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Published in

The Company of Biologists, Journal of Cell Science, 2020

DOI: 10.1242/jcs.242610

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H3K9me3 maintenance on a Human Artificial Chromosome is required for segregation but not centromere epigenetic memory

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Postprint: archiving restricted
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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

Most eukaryotic centromeres are located within heterochromatic regions. Paradoxically, heterochromatin can also antagonize de novo centromere formation and some centromeres lack it altogether. In order to investigate the importance of heterochromatin at centromeres, we used epigenetic engineering of a synthetic alphoidtetO Human Artificial Chromosome (HAC), to which chimeric proteins can be targeted. By tethering the JMJD2D demethylase, we removed heterochromatin mark H3K9me3 specifically from the HAC centromere. This caused no short-term defects, but long-term tethering reduced HAC centromere protein levels and triggered HAC mis-segregation. Yet, centromeric CENP-A was maintained at a reduced level. Furthermore, HAC centromere function was compatible with an alternative low-H3K9me3, high-H3K27me3 chromatin signature, as long as residual levels of H3K9me3 remained. When JMJD2D was released from the HAC, H3K9me3 levels recovered over several days back to initial levels along with CENP-A/-C and mitotic segregation fidelity. Our results suggest that a minimal level of heterochromatin is required to stabilize mitotic centromere function but not for maintaining centromere epigenetic memory, and that a homeostatic pathway maintains heterochromatin at centromeres.