Tension is the clue that the chromosome-separation apparatus is set up correctly. Right before cell division, chromosome pairs are neatly lined up in the middle of the cell. In yeast, the simple organism Hu uses to study the kinetochore, each chromosome has its own kinetochore. (In more complex cells, like human cells, several kinetochores bind along the same chromosome, making the process tougher to study.) Long molecular ropes called microtubules reach from each end of the cell to attach to kinetochores like grappling hooks.
If the two kinetochores on a chromosome pair are grabbed by microtubules pulling from opposite sides, this creates a tug of rope-like tension. In this case, the opposing microtubules can haul chromosome duplicates apart and ensure they each end up in separate daughter cells. But if one microtubule doesn’t attach, or both microtubules attach to the same kinetochore (leaving the kinetochore on the other chromosome bare), there’s no tension and cell division falters.
To make sure this process works, the kinetochore must correctly assemble and bind to DNA. But how do cells get an assembled, DNA-bound kinetochore from hundreds of loose kinetochore components? There remains much to learn about this complicated process, Hu said.
“Is there a step-by-step assembly process [for each protein], or does it pre-assemble into larger complexes that are then recruited to the DNA?” Hu said.
His outline of kinetochore assembly will be a major step to understanding how the process is regulated and will help scientists see how it breaks down and allows aneuploidy to occur.
Hu is using TIRF, a type of microscopy that will allow him to track the individual molecules as they come together to form the kinetochore. He can tag different kinetochore components with a molecule that fluoresces, and then use TIRF to track that fluorescence over time and space as the components come together into a full kinetochore. There are about 13 subcomplexes that make up a complete kinetochore, and Hu’s goal is to tag at least one representative protein from each. After repeating the tagging-and-tracking process with a protein from each subcomplex, Hu will be able to build a model of kinetochore assembly.
His approach is not limited to the kinetochore, he said. After he maps kinetochore organization, Hu is planning on applying his TIRF strategy to other large molecular complexes, such as those that are involved in repairing damaged DNA.
JCC Fund Fellowship offers more than financial support, Hu said. He’s looking forward to the travel support the fellowship provides and connecting with the wider community of JCC Fund fellows, particularly at their annual meeting.