Abstract

BackgroundThe centromere is the specialized chromatin region that directs chromosome segregation. The kinetochore assembles on the centromere, attaching chromosomes to microtubules in mitosis. The centromere position is usually maintained through cell cycles and generations. However, new centromeres, known as neocentromeres, can occasionally form on ectopic regions when the original centromere is inactivated or lost due to chromosomal rearrangements. Centromere repositioning can occur during evolution. Moreover, de novo centromeres can form on exogenously transformed DNA in human cells at a low frequency, which then segregates faithfully as human artificial chromosomes (HACs). How centromeres are maintained, inactivated and activated is unclear. A conserved histone H3 variant, CENP-A, epigenetically marks functional centromeres, interspersing with H3. Several histone modifications enriched at centromeres are required for centromere function, but their role in new centromere formation is less clear. Studying the mechanism of new centromere formation has been challenging because these events are difficult to detect immediately, requiring weeks for HAC selection.ResultsDNA injected into the Caenorhabditis elegans gonad can concatemerize to form artificial chromosomes (ACs) in embryos, which first undergo passive inheritance, but soon autonomously segregate within a few cell cycles, more rapidly and frequently than HACs. Using this in vivo model, we injected LacO repeats DNA, visualized ACs by expressing GFP::LacI, and monitored equal AC segregation in real time, which represents functional centromere formation. Histone H3K9 and H4 acetylations are enriched on new ACs when compared to endogenous chromosomes. By fusing histone deacetylase HDA-1 to GFP::LacI, we tethered HDA-1 to ACs specifically, reducing AC histone acetylations, reducing AC equal segregation frequency, and reducing initial kinetochroe protein CENP-AHCP−3 and NDC-80 deposition, indicating that histone acetylations facilitate efficient centromere establishment. Similarly, inhibition of RNA polymerase II-mediated transcription also delays initial CENP-AHCP-3 loading.ConclusionsAcetylated histones on chromatin and transcription can create an open chromatin environment, enhancing nucleosome disassembly and assembly, and potentially contribute to centromere establishment. Alternatively, acetylation of soluble H4 may stimulate the initial deposition of CENP-AHCP−3-H4 nucleosomes. Our findings shed light on the mechanism of de novo centromere activation.

Highlights

  • The centromere is the specialized chromatin region that directs chromosome segregation

  • Our work demonstrates the use of C. elegans artificial chromosomes (ACs) as an in vivo model to study the role of epigenetic factors in de novo centromere formation during the actual time of the event, and illustrates the involvement of histone acetylation and transcription in de novo centromere establishment

  • Caenorhabditis elegans newly formed ACs in early cell stage are hyperacetylated at H3K9 and H4 In order to decipher whether the role of histone modifications on de novo centromere formation in human artificial chromosomes (HACs) is conserved in C. elegans ACs, we first studied the abundance of euchromatin-related histone modifications, H3K9 and H4 acetylations on newly formed, first-generation LacO-containing ACs in embryos

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Summary

Introduction

The centromere is the specialized chromatin region that directs chromosome segregation. De novo centromeres can form on exogenously transformed DNA in human cells at a low frequency, which segregates faithfully as human artificial chromosomes (HACs). A conserved histone H3 variant, CENP-A, epigenetically marks functional centromeres, interspersing with H3. Centromeric regions have different DNA sequences and sizes across species, but functional centromeres are often marked by the conserved histone H3 variant, CENP-A. Neocentromeres occasionally form on ectopic regions after chromosomal rearrangements or inactivation of the original centromere [1]. De novo centromeres can form on exogenous DNA transformed into cells, which segregates faithfully as artificial chromosomes (ACs). These functional neocentromeres and de novo centromeres contain CENP-A. CENP-A is recognized as one of the most upstream proteins in the kinetochore assembly hierarchy and acts as a platform to recruit other kinetochore proteins [3, 4]

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