Bio-Protocol (Dec 2024)
Quantitative Analysis of Kinetochore Protein Levels and Inter-Kinetochore Distances in Mammalian Cells During Mitosis
Abstract
The mammalian kinetochore is a multi-layered protein complex that forms on the centromeric chromatin. The kinetochore serves as the attachment hub for the plus ends of microtubules emanating from the centrosomes during mitosis. For karyokinesis, bipolar kinetochore-microtubule attachment and subsequent microtubule depolymerization lead to the development of inter-kinetochore tension between the sister chromatids. These events are instrumental in initiating a signaling cascade culminating in the segregation of the sister chromatids equally between the new daughter cells. Of the hundreds of conserved proteins that constitute the mammalian kinetochore, many that reside in the outermost layer are loaded during early mitosis and removed around metaphase-anaphase. Dynamically localized kinetochore proteins include those required for kinetochore-microtubule attachment, spindle assembly checkpoint proteins, various kinases, and molecular motors. The abundance of these kinetochore-localized proteins varies at prometaphase, metaphase, and anaphase, and is thus considered diagnostic of the fidelity of progression through these stages of mitosis. Here, we document detailed, state-of-the-art methodologies based on high-resolution fluorescence confocal microscopy followed by quantification of the levels of kinetochore-localized proteins during mitosis. We also document methods to accurately measure distances between sister kinetochores in mammalian cells, a surrogate readout for inter-kinetochore tension, which is essential for chromosome segregation.