4.5 Article

Dgcr8 and Dicer are essential for sex chromosome integrity during meiosis in males

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 128, Issue 12, Pages 2314-2327

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.167148

Keywords

Dgcr8; Dicer; Dicer1; Germ line; MicroRNA; Meiosis; Sex chromosomes; Sex body; Telomere

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01GM105668, HD041012]
  2. National Centers for Translational Research in Reproduction and Infertility (NCTRI) [P50HD076210]
  3. NIH [T32GM00761, T32HD052471]
  4. NIH training grant in Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology [T32GM007273]
  5. VERGE predoctoral award from the Vertebrate Genomics Center at Cornell University

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Small RNAs play crucial roles in regulating gene expression during mammalian meiosis. To investigate the function of microRNAs (miRNAs) and small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) during meiosis in males, we generated germ-cell-specific conditional deletions of Dgcr8 and Dicer in mice. Analysis of spermatocytes from both conditional knockout lines revealed that there were frequent chromosomal fusions during meiosis, always involving one or both sex chromosomes. RNA sequencing indicates upregulation of Atm in spermatocytes from miRNA-deficient mice, and immunofluorescence imaging demonstrates an increased abundance of activated ATM kinase and mislocalization of phosphorylated MDC1, an ATM phosphorylation substrate. The Atm 3'UTR contains many potential microRNA target sites, and, notably, target sites for several miRNAs depleted in both conditional knockout mice were highly effective at promoting repression. RNF8, a telomere-associated protein whose localization is controlled by the MDC1-ATM kinase cascade, normally associates with the sex chromosomes during pachytene, but in both conditional knockouts redistributed to the autosomes. Taken together, these results suggest that Atm dysregulation in microRNA-deficient germ lines contributes to the redistribution of proteins involved in chromosomal stability from the sex chromosomes to the autosomes, resulting in sex chromosome fusions during meiotic prophase I.

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