Literature DB >> 31679929

Early Diverging Fungus Mucor circinelloides Lacks Centromeric Histone CENP-A and Displays a Mosaic of Point and Regional Centromeres.

María Isabel Navarro-Mendoza1, Carlos Pérez-Arques1, Shweta Panchal2, Francisco E Nicolás1, Stephen J Mondo3, Promit Ganguly2, Jasmyn Pangilinan4, Igor V Grigoriev5, Joseph Heitman6, Kaustuv Sanyal7, Victoriano Garre8.   

Abstract

Centromeres are rapidly evolving across eukaryotes, despite performing a conserved function to ensure high-fidelity chromosome segregation. CENP-A chromatin is a hallmark of a functional centromere in most organisms. Due to its critical role in kinetochore architecture, the loss of CENP-A is tolerated in only a few organisms, many of which possess holocentric chromosomes. Here, we characterize the consequence of the loss of CENP-A in the fungal kingdom. Mucor circinelloides, an opportunistic human pathogen, lacks CENP-A along with the evolutionarily conserved CENP-C but assembles a monocentric chromosome with a localized kinetochore complex throughout the cell cycle. Mis12 and Dsn1, two conserved kinetochore proteins, were found to co-localize to a short region, one in each of nine large scaffolds, composed of an ∼200-bp AT-rich sequence followed by a centromere-specific conserved motif that echoes the structure of budding yeast point centromeres. Resembling fungal regional centromeres, these core centromere regions are embedded in large genomic expanses devoid of genes yet marked by Grem-LINE1s, a novel retrotransposable element silenced by the Dicer-dependent RNAi pathway. Our results suggest that these hybrid features of point and regional centromeres arose from the absence of CENP-A, thus defining novel mosaic centromeres in this early-diverging fungus.
Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CENP-A; Grem-LINE1; Mis12 complex; Mucoromycotina; RNAi; centromere; early-diverging fungi; kinetochore; mosaic; retrotransposon

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31679929      PMCID: PMC6925572          DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.09.024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  71 in total

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Authors:  Barbara G Mellone; Daniele Fachinetti
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Review 10.  Advances in understanding the evolution of fungal genome architecture.

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