Structure of a Survivin-Borealin-INCENP core complex reveals how chromosomal passengers travel together.

Article Details

Citation

Jeyaprakash AA, Klein UR, Lindner D, Ebert J, Nigg EA, Conti E

Structure of a Survivin-Borealin-INCENP core complex reveals how chromosomal passengers travel together.

Cell. 2007 Oct 19;131(2):271-85.

PubMed ID
17956729 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The chromosomal passenger complex (CPC) is a key regulator of chromosome segregation and cytokinesis. CPC functions are connected to its localization. The complex first localizes to centromeres and later associates with the central spindle and midbody. Survivin, Borealin, and INCENP are the three components of the CPC that regulate the activity and localization of its enzymatic component, the kinase Aurora B. We determined the 1.4 A resolution crystal structure of the regulatory core of the CPC, revealing that Borealin and INCENP associate with the helical domain of Survivin to form a tight three-helical bundle. We used siRNA rescue experiments with structure-based mutants to explore the requirements for CPC localization. We show that the intertwined structural interactions of the core components lead to functional interdependence. Association of the core "passenger" proteins creates a single structural unit, whose composite molecular surface presents conserved residues essential for central spindle and midbody localization.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Baculoviral IAP repeat-containing protein 5O15392Details
Inner centromere proteinQ9NQS7Details