Role of PLK1 in the epigenetic maintenance of centromeres
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The centromere, a chromosome locus defined by the histone H3-like protein CENP-A, seeds the kinetochore to bind microtubules during cell division. Centromere maintenance requires CENP-A to be actively replenished by dedicated protein machinery in the early G1 cell-cycle phase, compensating for its two-fold dilution following DNA replication. Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) limit CENP-A deposition to once per cell cycle and function as negative regulators outside early G1. Antithetically, Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) promotes CENP-A deposition in early G1, but the molecular details are still unknown. We reveal a phosphorylation network that recruits PLK1 to the deposition machinery to control a conformational switch required for licensing the CENP-A deposition reaction. Our findings solve the long-standing question of how PLK1 contributes to the epigenetic maintenance of centromeres.
One-Sentence Summary
PLK1 licenses epigenetic maintenance of centromeres by regulating a conformational switch on the MIS18α protein.