| Literature DB >> 12356743 |
Jennifer M Spence1, Ricky Critcher, Thomas A Ebersole, Manuel M Valdivia, William C Earnshaw, Tatsuo Fukagawa, Christine J Farr.
Abstract
Dissection of human centromeres is difficult because of the lack of landmarks within highly repeated DNA. We have systematically manipulated a single human X centromere generating a large series of deletion derivatives, which have been examined at four levels: linear DNA structure; the distribution of constitutive centromere proteins; topoisomerase IIalpha cleavage activity; and mitotic stability. We have determined that the human X major alpha-satellite locus, DXZ1, is asymmetrically organized with an active subdomain anchored approximately 150 kb in from the Xp-edge. We demonstrate a major site of topoisomerase II cleavage within this domain that can shift if juxtaposed with a telomere, suggesting that this enzyme recognizes an epigenetic determinant within the DXZ1 chromatin. The observation that the only part of the DXZ1 locus shared by all deletion derivatives is a highly restricted region of <50 kb, which coincides with the topo isomerase II cleavage site, together with the high levels of cleavage detected, identify topoisomerase II as a major player in centromere biology.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12356743 PMCID: PMC129033 DOI: 10.1093/emboj/cdf511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: EMBO J ISSN: 0261-4189 Impact factor: 11.598