Abstract

The conserved family of cohesin proteins that mediate sister chromatid cohesion requires Scc2, Scc4 for chromatin-association and Eco1/Ctf7 for conversion to a tethering competent state. A popular model, based on the notion that cohesins form huge ring-like structures, is that Scc2, Scc4 function is essential only during G1 such that sister chromatid cohesion results simply from DNA replisome passage through pre-loaded cohesin rings. In such a scenario, cohesin deposition during G1 is temporally uncoupled from Eco1-dependent establishment reactions that occur during S-phase. Chl1 DNA helicase (homolog of human ChlR1/DDX11 and BACH1/BRIP1/FANCJ helicases implicated in Fanconi anemia, breast and ovarian cancer and Warsaw Breakage Syndrome) plays a critical role in sister chromatid cohesion, however, the mechanism through which Chl1 promotes cohesion remains poorly understood. Here, we report that Chl1 promotes Scc2 loading unto DNA such that both Scc2 and cohesin enrichment to chromatin are defective in chl1 mutant cells. The results further show that both Chl1 expression and chromatin-recruitment are tightly regulated through the cell cycle, peaking during S-phase. Importantly, kinetic ChIP studies reveals that Chl1 is required for Scc2 chromatin-association specifically during S-phase, but not during G1. Despite normal chromatin enrichment of both Scc2 and cohesin during G1, chl1 mutant cells exhibit severe chromosome segregation and cohesion defects – revealing that G1-loaded cohesins is insufficient to promote cohesion. Based on these findings, we propose a new model wherein S-phase cohesin loading occurs during DNA replication and in concert with both cohesion establishment and chromatin assembly reactions - challenging the notion that DNA replication fork navigates through or around pre-loaded cohesin rings.

Highlights

  • The generation of viable cell progeny requires the faithful replication of each parental chromosome, producing identical sister chromatids, and faithful segregation of sister chromatids into daughter cells

  • Is Scc2 binding to DNA reduced at cohesin association regions (CARs) sites? We investigated whether Chl1 participates in the stable binding of Scc2 at five independent CAR sites that reside along the arm of chromosome III and five CAR sites within CEN3 using chromatin immunoprecipitations

  • One of the major revelations of the current study involving Chl1 is that cohesins that associate with DNA during G1 fail to produce sister chromatid cohesion: chl1 mutant cells load cohesins onto DNA during G1 to levels identical to wildtype cells and to appropriate CAR sites - yet exhibit significant cohesion defects

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Summary

Introduction

The generation of viable cell progeny requires the faithful replication of each parental chromosome, producing identical sister chromatids, and faithful segregation of sister chromatids into daughter cells. Since these two cellular events, DNA replication (S phase) and chromosome segregation (M phase), are temporally separated, cells must maintain the identity of sister chromatids over time - in some cases for decades Cells achieve this feat through a conserved multimeric protein complex known as cohesins that consist of Smc, Smc, Mcd1/Scc and Scc3/Irr1 – along side cohesin-bound auxiliary factors Pds, Rad61/Wapl and metazoan-specific Sororin [1,2,3]. Despite normal Scc (and cohesin) recruitment to DNA during G1, chl mutant cells exhibit significant cohesion defects These findings significantly impact current models regarding the temporal coupling of cohesin deposition and cohesin establishment

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