4.8 Article

Genome-wide Control of Heterochromatin Replication by the Telomere Capping Protein TRF2

Journal

MOLECULAR CELL
Volume 70, Issue 3, Pages 449-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2018.03.036

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FEDER
  2. ARC
  3. le Minitere de l'Enseignement Superieur
  4. la region Provence Alpes-Cote d'Azur
  5. Inserm
  6. PHC Cai Yuanpei program of the Ministry of Foreign Affair [36721YM]
  7. Fondation ARC [PGA1*20160203873]
  8. Ligue Contre le Cancer [LIGUE 2014]
  9. ANR [ANR-1582-30020690]
  10. Institut Nationale du Cancer (INCa) (TELOCHROM)
  11. cross-cutting programof Inserm on aging (AGEMED, PT Vieillissement)
  12. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81270433, 81471400, 81522017, 91749126]
  13. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission (Oriental Scholars Program) [2012-67]
  14. Foundation of Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine for Translational Medicine Innovation project [15ZH4005]
  15. la Ligue Nationale contre le Cancer (Equipe labellisee Ligue)
  16. Institut Nationale du Cancer (INCa) (REPLITOP)
  17. Investments for the Future'' LABEX SIGNALIFE [ANR-11-LABX-0028-01]
  18. [ERC-2015-ADG-694694 ChromADICT]

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Hard-to-replicate regions of chromosomes (e.g., pericentromeres, centromeres, and telomeres) impede replication fork progression, eventually leading, in the event of replication stress, to chromosome fragility, aging, and cancer. Our knowledge of the mechanisms controlling the stability of these regions is essentially limited to telomeres, where fragility is counteracted by the shelterin proteins. Here we show that the shelterin subunit TRF2 ensures progression of the replication fork through pericentromeric heterochromatin, but not centromeric chromatin. In a process involving its N-terminal basic domain, TRF2 binds to pericentromeric Satellite III sequences during S phase, allowing the recruitment of the G-quadruplex-resolving helicase RTEL1 to facilitate fork progression. We also show that TRF2 is required for the stability of other heterochromatic regions localized throughout the genome, paving the way for future research on heterochromatic replication and its relationship with aging and cancer.

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