Condensin is required for chromosome arm cohesion during mitosis
- 1 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 20 (21) , 2973-2984
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.1468806
Abstract
We describe a novel requirement for the condensin complex in sister chromatid cohesion in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Strikingly, condensin-dependent cohesion can be distinguished from cohesin-based pairing by a number of criteria. First, condensin is required to maintain cohesion at several chromosomal arm sites but, in contrast to cohesin, is not required at either centromere or telomere-proximal loci. Second, condensin-dependent interlinks are established during mitosis independently of DNA replication and are reversible within a single cell cycle. Third, the loss of condensin-dependent linkages occurs without affecting cohesin levels at the separated URA3 locus. We propose that, during mitosis, robust sister chromatid cohesion along chromosome arms requires both condensinand cohesin-dependent mechanisms, which function independently of each other. We discuss the implications of our results for current models of sister chromatid cohesion.Keywords
This publication has 63 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unzipped and loadedThe Journal of cell biology, 2005
- THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF SMC AND KLEISIN COMPLEXESAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 2005
- Dissociation of Cohesin from Chromosome Arms and Loss of Arm Cohesion during Early Mitosis Depends on Phosphorylation of SA2PLoS Biology, 2005
- Genome-Wide Mapping of the Cohesin Complex in the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiaePLoS Biology, 2004
- Cdc14 Phosphatase Induces rDNA Condensation and Resolves Cohesin-Independent Cohesion during Budding Yeast AnaphaseCell, 2004
- Pds5p regulates the maintenance of sister chromatid cohesion and is sumoylated to promote the dissolution of cohesionThe Journal of cell biology, 2003
- Condensin and cohesin: more than chromosome compactor and glueNature Reviews Genetics, 2003
- C. elegans condensin promotes mitotic chromosome architecture, centromere organization, and sister chromatid segregation during mitosis and meiosisGenes & Development, 2002
- New heterologous modules for classical or PCR‐based gene disruptions in Saccharomyces cerevisiaeYeast, 1994
- SMC1: an essential yeast gene encoding a putative head-rod-tail protein is required for nuclear division and defines a new ubiquitous protein family.The Journal of cell biology, 1993