_title>Kinetochore-microtubule attachment throughout mitosis potentiated by the elongated stalk of the kinetochore kinesin CENP-E.</pubmed_title><pmcid>PMC4116301</pmcid><funding_grant_id>P30 NS047101</funding_grant_id><funding_grant_id>R01-GM098389</funding_grant_id><funding_grant_id>R01 GM098389</funding_grant_id><funding_grant_id>GM 033787</funding_grant_id><funding_grant_id>R01-GM29513</funding_grant_id><funding_grant_id>R01 GM029513</funding_grant_id><pubmed_authors>Cleveland DW</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Vitre B</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Kim Y</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Heuser JE</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Borda R</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Gudimchuk N</pubmed_authors><pubmed_authors>Grishchuk EL</pubmed_authors><view_count>58</view_count></additional><is_claimable>false</is_claimable><name>Kinetochore-microtubule attachment throughout mitosis potentiated by the elongated stalk of the kinetochore kinesin CENP-E.</name><description>Centromere protein E (CENP-E) is a highly elongated kinesin that transports pole-proximal chromosomes during congression in prometaphase. During metaphase, it facilitates kinetochore-microtubule end-on attachment required to achieve and maintain chromosome alignment. In vitro CENP-E can walk processively along microtubule tracks and follow both growing and shrinking microtubule plus ends. Neither the CENP-E-dependent transport along microtubules nor its tip-tracking activity requires the unusually long coiled-coil stalk of CENP-E. The biological role for the CENP-E stalk has now been identified through creation of "Bonsai" CENP-E with significantly shortened stalk but wild-type motor and tail domains. We demonstrate that Bonsai CENP-E fails to bind microtubules in vitro unless a cargo is contemporaneously bound via its C-terminal tail. In contrast, both full-length and truncated CENP-E that has no stalk and tail exhibit robust motility with and without cargo binding, highlighting the importance of CENP-E stalk for its activity. Correspondingly, kinetochore attachment to microtubule ends is shown to be disrupted in cells whose CENP-E has a shortened stalk, thereby producing chromosome misalignment in metaphase and lagging chromosomes during anaphase. Together these findings establish an unexpected role of CENP-E elongated stalk in ensuring stability of kinetochore-microtubule attachments during chromosome congression and segregation.</description><dates><release>2014-01-01T00:00:00Z</release><publication>2014 Aug</publication><modification>2024-10-19T00:36:22.117Z</modification><creation>2019-03-27T01:33:04Z</creation></dates><accession>S-EPMC4116301</accession><cross_references><pubmed>24920822</pubmed><doi>10.1091/mbc.E14-01-0698</doi></cross_references></HashMap>