Abstract
Human Mps1 (hMps1) is a mitotic checkpoint kinase responsible for sensing the unattached and tensionless kinetochore. Despite its importance in safeguarding proper chromosome segregation, how hMps1 is recruited to the kinetochore remains incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that phosphorylation at Thr-288 by the cell cycle checkpoint kinase CHK2 is involved in this process. We discovered that the phosphorylation-deficient T288A mutant has an impaired ability to localize to the kinetochore and cannot reestablish the mitotic checkpoint in hMps1-depleted cells. In support, we found that nocodazole induced hMps1 phosphorylation at the previously identified CHK2 site Thr-288 and that this could be detected at the kinetochore in a CHK2-dependent manner. Mechanistically, phosphorylation at Thr-288 promoted the interaction with the KMN (KNL1-Mis12-Ndc80 network) protein HEC1. Forced kinetochore localization corrected the defects associated with the T288A mutant. Our results provide evidence of a newly identified hMps1 phosphorylation site that is involved in the mitotic checkpoint and that CHK2 contributes to chromosomal stability through hMps1.
