4.7 Article

Centromeres are specialized replication domains in heterochromatin

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 153, Issue 1, Pages 101-109

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.153.1.101

Keywords

centromere; heterochromatin; DNA replication; histone; Drosophila

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The properties that define centromeres in complex eukaryotes are poorly understood because the underlying DNA is normally repetitive and indistinguishable from surrounding noncentromeric sequences. However, centromeric chromatin contains variant H3-like histones that may specify centromeric regions. Nucleosomes are normally assembled during DNA replication; therefore, we examined replication and chromatin assembly at centromeres in Drosophila cells. DNA in pericentric heterochromatin replicates late in S phase, and so centromeres are also thought to replicate late. In contrast to expectation, we show that centromeres replicate as isolated domains early in S phase. These domains do not appear to assemble conventional H3-containing nucleosomes, and deposition of the Cid centromeric H3-like variant proceeds by a replication-independent pathway. We suggest that late-replicating pericentric heterochromatin helps to maintain embedded centromeres by blocking conventional nucleosome assembly early in S phase, thereby allowing the deposition of centromeric histones.

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