4.7 Article

Orc4 spatiotemporally stabilizes centromeric chromatin

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GENOME RESEARCH
卷 31, 期 4, 页码 607-621

出版社

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gr.265900.120

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资金

  1. Tata Innovation Fellowship from the Department of Biotechnology (DBT), Government of India [BT/HRT/35/01/03/2017]
  2. J.C. Bose fellowship from Science and Engineering Research Board, Government of India [SERBJCB/JNCASR/D0017/2020/00807]
  3. DBT [BT/PR14557/BRB/10/1529/2016, BT/PR16240/BID/7/575/2016, BT/PR14840/BRB/10/880/2010]
  4. DBT grant in Life Science Research, Education and Training at JNCASR [BT/INF/22/SP27679/2018]
  5. JNCASR [JNC/AO/PB.022(L)]
  6. Department of Atomic Energy (DAE)
  7. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB)
  8. Department of Science and Technology (DST), India [EMR/2016/005965]
  9. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), Government of India [09/733(0178)/2012-EMR-I]
  10. CSIR [09/733 (0253)/219-EMR-I, 9/733 (0161)/2011-EMR-I]
  11. CSIR S.P. Mukherjee fellowship [SPM-07/733(0181)/2013-EMR-I]

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The establishment and propagation of centromeric chromatin in most eukaryotes are mediated by epigenetic mechanisms. Determinants such as DNA replication origins, origin binding proteins, and replication timing of centromere DNA play crucial roles in centromere function. In the yeast Candida albicans, Orc4 is abundantly present at all centromeres, with early replicating Orc4-bound regions interacting stronger with themselves than with late replicating regions. Orc4, Mcm2, and Scm3 are essential for maintaining centromeric chromatin stability and CENPA recruitment in C. albicans.
The establishment of centromeric chromatin and its propagation by the centromere-specific histone CENPA is mediated by epigenetic mechanisms in most eukaryotes. DNA replication origins, origin binding proteins, and replication timing of centromere DNA are important determinants of centromere function. The epigenetically regulated regional centromeres in the budding yeast Candida albicans have unique DNA sequences that replicate earliest in every chromosome and are clustered throughout the cell cycle. In this study, the genome-wide occupancy of the replication initiation protein Orc4 reveals its abundance at all centromeres in C. albicans. Orc4 is associated with four different DNA sequence motifs, one of which coincides with tRNA genes (tDNA) that replicate early and cluster together in space. Hi-C combined with genome-wide replication timing analyses identify that early replicating Orc4-bound regions interact with themselves stronger than with late replicating Orc4-bound regions. We simulate a polymer model of chromosomes of C. albicans and propose that the early replicating and highly enriched Orc4-bound sites preferentially localize around the clustered kinetochores. We also observe that Orc4 is constitutively localized to centromeres, and both Orc4 and the helicase Mcm2 are essential for cell viability and CENPA stability in C. albicans. Finally, we show that new molecules of CENPA are recruited to centromeres during late anaphase/telophase, which coincides with the stage at which the CENPA-specific chaperone Scm3 localizes to the kinetochore. We propose that the spatiotemporal localization of Orc4 within the nucleus, in collaboration with Mcm2 and Scm3, maintains centromeric chromatin stability and CENPA recruitment in C. albicans.

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