Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

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American Society for Cell Biology, Molecular Biology of the Cell, 18(22), p. 3465-3477

DOI: 10.1091/mbc.e11-05-0423

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Condensins I and II are essential for construction of bivalent chromosomes in mouse oocytes

Journal article published in 2011 by Jibak Lee, Sugako Ogushi ORCID, Mitinori Saitou, Tatsuya Hirano
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

In many eukaryotes, condensins I and II associate with chromosomes in an ordered fashion during mitosis and play nonoverlapping functions in their assembly and segregation. Here we report for the first time the spatiotemporal dynamics and functions of the two condensin complexes during meiotic divisions in mouse oocytes. At the germinal vesicle stage (prophase I), condensin I is present in the cytoplasm, whereas condensin II is localized within the nucleus. After germinal vesicle breakdown, condensin II starts to associate with chromosomes and becomes concentrated onto chromatid axes of bivalent chromosomes by metaphase I. REC8 "glues" chromosome arms along their lengths. In striking contrast to condensin II, condensin I localizes primarily around centromeric regions at metaphase I and starts to associate stably with chromosome arms only after anaphase I. Antibody injection experiments show that condensin functions are required for many aspects of meiotic chromosome dynamics, including chromosome individualization, resolution, and segregation. We propose that the two condensin complexes play distinctive roles in constructing bivalent chromosomes: condensin II might play a primary role in resolving sister chromatid axes, whereas condensin I might contribute to monopolar attachment of sister kinetochores, possibly by assembling a unique centromeric structure underneath.