EMD-7446

Single-particle
6.5 Å
EMD-7446 Deposition: 01/02/2018
Map released: 23/05/2018
Last modified: 27/11/2019
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links

EMD-7446

Structure of the DASH/Dam1 complex shows its role at the yeast kinetochore-microtubule interface (symmetric reconstruction)

EMD-7446

Single-particle
6.5 Å
EMD-7446 Deposition: 01/02/2018
Map released: 23/05/2018
Last modified: 27/11/2019
Overview 3D View Sample Experiment Validation Volume Browser Additional data Links
Sample Organism: Chaetomium thermophilum
Sample: DASH/Dam1 complex

Deposition Authors: Jenni S, Harrison SC
Structure of the DASH/Dam1 complex shows its role at the yeast kinetochore-microtubule interface.
Jenni S , Harrison SC
(2018) Science , 360 , 552 - 558
PUBMED: 29724956
DOI: doi:10.1126/science.aar6436
ISSN: 1095-9203
ASTM: SCIEAS
Abstract:
Kinetochores connect mitotic-spindle microtubules with chromosomes, allowing microtubule depolymerization to pull chromosomes apart during anaphase while resisting detachment as the microtubule shortens. The heterodecameric DASH/Dam1 complex (DASH/Dam1c), an essential component of yeast kinetochores, assembles into a microtubule-encircling ring. The ring associates with rodlike Ndc80 complexes to organize the kinetochore-microtubule interface. We report the cryo-electron microscopy structure (at ~4.5-angstrom resolution) of a DASH/Dam1c ring and a molecular model of its ordered components, validated by evolutionary direct-coupling analysis. Integrating this structure with that of the Ndc80 complex and with published interaction data yields a molecular picture of kinetochore-microtubule attachment, including how flexible, C-terminal extensions of DASH/Dam1c subunits project and contact widely separated sites on the Ndc80 complex rod and how phosphorylation at previously identified sites might regulate kinetochore assembly.