Literature DB >> 24449889

Kinetochore assembly and heterochromatin formation occur autonomously in Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

William R A Brown1, Geraint Thomas, Nicholas C O Lee, Martin Blythe, Gianni Liti, Jonas Warringer, Matthew W Loose.   

Abstract

Kinetochores in multicellular eukaryotes are usually associated with heterochromatin. Whether this heterochromatin simply promotes the cohesion necessary for accurate chromosome segregation at cell division or whether it also has a role in kinetochore assembly is unclear. Schizosaccharomyces pombe is an important experimental system for investigating centromere function, but all of the previous work with this species has exploited a single strain or its derivatives. The laboratory strain and most other S. pombe strains contain three chromosomes, but one recently discovered strain, CBS 2777, contains four. We show that the genome of CBS 2777 is related to that of the laboratory strain by a complex chromosome rearrangement. As a result, two of the kinetochores in CBS 2777 contain the central core sequences present in the laboratory strain centromeres, but lack adjacent heterochromatin. The closest block of heterochromatin to these rearranged kinetochores is ∼100 kb away at new telomeres. Despite lacking large amounts of adjacent heterochromatin, the rearranged kinetochores bind CENP-A(Cnp1) and CENP-C(Cnp3) in similar quantities and with similar specificities as those of the laboratory strain. The simplest interpretation of this result is that constitutive kinetochore assembly and heterochromatin formation occur autonomously.

Entities:  

Keywords:  epigenesis; microbial diversity; yeast

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24449889      PMCID: PMC3918819          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1216934111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  27 in total

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3.  Growth arrest and chromosome instability in aneuploid yeast.

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4.  Heterochromatin and RNAi are required to establish CENP-A chromatin at centromeres.

Authors:  Hernan Diego Folco; Alison L Pidoux; Takeshi Urano; Robin C Allshire
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-01-04       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  CENP-A exceeds microtubule attachment sites in centromere clusters of both budding and fission yeast.

Authors:  Valerie C Coffman; Pengcheng Wu; Mark R Parthun; Jian-Qiu Wu
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Authors:  William R A Brown; Gianni Liti; Carlos Rosa; Steve James; Ian Roberts; Vincent Robert; Neil Jolly; Wen Tang; Peter Baumann; Carter Green; Kristina Schlegel; Jonathan Young; Fabienne Hirchaud; Spencer Leek; Geraint Thomas; Anders Blomberg; Jonas Warringer
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2011-12-01       Impact factor: 3.154

7.  Evolutionary-conserved telomere-linked helicase genes of fission yeast are repressed by silencing factors, RNAi components and the telomere-binding protein Taz1.

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8.  Evolutionary-new centromeres preferentially emerge within gene deserts.

Authors:  Mariana Lomiento; Zhaoshi Jiang; Pietro D'Addabbo; Evan E Eichler; Mariano Rocchi
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2.  Population genomics of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Fawcett; Tetsushi Iida; Shohei Takuno; Ryuichi P Sugino; Tomoyuki Kado; Kazuto Kugou; Sachiko Mura; Takehiko Kobayashi; Kunihiro Ohta; Jun-ichi Nakayama; Hideki Innan
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4.  An aging-independent replicative lifespan in a symmetrically dividing eukaryote.

Authors:  Eric C Spivey; Stephen K Jones; James R Rybarski; Fatema A Saifuddin; Ilya J Finkelstein
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2017-01-31       Impact factor: 8.140

5.  H3K9me3 maintenance on a human artificial chromosome is required for segregation but not centromere epigenetic memory.

Authors:  Nuno M C Martins; Fernanda Cisneros-Soberanis; Elisa Pesenti; Natalia Y Kochanova; Wei-Hao Shang; Tetsuya Hori; Takahiro Nagase; Hiroshi Kimura; Vladimir Larionov; Hiroshi Masumoto; Tatsuo Fukagawa; William C Earnshaw
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2020-07-24       Impact factor: 5.285

6.  Heterochromatin suppresses gross chromosomal rearrangements at centromeres by repressing Tfs1/TFIIS-dependent transcription.

Authors:  Akiko K Okita; Faria Zafar; Jie Su; Dayalini Weerasekara; Takuya Kajitani; Tatsuro S Takahashi; Hiroshi Kimura; Yota Murakami; Hisao Masukata; Takuro Nakagawa
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2019-01-11

7.  Mutation and selection explain why many eukaryotic centromeric DNA sequences are often A + T rich.

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8.  Repeat-Associated Fission Yeast-Like Regional Centromeres in the Ascomycetous Budding Yeast Candida tropicalis.

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9.  Bulk Segregant Analysis Reveals the Genetic Basis of a Natural Trait Variation in Fission Yeast.

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  9 in total

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