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Budding Yeast Centrosome Duplication Requires Stabilization of Spc29 via Mps1-mediated Phosphorylation
Authors:Eric P. Holinger   William M. Old   Thomas H. Giddings   Jr.   Catherine Wong   John R. Yates   III     Mark Winey
Affiliation:Departments of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and §Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0347 and the Department of Cell Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037
Abstract:Protein phosphorylation plays an important role in the regulation of centrosome duplication. In budding yeast, numerous lines of evidence suggest a requirement for multiple phosphorylation events on individual components of the centrosome to ensure their proper assembly and function. Here, we report the first example of a single phosphorylation event on a component of the yeast centrosome, or spindle pole body (SPB), that is required for SPB duplication and cell viability. This phosphorylation event is on the essential SPB component Spc29 at a conserved Thr residue, Thr240. Mutation of Thr240 to Ala is lethal at normal gene dosage, but an increased copy number of this mutant allele results in a conditional phenotype. Phosphorylation of Thr240 was found to promote the stability of the protein in vivo and is catalyzed in vitro by the Mps1 kinase. Furthermore, the stability of newly synthesized Spc29 is reduced in a mutant strain with reduced Mps1 kinase activity. These results demonstrate the first evidence for a single phosphorylation event on an SPB component that is absolutely required for SPB duplication and suggest that the Mps1 kinase is responsible for this protein-stabilizing phosphorylation.Centrosomes are critical for organizing microtubules that make up the mitotic and meiotic spindles that segregate chromosomes during cell division. The duplication of these organelles must be tightly regulated to occur once and only once during each cell cycle to prevent the formation of monopolar or multipolar mitotic spindles that can cause chromosomal instability. The yeast centrosome is called the spindle pole body (SPB)3 and is one of the best characterized microtubule-organizing centers. Although the SPB and the centrosome are morphologically distinct, they share the common function of spindle organization. Many SPB components and regulators of SPB assembly and function are conserved throughout evolution (1). This has made the yeast SPB an excellent model in which to study the regulation of centrosome duplication.The regulation of centrosome function and duplication by phosphorylation is well documented (210). Although several yeast SPB components are phosphoproteins in vivo (1116), little is known about the specific sites of phosphorylation or the roles these modifications play in the regulation of SPB duplication and function. The yeast cyclin-dependent kinase Cdc28 and the multifunctional Mps1 kinase have both been implicated in the regulation of SPB components by phosphorylation (1720). Two essential SPB components, Spc42 and Spc110, are phosphorylated by both of these kinases. Prevention of modification by either kinase alone is not detrimental, but the two kinases work in concert with each other to produce a fully functional protein. These examples demonstrate that some SPB components are coordinately regulated by the actions of more than one protein kinase and that an accumulation of hyperphosphorylation, rather than specific individual phosphorylation events, is the predominant mechanism of phosphoregulation of SPB components.In this study, we demonstrate that a single phosphothreonine, phospho-Thr240, near the C terminus of the SPB component Spc29 is absolutely required for SPB duplication and mitotic progression. The modification promotes the stability of the Spc29 protein and appears to be catalyzed by the Mps1 kinase. These results reveal the first single phosphorylation event known to be essential for SPB duplication and elucidate a mechanism by which cells can achieve tight regulation of centrosome duplication through a cascade of phosphorylation-mediated protein stabilization wherein the yeast cyclin-dependent kinase stabilizes the Mps1 kinase by phosphorylation (19), and the Mps1 kinase in turn stabilizes the Spc29 protein by phosphorylation, ensuring adequate levels of this critical SPB component for the assembly of new spindle poles.
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