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Brief Report

Domain Architectures of the Scm3p Protein Provide Insights into Centromere Function and Evolution

L. Aravind, Lakshminarayan M. Iyer and Carl Wu

volume 6 | issue 20

15 October 2007
Pages: 2511 - 2515

This is an open-access article

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Recently, Scm3p has been shown to be a nonhistone component of centromeric chromatin that binds stoichiometrically to CenH3-H4 histones, and to be required for the assembly of kinetochores in S. cerevisiae. Scm3p is conserved across fungi, and displays a remarkable variation in protein size, ranging from ~200 amino acids in Saccharomyces cerevisiae to ~1300 amino acids in Neurospora crassa. This is primarily due a variable C-terminal segment that is linked to a conserved N-terminal, CenH3-interacting domain. We have discovered that the extended C-terminal region is strikingly characterized by lineage-specific fusions of single or multiple DNA-binding domains⎯different versions of the MYB and C2H2 zinc finger domains, AT-hooks, and a novel cysteine-rich metal-chelating cluster⎯that are absent from the small versions of Scm3. Instead, S. cerevisiae point centromeres are recognized by components of the CBF3 DNA binding complex, which are conserved amongst close relatives of budding yeast, but are correspondingly absent from more distant fungi that possess regional centromeres. Hence, the C-terminal DNA binding motifs found in large Scm3p proteins may, along with CenH3, serve as a key epigenetic signal by recognizing and accommodating the lineage-specific diversity of centromere DNA in course of evolution.

Authors

L. Aravind

National Library of Medicine; Bethesda, Maryland

Lakshminarayan M. Iyer

National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD

Carl Wu

National Institutes of Health; Bethesda, Maryland


This is an open-access article

 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.