4.8 Article

Robertsonian Fusion and Centromere Repositioning Contributed to the Formation of Satellite-free Centromeres During the Evolution of Zebras

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 39, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msac162

Keywords

neocentromere; Robertsonian fusion; centromere repositioning; genome evolution; ChIP-seq; CENP-A

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) [Department of Biology and Biotechnology L. Spallanzani, University of Pavia] [2015RA7XZS_002]
  2. Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR-Progetto Bandiera Epigenomica)
  3. Collaborative Research Centre 992 Medical Epigenetics (DFG) [SFB 992/1 2012]
  4. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [BMBF] [031 A538A/A538C RBC, 031L0101B/031L0101C de.NBI-epi, 031L0106 de.STAIR (de.NBI)]

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Through ChIP-seq experiments on zebras, researchers discovered that a majority of centromeres in zebras lack satellite DNA, which challenges the role of satellite DNA in centromere function. They also found that satellite-free centromeres can arise from centromere repositioning, Robertsonian fusion, or inversion breakpoints.
Centromeres are epigenetically specified by the histone H3 variant CENP-A and typically associated with highly repetitive satellite DNA. We previously discovered natural satellite-free neocentromeres in Equus caballus and Equus asinus. Here, through ChIP-seq with an anti-CENP-A antibody, we found an extraordinarily high number of centromeres lacking satellite DNA in the zebras Equus burchelli (15 of 22) and Equus grevyi (13 of 23), demonstrating that the absence of satellite DNA at the majority of centromeres is compatible with genome stability and species survival and challenging the role of satellite DNA in centromere function. Nine satellite-free centromeres are shared between the two species in agreement with their recent separation. We assembled all centromeric regions and improved the reference genome of E. burchelli. Sequence analysis of the CENP-A binding domains revealed that they are LINE-1 and AT-rich with four of them showing DNA amplification. In the two zebras, satellite-free centromeres emerged from centromere repositioning or following Robertsonian fusion. In five chromosomes, the centromeric function arose near the fusion points, which are located within regions marked by traces of ancestral pericentromeric sequences. Therefore, besides centromere repositioning, Robertsonian fusions are an important source of satellite-free centromeres during evolution. Finally, in one case, a satellite-free centromere was seeded on an inversion breakpoint. At 11 chromosomes, whose primary constrictions seemed to be associated with satellite repeats by cytogenetic analysis, satellite-free neocentromeres were instead located near the ancestral inactivated satellite-based centromeres; therefore, the centromeric function has shifted away from a satellite repeat containing locus to a satellite-free new position.

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