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Point centromere activity requires an optimal level of centromeric noncoding RNA.


ABSTRACT: In budding yeast, which possesses simple point centromeres, we discovered that all of its centromeres express long noncoding RNAs (cenRNAs), especially in S phase. Induction of cenRNAs coincides with CENP-ACse4 loading time and is dependent on DNA replication. Centromeric transcription is repressed by centromere-binding factor Cbf1 and histone H2A variant H2A.ZHtz1 Deletion of CBF1 and H2A.Z HTZ1 results in an up-regulation of cenRNAs; an increased loss of a minichromosome; elevated aneuploidy; a down-regulation of the protein levels of centromeric proteins CENP-ACse4, CENP-A chaperone HJURPScm3, CENP-CMif2, SurvivinBir1, and INCENPSli15; and a reduced chromatin localization of CENP-ACse4, CENP-CMif2, and Aurora BIpl1 When the RNA interference system was introduced to knock down all cenRNAs from the endogenous chromosomes, but not the cenRNA from the circular minichromosome, an increase in minichromosome loss was still observed, suggesting that cenRNA functions in trans to regulate centromere activity. CenRNA knockdown partially alleviates minichromosome loss in cbf1?, htz1?, and cbf1? htz1? in a dose-dependent manner, demonstrating that cenRNA level is tightly regulated to epigenetically control point centromere function.

SUBMITTER: Ling YH 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6442628 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Point centromere activity requires an optimal level of centromeric noncoding RNA.

Ling Yick Hin YH   Yuen Karen Wing Yee KWY  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20190308 13


In budding yeast, which possesses simple point centromeres, we discovered that all of its centromeres express long noncoding RNAs (cenRNAs), especially in S phase. Induction of cenRNAs coincides with CENP-A<sup>Cse4</sup> loading time and is dependent on DNA replication. Centromeric transcription is repressed by centromere-binding factor Cbf1 and histone H2A variant H2A.Z<sup>Htz1</sup> Deletion of <i>CBF1</i> and <i>H2A.Z</i><sup><i>HTZ1</i></sup> results in an up-regulation of cenRNAs; an incr  ...[more]

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