Abstract

Distinct chromatin organization features, such as centromeres and heterochromatin domains, are inherited epigenetically. However, the mechanisms that modulate the accuracy of epigenetic inheritance, especially at the individual nucleosome level, are not well-understood. Here, using ChIP and next-generation sequencing (ChIP-Seq), we characterized Ccp1, a homolog of the histone chaperone Vps75 in budding yeast that functions in centromere chromatin duplication and heterochromatin maintenance in fission yeast (Schizosaccharomyces pombe). We show that Ccp1 is enriched at the central core regions of the centromeres. Of note, among all histone chaperones characterized, deletion of the ccp1 gene uniquely reduced the rate of epigenetic switching, manifested as position effect variegation within the centromeric core region (CEN-PEV). In contrast, gene deletion of other histone chaperones either elevated the PEV switching rates or did not affect centromeric PEV. Ccp1 and the kinetochore components Mis6 and Sim4 were mutually dependent for centromere or kinetochore association at the proper levels. Moreover, Ccp1 influenced heterochromatin distribution at multiple loci in the genome, including the subtelomeric and the pericentromeric regions. We also found that Gar2, a protein predominantly enriched in the nucleolus, functions similarly to Ccp1 in modulating the epigenetic stability of centromeric regions, although its mechanism remained unclear. Together, our results identify Ccp1 as an important player in modulating epigenetic stability and maintaining proper organization of multiple chromatin domains throughout the fission yeast genome.

Highlights

  • Distinct chromatin organization features, such as centromeres and heterochromatin domains, are inherited epigenetically

  • To elucidate the mechanism that modulates the nucleosomal epigenetic stability in fission yeast, we performed a genetic survey in an annotated gene deletion library [30]

  • We focus on one gene, SPBC36B7.08c, named as ccp1, which encodes a protein homologous to a histone chaperone, Vps75, in the budding yeast

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

PEV was observed with a reporter gene (e.g. ade or ura4) inserted within the centromeric core region (referred to as CEN-PEV in this work) [26] Subsequent studies, including those from our laboratory, have demonstrated that in CEN-PEV, Cnp (CENP-A homolog in fission yeast) nucleosome occupancy on the reporter gene correlates with its transcriptional silencing [15, 27, 28]. We describe characterizing new roles of Ccp in fission yeast, as an important modulator for the epigenetic stability of PEVs associated with Cnp or heterochromatin modification (H3K9me2), centromere function, and proper heterochromatin. We have found that Gar, a nucleolar protein, functionally cooperates with Ccp in maintaining proper heterochromatin distribution at pericentromeric regions as well as in modulating centromeric epigenetic stability

Results
Epigenetic stability is regulated intricately
Strains and media
Pedigree analysis
Mass spectrometry
Full Text
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