Content area

Abstract

The basic determinant of chromosome inheritance, the centromere, is specified in many eukaryotes by an epigenetic mark. Using gene targeting in human cells and fission yeast, chromatin containing the centromere-specific histone H3 variant CENP-A is demonstrated to be the epigenetic mark that acts through a two-step mechanism to identify, maintain and propagate centromere function indefinitely. Initially, centromere position is replicated and maintained by chromatin assembled with the centromere-targeting domain (CATD) of CENP-A substituted into H3. Subsequently, nucleation of kinetochore assembly onto CATD-containing chromatin is shown to require either the amino- or carboxy-terminal tail of CENP-A for recruitment of inner kinetochore proteins, including stabilizing CENP-B binding to human centromeres or direct recruitment of CENP-C, respectively.

Details

Title
A two-step mechanism for epigenetic specification of centromere identity and function
Author
Fachinetti, Daniele; Diego Folco, H; Nechemia-arbely, Yael; Valente, Luis P; Nguyen, Kristen; Wong, Alex J; Zhu, Quan; Holland, Andrew J; Desai, Arshad; Jansen, Lars E T; Cleveland, Don W
Pages
1056-66
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Sep 2013
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
14657392
e-ISSN
14764679
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1429231162
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Sep 2013