Counting the Core

By Richard P. Grant Counting the Core Henrik Jonsson / Istockphoto (Mitosis) The paper S. Ohta et al., "The protein composition of mitotic chromosomes determined using multiclassifier combinatorial proteomics," Cell, 142:810-21, 2010. Free F1000 Evaluation The finding Despite the central importance of chromosomes, very little is understood about the more than 120 proteins present at the kinetochore, the complex of proteins involved in connectin

Written byRichard P. Grant
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The paper

S. Ohta et al., "The protein composition of mitotic chromosomes determined using multiclassifier combinatorial proteomics," Cell, 142:810-21, 2010. Free F1000 Evaluation

The finding

Despite the central importance of chromosomes, very little is understood about the more than 120 proteins present at the kinetochore, the complex of proteins involved in connecting the spindle fibers to the centromere during mitosis—not even how many are functionally relevant. Using a clever combination of genetic, proteomic, and computational techniques, Bill Earnshaw and colleagues at the University of Edinburgh identified which proteins should be studied, and proposed that almost 100 more kinetochore proteins remain to be characterized.

The technique

Using mass spectroscopy, Earnshaw's team measured the protein content of kinetochores at different stages of the cell cycle and compared the protein profiles to those of cells that lack some chromosomal proteins.

The machine

Because mass-spec experiments can miss relevant proteins, the researchers created six ...

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