Literature DB >> 26851213

A role for tuned levels of nucleosome remodeler subunit ACF1 during Drosophila oogenesis.

Kenneth Börner1, Dhawal Jain1, Paula Vazquez-Pianzola2, Sandra Vengadasalam1, Natascha Steffen1, Dmitry V Fyodorov3, Pavel Tomancak4, Alexander Konev5, Beat Suter2, Peter B Becker6.   

Abstract

The Chromatin Accessibility Complex (CHRAC) consists of the ATPase ISWI, the large ACF1 subunit and a pair of small histone-like proteins, CHRAC-14/16. CHRAC is a prototypical nucleosome sliding factor that mobilizes nucleosomes to improve the regularity and integrity of the chromatin fiber. This may facilitate the formation of repressive chromatin. Expression of the signature subunit ACF1 is restricted during embryonic development, but remains high in primordial germ cells. Therefore, we explored roles for ACF1 during Drosophila oogenesis. ACF1 is expressed in somatic and germline cells, with notable enrichment in germline stem cells and oocytes. The asymmetrical localization of ACF1 to these cells depends on the transport of the Acf1 mRNA by the Bicaudal-D/Egalitarian complex. Loss of ACF1 function in the novel Acf1(7) allele leads to defective egg chambers and their elimination through apoptosis. In addition, we find a variety of unusual 16-cell cyst packaging phenotypes in the previously known Acf1(1) allele, with a striking prevalence of egg chambers with two functional oocytes at opposite poles. Surprisingly, we found that the Acf1(1) deletion--despite disruption of the Acf1 reading frame--expresses low levels of a PHD-bromodomain module from the C-terminus of ACF1 that becomes enriched in oocytes. Expression of this module from the Acf1 genomic locus leads to packaging defects in the absence of functional ACF1, suggesting competitive interactions with unknown target molecules. Remarkably, a two-fold overexpression of CHRAC (ACF1 and CHRAC-16) leads to increased apoptosis and packaging defects. Evidently, finely tuned CHRAC levels are required for proper oogenesis.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bromodomain; Germarium; ISWI ATPase; Nucleosome remodeling; PHD finger

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26851213      PMCID: PMC5012898          DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.01.039

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Biol        ISSN: 0012-1606            Impact factor:   3.582


  52 in total

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Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2010-12-22       Impact factor: 17.970

Review 3.  Methods for studying oogenesis.

Authors:  Andrew M Hudson; Lynn Cooley
Journal:  Methods       Date:  2014-01-17       Impact factor: 3.608

Review 4.  Chromatin remodelling during development.

Authors:  Lena Ho; Gerald R Crabtree
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5.  Clathrin heavy chain plays multiple roles in polarizing the Drosophila oocyte downstream of Bic-D.

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Authors:  Lisa R Racki; Janet G Yang; Nariman Naber; Peretz D Partensky; Ashley Acevedo; Thomas J Purcell; Roger Cooke; Yifan Cheng; Geeta J Narlikar
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Authors:  Zoe Pillidge; Sarah J Bray
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3.  The mRNA transportome of the BicD/Egl transport machinery.

Authors:  Paula Vazquez-Pianzola; Bogdan Schaller; Martino Colombo; Dirk Beuchle; Samuel Neuenschwander; Anne Marcil; Rémy Bruggmann; Beat Suter
Journal:  RNA Biol       Date:  2016-11-01       Impact factor: 4.652

4.  The chromatin remodeler Snf2h is essential for oocyte meiotic cell cycle progression.

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5.  Drosophila Heterochromatin Stabilization Requires the Zinc-Finger Protein Small Ovary.

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6.  CHRAC/ACF contribute to the repressive ground state of chromatin.

Authors:  Alessandro Scacchetti; Laura Brueckner; Dhawal Jain; Tamas Schauer; Xu Zhang; Frank Schnorrer; Bas van Steensel; Tobias Straub; Peter B Becker
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  6 in total

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