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Aurora-B phosphorylation in vitro identifies a residue of Survivin that is essential for its localization and binding to INCENP in vivo

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 13:54 authored by Sally Paula Wheatley, Alexander J. Henzing, Helen Dodson, Walid Khaled, William C. Earnshaw
The chromosomal passengers aurora-B kinase, INCENP and survivin, are essential proteins that have been implicated in the regulation of metaphase chromosome alignment, spindle checkpoint function and cytokinesis. All three share a common pattern of localization and it was recently demonstrated that aurora-B, INCENP and survivin are present in a complex in Xenopus eggs and S.cerevisiae. The presence of aurora-B kinase in the complex, and its ability to bind the other components directly, suggests that INCENP and survivin could potentially be aurora-B substrates. This hypothesis was recently proven for INCENP in vitro. Here we report that human survivin is specifically phosphorylated in vitro by aurora-B kinase at threonine117 in its carboxyl alpha-helical coil. Mutation of threonine117 to alanine prevents survivin phosphorylation by aurora-B in vitro, but does not alter its localization in HeLa cells. By contrast, a phospho-mimic, in which threonine117 was mutated to glutamic acid, was unable to localize correctly at any stage in mitosis. These data suggest that phosphorylation of survivin at threonine117 by aurora-B may regulate targeting of survivin, and possibly the entire passenger complex, in mammals.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Journal of Biological Chemistry

ISSN

0021-9258

Publisher

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Issue

7

Volume

279

Page range

5655-5660

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2007-03-20

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