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Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 11-19, January 1, 1999
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York 11724 USA
The assembly of mitotic chromosomes is a
fundamental cellular event that ensures the faithful segregation of
genetic information during cell division. It involves two processes
that are, in principle, mechanistically distinct. The first process,
establishment of sister chromatid cohesion, occurs during or soon after
chromosome duplication. The linkage between two sister chromatids is
maintained throughout G2 phase and secures the bipolar
attachment of each chromosome to the spindle apparatus from
prometaphase through metaphase. The second process, chromosome
condensation, can be visualized most dramatically at the onset of
mitosis, converting the chromatids into physically strong, rod-shaped
structures. The resulting metaphase chromosome consists of two
condensed sister chromatids tightly paired at their centromeric regions
as well as along their entire arms. At the onset of anaphase, the
linkage between the sister chromatids is dissolved, allowing them to be pulled apart to opposite poles of the cell. This dynamic behavior of
chromosomes had been described by cytologists long before the central
role of DNA as the genetic material was recognized and long before the
biochemical basis of cell cycle progression was elucidated.
Nevertheless, the molecular mechanisms underlying these structural
changes of chromosomes have remained poorly understood to date. A
recent breakthrough in this field was the discovery of a novel family
of chromosomal ATPases, the structural maintenance of chromosome (SMC)
family. Genetic and biochemical studies have shown that in eukaryotes,
two distinct classes of SMC protein complexes, condensins and cohesins,
play central roles in chromosome condensation and sister-chromatid
cohesion, respectively. Other SMC protein complexes are involved in
chromosome-wide gene repression (dosage compensation) and
recombinational repair. SMC proteins are also conserved among bacteria
and archaea, and their functional characterization is just beginning to
emerge. In this paper recent progress in the SMC field is discussed and
an attempt is made to deduce a basic scheme of SMC-mediated chromosome
mechanics that might be common from bacteria to vertebrates. For recent reviews on this topic, see Koshland and Strunnikov (1996) SMC proteins are large polypeptides (between 1000 and 1500 amino
acids long) that share common structural motifs, including an
amino-terminal nucleotide-binding motif (the Walker A motif), two
central coiled-coil motifs, and a carboxy-terminal conserved sequence,
termed the DA-box (perhaps related to the Walker B motif). Most
eukaryotes have multiple SMC proteins, which have been classified into
four subtypes (from SMC1- to SMC4-type proteins; Tables 1 and
2). Biochemical studies have
revealed that SMC proteins form two different types of heterodimers
with a remarkable specificity: one combination is SMC1 and SMC3, and
the other is SMC2 and SMC4 (Hirano and Mitchison 1994
![]()
Introduction
Top
Introduction
Evolutionary conservation of...
Condensins and chromosome...
Cohesins and sister-chromatid...
Smc and bacterial chromosome...
Smc as an atp-modulated...
Concluding remarks and future...
References
, Hirano (1998)
and Jessberger et al. (1998)
.
![]()
Evolutionary conservation of SMC proteins
Top
Introduction
Evolutionary conservation of...
Condensins and chromosome...
Cohesins and sister-chromatid...
Smc and bacterial chromosome...
Smc as an atp-modulated...
Concluding remarks and future...
References
; Jessberger et
al. 1996
; Sutani and Yanagida 1997
; Lieb et al. 1998
; Losada et al.
1998
; Schmiesing et al. 1998
). The SMC1-SMC3 and SMC2-SMC4
heterodimers further associate with different sets of non-SMC subunits,
producing a variety of large protein complexes with diverse functions
(Fig. 1; Tables 1 and 2). smc genes are
also found in most of the bacterial and archaeal genomes. Each of the
genomes contains a single smc gene, suggesting that
bacterial or archaeal SMC proteins might function as homodimers. This
idea has been confirmed recently by biochemical studies of the
Bacillus subtilis SMC protein (Hirano and Hirano 1998
; Melby
et al. 1998
). For an updated version of phylogenetic trees of SMC
proteins, refer to Melby et al. (1998)
.
Table 1.
Protein complexes containing SMC2-SMC4
Table 2.
Protein complexes containing SMC1-SMC3

View larger version (27K):
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Figure 1.
Structural organization of eukaryotic SMC
protein complexes. (SMC2-SMC4-type) 13S condensin is a five-subunit
protein complex that plays a central role in chromosome condensation in
Xenopus egg cell-free extracts. Two SMC subunits, XCAP-C
(SMC4-type) and XCAP-E (SMC2-type), constitute the core of this
complex. XCAP-H is homologous to the Drosophila Barren
protein. The dosage compensation complex has been identified through
genetic and biochemical studies in C. elegans. It is composed
of at least four subunits, including MIX-1 (SMC2-type), DPY-27
(SMC4-variant type), DPY-26 (weakly homologous to XCAP-H), and DPY-28
(homologous to XCAP-D2). (SMC1-SMC3-type) The 14S cohesin
complex, which was originally inferred from genetic studies in yeast
and subsequently purified from Xenopus egg extracts, is
involved in sister-chromatid cohesion. It contains XSMC1 (SMC1-type),
XSMC3 (SMC3-type), and XRAD21 (the Xenopus homolog of S. cerevisiae Scc1p/Mcd1p and S. pombe Rad21).
The stoichiometry of each subunit in the complex and the identities of
the remaining subunits (p155 and p95) are currently unknown. RC-1 is a
recombination protein complex purified from calf thymus that contains
DNA polymerase
, ligase III, and two SMC (SMC1- and SMC3-type)
subunits. SMC subunits are shown by rectangles; non-SMC subunits are
shown by ellipses.
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Condensins and chromosome condensation |
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Components
SMC2- and SMC4-type proteins act as core components of condensins,
chromosome condensation protein complexes originally purified from
Xenopus laevis egg extracts (Hirano and Mitchison 1994
; Hirano et al. 1997
). The egg extracts contain two forms of the condensin complexes with sedimentation coefficients of 8S and 13S. The 8S form
(8S condensin) is a heterodimer of XCAP-E (SMC2-type) and XCAP-C
(SMC4-type), whereas the 13S form (13S condensin) contains three
additional subunits, XCAP-D2, XCAP-G, and XCAP-H (Fig. 1; Table 1). As
judged by immunodepletion and add-back experiments, 13S condensin is
the active complex required for chromosome condensation in this
cell-free system. The functional role of 8S condensin is unclear. In a
cell lysate of Schizosaccharomyces pombe, a ~13S complex is
detected whose subunit composition is similar to that of the
Xenopus 13S condensin complex: It contains Cut14 (SMC2-type), Cut3 (SMC4-type) (Sutani and Yanagida 1997
), and three other subunits (T. Sutani and M. Yanagida, pers. comm.). Mutations in cut3 or cut14 lead to defects in chromosome condensation and
segregation in S. pombe (Saka et al. 1994
). An smc2
mutant in Saccharomyces cerevisiae also shows similar
phenotypes (Strunnikov et al. 1995
). These genetic studies in yeasts
demonstrate that SMC2- and SMC4-type proteins are required for
chromosome condensation in vivo and further support the idea that
condensation is a prerequisite for successful segregation of chromosomes.
Amino acid sequence analysis of XCAP-D2, XCAP-G, and XCAP-H shows that
they are all highly conserved from yeast to humans (Table 1; Hirano et
al. 1997
; Kimura et al. 1998
; T. Hirano, unpubl.). XCAP-H is homologous
to a Drosophila melanogaster protein called Barren (Bhat et
al. 1996
). Mutants in barren are defective in chromosome
segregation in early embryos in Drosophila, consistent with
its role in mitotic chromosome dynamics. More recently, it has been
shown that Brn1p, the yeast homolog of Barren/XCAP-H, is
an essential nuclear protein required for condensation of rDNA (I. Ouspenski, pers. comm.). In Drosophila, Barren was shown to interact with topoisomerase II and to modulate its enzymatic activity (Bhat et al. 1996
). However, no such interaction has been detected in
Xenopus, at least before the two proteins are targeted to
chromosomes (Hirano et al. 1997
). Further studies will be required to
clarify the functional interactions between condensin subunits and
topoisomerase II. Whereas the primary structures of these non-SMC
subunits provide little information about their biochemical functions,
a recent study from the Xenopus cell-free system suggests that
they play regulatory roles in condensin functions (see below). Genetic
studies of the XCAP-D2 and XCAP-G homologs are yet to be described.
Mechanism
How does the condensin complex interact with chromatin and induce
its condensation? Although we are still in a stage too early to answer
this mechanistic question, the first clue was provided by the finding
that 13S condensin can induce superhelical tension into DNA by
utilizing the energy of ATP hydrolysis (Kimura and Hirano 1997
).
Although 13S condensin has no topoisomerase activity, it can introduce
positive supercoils into relaxed circular DNA in the presence of
topoisomerase I. This supercoiling reaction is ATP dependent and
requires a stoichiometric amount of 13S condensin. 13S condensin has a
DNA-stimulated ATPase activity, consistent with the finding that all
SMC proteins share ATP-binding motifs. Moreover, a recent study has
shown that the supercoiling activity is regulated during the cell cycle
(Kimura et al. 1998
). Whereas the interphase and mitotic forms of 13S
condensin have the same subunit composition, the three non-SMC
subunits, XCAP-D2, XCAP-G, and XCAP-H, are phosphorylated in a
mitosis-specific manner. The interphase complex does not support
supercoiling and phosphatase treatment of the mitotic complex abolishes
its activity, indicating that the supercoiling activity is regulated by
mitosis-specific phosphorylation. In vitro phosphorylation and
phosphopeptide mapping experiments have shown that cdc2 is likely to be
the physiological kinase that phosphorylates and activates 13S
condensin. Multiple cdc2 phosphorylation sites are clustered in the
carboxy-terminal domain of XCAP-D2 and the amino-terminal domain of
XCAP-H. These results reveal a direct functional link between the
master mitotic kinase cdc2 and chromosome condensation. They also
provide additional evidence that the ATP-dependent supercoiling
activity of 13S condensin may be physiologically relevant and
contribute directly to mitosis-specific condensation.
The second activity found associated with condensin subunits is
reannealing of complementary DNA strands. This activity is supported by
the Cut3-Cut14 heterodimer of S. pombe (an equivalent of
Xenopus 8S condensin; Sutani and Yanagida 1997
). A combined biochemical and genetic analysis suggests a strong correlation between
the reannealing activity in vitro and the condensation activity in
vivo. It should be emphasized, however, that the reannealing reaction
does not require ATP and is considered to be only a part of the
condensin activity (Yanagida 1998
). To better understand these
biochemical activities at a mechanistic level, functional dissection of
the condensin complex as well as of its individual subunits is
essential. Such analysis has just been initiated with the yeast SMC
proteins (Akhmedov et al. 1998
). A major DNA-binding activity appears
to reside in the carboxy-terminal domain of Smc2p (and Smc1p), and this
domain alone is able to support a partial reannealing activity. The
latter observation is somehow inconsistent with a previous work showing
that heterodimeric association of Cut3 and Cut14 was necessary to
reconstitute a reannealing activity in vitro (Sutani and Yanagida
1997
). More quantitative analysis will be required to clarify this
discrepancy. The amino-terminal domain of Smc2p (and Smc1p), which
contains the Walker A motif, binds to ATP but is apparently
insufficient to hydrolyze it (Akhmedov et al. 1998
).
Another important question concerns the target sequences of the
condensin complex. Is it recruited to specific chromosomal sites to
initiate condensation? 13S condensin is unlikely to display a strict
sequence specificity and is more likely to recognize structural
features of DNA instead, such as bent DNA or narrow minor grooves. It
has been shown that the complex displays a high affinity for structured
DNA, such as cruciform DNA (Kimura and Hirano 1997
). Remarkably, a
small fragment of the carboxy-terminal domain of Smc2p (and Smc1p)
appears to be able to recognize a cruciform DNA (Akhmedov et al. 1998
).
Future work must also address the question of whether, in the context
of chromosomes, SMC proteins interact preferentially to
scaffold-associated regions (SARs), cis-acting sequences
implicated in higher-order chromosome dynamics (e.g., Strick and
Laemmli 1995
).
Chromosomal targeting
How does 13S condensin initiate chromosome condensation specifically
at the onset of mitosis? The cdc2-dependent activation of the
supercoiling activity of 13S condensin does not account for the whole
mechanism. In cell-free extracts of Xenopus eggs, association
of 13S condensin with chromosomes is mitosis specific (Hirano et al.
1997
). Nevertheless, the mitotic and interphase forms of 13S condensin,
once purified from the extracts, display a comparable level of
DNA-binding activity (Kimura et al. 1998
). Therefore, an additional
regulatory mechanism must exist at the level of chromosomal targeting.
Three models can be considered. First, eukaryotic cells may have a
mitosis-specific factor that actively participates in the loading of
condensin on chromatin. Alternatively, an interphase-specific inhibitor
would prevent 13S condensin from binding to chromatin. Second, as the
physiological target of 13S condensin is likely to be chromatin rather
than naked DNA, it is possible that the mitotic form of 13S condensin has a higher affinity for nucleosomal DNA than the interphase form.
Third, cell cycle-specific modification of nucleosomes may influence
the interaction between chromatin and 13S condensin. In this respect,
mitosis-specific phosphorylation of histone H3 is of great interest.
Recent experiments using a phosphoepitope-specific antibody
demonstrated that there is a strong spatial and temporal correlation
between phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10 and chromosome
condensation (Hendzel et al. 1997
). One attractive hypothesis is that
mitotically phosphorylated histone H3 acts as a `chromatin receptor'
that recruits 13S condensin to chromosomes. At present, these three
models are equally possible and yet not mutually exclusive. Clearly,
multiple mechanisms must cooperate to ensure that chromosome
condensation occurs only during mitosis in the eukaryotic cell cycle.
An additional level of regulation might take place when condensation
factors are transported into the nucleus (Matsusaka et al. 1998
).
Finally, it should be noted that cdc2 is unable to fully phosphorylate
XCAP-H or XCAP-G in vitro (Kimura et al. 1998
), suggesting that other
mitotic kinases participate in condensin regulation.
Relationship to chromosome-wide gene repression
A functional link between mitotic chromosome condensation and
chromosome-wide gene repression was first recognized when an SMC
protein (DPY-27) was found to be an essential regulator of dosage
compensation in Caenorhabditis elegans (Chuang et al. 1994
). In this organism, hermaphrodites (XX) reduce the level of transcripts from each of their X chromosomes to equalize X-linked gene expression with that of males (XO). An elegant combination of genetics and biochemistry has identified a protein complex containing DPY-27 that is
specifically recruited to X chromosomes and executes dosage compensation (Chuang et al. 1996
). The complex shows striking structural similarities to the Xenopus 13S condensin complex: like 13S condensin, the dosage compensation complex consists of two SMC
subunits (DPY-27 and MIX-1) and two (or more) non-SMC subunits (Fig. 1;
Table 1). MIX-1 is an SMC2-type protein that is required for both
mitosis and dosage compensation (Lieb et al. 1998
), whereas DPY-27 is
an `SMC4-variant'-type protein that is essential only for dosage
compensation (Chuang et al. 1994
). MIX-1 is believed to fulfill its
mitotic functions through association with a more conventional
SMC4-type protein that is distinct from DPY-27. DPY-26, one of the
non-SMC subunits, shares a limited similarity to XCAP-H (Lieb et al.
1996
; Hirano et al. 1997
). More recently, it has been shown that DPY-28
is also a component of the complex and is homologous to XCAP-D2 (B. Meyer, pers. comm.). The dosage compensation complex is likely to
regulate gene expression by altering the higher-order structure of X
chromosomes, possibly through a mechanism similar to the one underlying
chromosome condensation. Furthermore, these studies provide an
evolutionarily remarkable example of how an SMC protein (MIX-1) can
flexibly, yet selectively, change its SMC partner and adapt itself to
participate in a different cellular process.
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Cohesins and sister-chromatid cohesion |
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Components
Perhaps one of the least understood issues in eukaryotic chromosome
dynamics is the mechanism of sister-chromatid cohesion. How is the
linkage between sister chromatids established, maintained, and
dissolved during the cell cycle? Recent studies have shown that a
subclass of SMC proteins plays a key role in this important process.
Smc1p in S. cerevisiae, the founding member of the SMC family,
was originally identified through a genetic screen for mutants that
exhibit a high rate of minichromosome loss (Larionov et al. 1985
) and
was subsequently shown to be essential for proper segregation of
natural chromosomes (Strunnikov et al. 1993
). However, the specific
role of Smc1p and Smc3p in segregation was not revealed until a new
genetic screen was designed for mutants that show premature separation
of sister chromatids (Michaelis et al. 1997
). The screen identified
four gene products required for sister-chromatid cohesion in mitosis,
namely, Smc1p, Smc3p, Scc1p, and Scc2p. Scc1p (also called Mcd1p) was
identified independently in a genetic screen for mutants that exhibit
enhanced inviability after a mitotic arrest, as well as in a high-copy
suppressor screen for an smc1 mutant (Guacci et al. 1997
).
Scc1p/Mcd1p is homologous to S. pombe Rad21
implicated in DNA repair and mitosis (Birkenbihl and Subramani 1992
;
Birkenbihl and Subramani 1995
; Tatebayashi et al. 1998
) and is highly
conserved among eukaryotic organisms, including humans (McKay et al.
1996
). These results suggest the existence of an evolutionarily
conserved machinery for sister-chromatid cohesion that may include
homologs of these gene products.
This idea has been substantiated very recently by a biochemical study
that identified protein complexes (cohesins) containing SMC1- and
SMC3-type proteins from Xenopus egg extracts (Losada et al.
1998
). Like condensins, Xenopus egg extracts contain two forms
of the cohesin complexes with sedimentation coefficients of 9S and 14S.
The 9S form (9S cohesin) is a heterodimer of XSMC1 (SMC1-type) and
XSMC3 (SMC3-type), whereas the 14S form (14S cohesin) contains at least
three additional subunits, p155, p120, and p95 (Fig. 1; Table 2). p120
is identical to XRAD21, the Xenopus homolog of yeast
Rad21/Scc1p/Mcd1p. Although the identities
of p155 and p95 are not known, they are immunologically distinct from
the subunits of 13S condensin, indicating that the two SMC protein complexes share no common subunits. Nevertheless, it should be noted
that 14S cohesin and 13S condensin share striking similarities in their
structural organization (Fig. 1). It will be of great interest to test
whether 14S cohesin has biochemical activities similar to those
associated with 13S condensin (Kimura and Hirano 1997
). In the
Xenopus egg cell-free extracts, 14S cohesin binds to
interphase chromatin coincidentally with DNA replication, and most of
the complexes dissociate from chromatin at the onset of mitosis.
Immunodepletion of cohesins during interphase causes defects in sister
chromatid cohesion in subsequent mitosis (Losada et al. 1998
).
Different sets of genetic studies have identified proteins that
potentially interact with the cohesin subunits. In S. cerevisiae, Smc1p interacts genetically and physically with Trf4p
(Castaño et al. 1996
), a gene product originally found in a
screen for mutants that become lethal in combination with a
topoisomerase I mutation (Sadoff et al. 1995
). Recent evidence suggests
that a trf4 mutant also exhibits a cohesion defect (M. Christman, pers. comm.). In Aspergillus nidulans, SudA
(SMC3-type protein) interacts genetically with BimD (Holt and May 1996
)
and SudD (Anaya et al. 1998
), both of which are required for proper
segregation of chromosomes. It remains to be determined whether any of
these proteins are components of the 14S cohesin complex. In S. pombe, Mis4, which is required for sister-chromatid cohesion, has
been found to be homologous to S. cerevisiae Scc2p (Furuya et
al. 1998
). Immunoprecipitation experiments suggest that this new class
of cohesion proteins (Mis4/Scc2p) functions in a complex
that is distinct from cohesins.
Establishment, maintenance, and dissolution of cohesion
A recent study in yeast provides insight into how cohesin might
establish the linkage between sister chromatids (Uhlmann and Nasmyth
1998
). In yeast, Scc1p/Mcd1p is an unstable protein that is synthesized in late G1 and is degraded after the
metaphase-anaphase transition. Using a system in which expression of
Scc1p/Mcd1p during the cell cycle can be manipulated
precisely, it has been shown that Scc1p/Mcd1p's function
becomes essential during S phase when it is recruited to chromosomes.
When Scc1p/Mcd1p is expressed in G2 phase, it
still binds to chromosomes but fails to function properly. These
results suggest that Scc1p/Mcd1p can establish cohesion
only when it binds to duplicating chromatin during S phase. It is
attractive to speculate that the establishment of sister-chromatid
cohesion is directly coupled to passage of a replication fork, although
no evidence for this hypothesis is currently available.
How is the cohesin-mediated cohesion dissolved when sister chromatids
separate? In S. cerevisiae, loss of cohesion at the metaphase-anaphase transition is accompanied by
Scc1p/Mcd1p's dissociation from chromatids (Michaelis et
al. 1997
). Recent evidence indicates that this process depends on
Esp1p, which exists in a complex with its inhibitor Pds1p before
anaphase (Ciosk et al. 1998
). It has been proposed that at the
metaphase-anaphase transition, the anaphase-promoting complex (APC)
triggers proteolysis of Pds1p, which in turn liberates Esp1p's
function that leads to the dissociation of Scc1/Mcd1p
from sister chromatids. Although the dissociated Scc1p/Mcd1p is subsequently degraded in an APC-dependent
manner, functional consequence of this degradation is currently not
known. In S. pombe, the Cut1-Cut2 complex, the homolog of
Esp1p-Pds1p, may have an analogous role in sister-chromatid separation
(Funabiki et al. 1996
; Kumada et al. 1998
).
In Xenopus, the 14S cohesin complex associates with chromatin
during S phase, but most of the complex dissociates from it at the
onset of mitosis (Losada et al. 1998
). This behavior is different from
that of Scc1p/Mcd1p in yeast, suggesting that
sister-chromatid cohesion in higher eukaryotes might involve
multilayered mechanisms. It has been proposed that a reorganization of
cohesion occurs at the onset of mitosis when interphase cohesion is
partially released and mitotic cohesion is reestablished (Fig. 2;
Losada et al. 1998
). The mitotic cohesion between
condensed sister chromatids could be mediated by mitosis-specific
factors that are distinct from cohesins. One such candidate is
MEI-S332, a Drosophila protein that is recruited to the
centromeres in prophase and displaced from them at the
metaphase-anaphase transition (Moore et al. 1998
). However,
MEI-S332's function is not essential in mitosis. This could be
explained by the existence of redundant molecular mechanisms holding
sister chromatids together at the centromeres. Alternatively, other
proteins acting along the chromosome arms (e.g., the low level of
cohesins left on mitotic chromosomes) would be sufficient to ensure
cohesion at this stage. These studies also raise an important question
of how the two different types of cohesion, cohesion along the
chromosomal arms and cohesion at the centromeres, are differentially
established and dissolved during mitotic cell cycle. The distinct
functional roles of the two types of cohesion are more apparent in
meiosis (Miyazaki and Orr-Weaver 1994
). In S. cerevisiae,
cohesins might mediate both arm cohesion and centromeric cohesion, and
thereby act as the sole or predominant regulator of cohesion during the
mitotic cycle.
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A link between cohesion and condensation?
What is the functional relationship between sister-chromatid
cohesion and condensation? Do cohesins and condensins interplay with
each other? In yeast, mutations in a cohesin subunit
(Scc1p/Mcd1p) result in abnormal condensation (Guacci et
al. 1997
). This observation has led to a model proposing that
Scc1p/Mcd1p functions as a linker molecule that connects
the cohesion and condensation machineries on mitotic chromosomes. In
contrast, in Xenopus, there is no evidence for a requirement
for the Scc1p/Mcd1p homolog (XRAD21) in condensation (Losada et al.
1998
). XRAD21 is a subunit of the cohesion machinery (14S cohesin) and
does not associate with the condensation machinery (13S condensin). In
the cohesin-depleted (thereby XRAD21-depleted) extracts, 13S condensin
can associate normally with chromosomes and drive their condensation.
Thus, cohesion and condensation are largely separable in the
Xenopus cell-free system (Fig. 2). The apparent discrepancy
between the two systems may be explained by differential contribution
of the condensation and cohesion machineries to metaphase chromosome
architecture (Losada et al. 1998
). Nevertheless, the structural
similarity between cohesins and condensins suggests strongly that
cohesion and condensation might have evolved from a common molecular
mechanism. In the primitive chromosome cycle of bacteria, the two
processes could be regulated by a single SMC protein (Hirano and Hirano
1998
; Lin and Grossman 1998
).
Relationship to recombinational repair
The identification of the two different SMC2-SMC4 complexes has
provided a hitherto unexpected link between dosage compensation and
mitotic chromosome condensation. Likewise, biochemical characterization of recombination complex-1 (RC-1) has uncovered a potential connection between sister-chromatid cohesion and recombinational repair. RC-1 was
originally purified from calf thymus as a protein complex that
catalyzes a recombinational repair reaction in vitro (Jessberger et al.
1993
) and subsequently found to contain two SMC subunits (bSMC1 and
bSMC3) in addition to DNA polymerase
and ligase III (Fig. 1;
Table 2; Jessberger et al. 1996
). Although RC-1 and 14S cohesin share
the SMC1- and SMC3-type subunits, the two complexes contain different
sets of non-SMC subunits and are thereby distinct. The identification
of Rad21 homologs as components of the cohesin complexes further
emphasizes the link between cohesion and double-strand break repair
(Guacci et al. 1997
; Michaelis et al. 1997
; Losada et al. 1998
). Future
studies should elucidate how SMC proteins manipulate the interaction
between sister DNA molecules and how they contribute to maintaining the
genetic integrity in the interphase nucleus.
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SMC and bacterial chromosome mechanics |
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A remarkable feature of SMC proteins is that they are conserved not
only among eukaryotes but also in bacteria and archaea. The ancient
origin of SMC proteins is likely to reflect their fundamental function
in DNA dynamics. Whereas multiple SMC members have been found within
single eukaryotic species, each of the bacterial or archaeal genomes
fully sequenced so far contains either a single or no smc
gene. Recently, two groups have reported the first genetic studies of
the smc gene from the Gram-positive bacterium B. subtilis (Britton et al. 1998
; Moriya et al. 1998
). Null mutations
in smc cause multiple phenotypes, including accumulation of
anucleate cells, disruption of nucleoid structure, and misassembly of a
protein complex involved in chromosome partitioning. It has been
proposed that the B. subtilis smc gene product (BsSMC)
contributes directly to the compaction of the nucleoid mass and that
defects in this process result in the multiple phenotypes observed in the smc mutants. An immunolocalization study shows that BsSMC localizes to the chromosomes but is also present in discrete foci at
polar positions in the cell (Graumann et al. 1998
). Cell
cycle-dependent structural changes of the polar foci suggest a dynamic
movement of BsSMC within the cell and its functional contribution to
chromosome condensation and segregation.
A biochemical analysis has demonstrated that BsSMC can function as a
simple homodimer without any associated subunits (Hirano and Hirano
1998
). Surprisingly, BsSMC binds preferentially to single-stranded DNA
(ssDNA). It has a DNA-stimulated ATPase activity and the stimulation is
much greater with ssDNA than with double-stranded DNA (dsDNA).
Moreover, BsSMC can form large nucleoprotein aggregates in an
ATP-dependent and ssDNA-specific manner. Although the in vitro evidence
for dynamic interactions between BsSMC and ssDNA is strong, it remains
to be determined whether the interactions are physiologically relevant.
The energy-dependent aggregation of ssDNA might represent a primitive
type of chromosome condensation that occurs during segregation of
bacterial chromosomes. A role of ssDNA in chromosome condensation has
also been suggested in S. pombe (Sutani and Yanagida 1997
).
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SMC as an ATP-modulated DNA cross-linker |
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One of the unique features of SMC proteins is that they have two
long coiled-coil domains separated by a nonhelical hinge. A remarkable
observation from a recent electron microscopic study is that the
coiled-coils of the BsSMC homodimer are arranged into an antiparallel
fashion (Melby et al. 1998
). Such long antiparallel coiled-coil
interactions (~300 amino acids long) are unusual and have no
precedent. The antiparallel arrangement, however, explains how two
conserved ATP-binding motifs located in the amino- and carboxy-terminal
domains (the Walker A and B motifs, respectively) can make direct
contact with each other, constituting an ATP-binding pocket (Saitoh et
al. 1994
). Therefore, BsSMC has a symmetrical structure with two
identical functional domains at the ends of the long arms (Fig.
3A). Because each end has the ability to interact with both ATP and DNA (Akhmedov et al. 1998
), the SMC homodimer could
be considered as an ATP-modulated DNA cross-linker. The structural
study shows further that the central hinge is structurally flexible,
allowing a `scissoring' action of the SMC cross-linker. This novel
mode of action might illustrate how BsSMC induces an aggregation of
ssDNA (Hirano and Hirano 1998
). It will be very important to understand
how ATP-binding and hydrolysis modulate SMC functions, although it has
been shown that DNA-binding per se does not require ATP (Hirano and
Hirano 1998
). Whatever the mechanism might be, it is no longer
appropriate to emphasize the structural similarity between SMC proteins
and cytoskeletal motor proteins because the latter proteins have a
polar structure with the ATP-utilizing domains located at one end of
the molecule.
|
Can the antiparallel mode of association be extended to eukaryotic SMC
heterodimers? Although it remains to be tested experimentally, the
answer is likely to be yes. Then the two classes of eukaryotic SMC
complexes would be categorized into different types of DNA cross-linkers. The SMC2-SMC4-type complexes, which participate in
chromosome condensation and dosage compensation, may be considered as
an intramolecular DNA cross-linker that promotes compaction of a single
DNA molecule (Fig. 3B, left). In contrast, the SMC1-SMC3-type complexes, which are involved in sister chromatid cohesion and recombinational repair, can be regarded as an intermolecular DNA cross-linker that brings and holds two different DNA molecules together
(Fig. 3B, right). Although this is obviously an oversimplified view,
the cross-linker model provides us with a basic framework for our
understanding of how eukaryotic SMC protein complexes might work. In
this scenario, we need to understand how the two classes of SMC protein
complexes might distinguish between the intramolecular and
intermolecular DNA interactions. Introduction of superhelical tension
into DNA is likely to be one of the key mechanisms underlying the
action of the SMC2-SMC4-type complexes because superhelical tension
propagates only intramolecularly (Kimura and Hirano 1997
). One possible
mechanism would be that the SMC2-SMC4 cross-linker mediates the
formation of a specific type of DNA loops (e.g., loops with positive
chirality) and thereby generates positive superhelical tension into
DNA. Finally, it is important to note that the two ends of a eukaryotic
SMC heterodimer are similar but not identical and therefore must have
differentiated functional roles.
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Concluding remarks and future directions |
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|
|
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SMC proteins are key components that regulate a wide variety of chromosomal events from bacteria to humans. Although recent studies have uncovered diverse cellular functions and unique biochemical activities of this new class of chromosomal ATPases, we still do not understand how they are functionally related and mechanistically linked. In this paper a hypothesis is offered that ATP-modulated cross-linking of DNA represents the key mechanism underlying all actions of SMC dimers. In eukaryotes, combinatorial association of different SMC and non-SMC subunits provides an opportunity for each SMC complex to acquire a unique and more sophisticated activity required for its specialized cellular function. Future biochemical, genetic, and structural characterization of SMC proteins in the bacterial and eukaryotic systems should refine and extend this idea. It is also anticipated that a better understanding of SMC proteins will provide fundamental insights into the evolution of large-scale chromosome mechanics. Finally, it should be added that the potential roles of SMC protein complexes remain to be determined in a number of important areas, such as interphase nuclear architecture (e.g., heterochromatin formation) and meiotic chromosome dynamics and recombination.
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Acknowledgments |
|---|
I thank C. Wu, I. Ouspenski, H. Bellen, M. Christman, B. Meyer, and M. Yanagida for allowing me to cite their results prior to publication. I am also grateful to K. Nasmyth, R. Jessberger, A. Strunnikov, K. Yokomori, and M. Yanagida for preprints. This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Pew Scholars Program in the Biomedical Sciences, and the Human Frontier Science Program.
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Footnotes |
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1 E-MAIL hirano{at}cshl.org; FAX (516) 367-8815.
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References |
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