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Publication : MCAK regulates chromosome alignment but is not necessary for preventing aneuploidy in mouse oocyte meiosis I.

First Author  Illingworth C Year  2010
Journal  Development Volume  137
Issue  13 Pages  2133-8
PubMed ID  20504960 Mgi Jnum  J:161955
Mgi Id  MGI:4462099 Doi  10.1242/dev.048306
Citation  Illingworth C, et al. (2010) MCAK regulates chromosome alignment but is not necessary for preventing aneuploidy in mouse oocyte meiosis I. Development 137(13):2133-8
abstractText  Errors in chromosome segregation in mammalian oocytes lead to aneuploid eggs that are developmentally compromised. In mitotic cells, mitotic centromere associated kinesin (MCAK; KIF2C) prevents chromosome segregation errors by detaching incorrect microtubule-kinetochore interactions. Here, we examine whether MCAK is involved in spindle function in mouse oocyte meiosis I, and whether MCAK is necessary to prevent chromosome segregation errors. We find that MCAK is recruited to centromeres, kinetochores and chromosome arms in mid-meiosis I, and that MCAK depletion, or inhibition using a dominant-negative construct, causes chromosome misalignment. However, the majority of oocytes complete meiosis I and the resulting eggs retain the correct number of chromosomes. Moreover, MCAK-depleted oocytes can recover from mono-orientation of homologous kinetochores in mid-meiosis I to segregate chromosomes correctly. Thus, MCAK contributes to chromosome alignment in meiosis I, but is not necessary for preventing chromosome segregation errors. Although other correction mechanisms may function in mammalian meiosis I, we speculate that late establishment of kinetochore microtubules in oocytes reduces the likelihood of incorrect microtubule-kinetochore interactions, bypassing the requirement for error correction.
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