4.8 Article

Molecular conflicts disrupting centromere maintenance contribute to Xenopus hybrid inviability

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 18, Pages 3939-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.07.037

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) GRFP fellowship
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [T32 GM113854-02]
  3. NIH NIGMS [R01 GM074728]
  4. NIH MIRA [R35 GM118183]
  5. Flora Lamson Hewlett Chair

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The causes of hybrid inviability, a reproductive isolation mechanism, are poorly understood. This study found that the failure of functional centromere assembly on paternal chromosomes is the cause of embryonic lethality in hybrids. The disruption of centromere integrity due to epigenetic mechanisms and conflicts between replication and transcription machineries contribute to the inactivation of specific paternal centromeres in hybrids.
Although central to evolution, the causes of hybrid inviability that drive reproductive isolation are poorly understood. Embryonic lethality occurs when the eggs of the frog X. tropicalis are fertilized with either X. laevis or X. borealis sperm. We observed that distinct subsets of paternal chromosomes failed to assemble functional centromeres, causing their mis-segregation during embryonic cell divisions. Core centromere DNA sequence analysis revealed little conservation among the three species, indicating that epigenetic mechanisms that normally operate to maintain centromere integrity are disrupted on specific paternal chromosomes in hybrids. In vitro reactions combining X. tropicalis egg extract with either X. laevis or X. borealis sperm chromosomes revealed that paternally matched or overexpressed centromeric histone CENP-A and its chaperone HJURP could rescue centromere assembly on affected chromosomes in interphase nuclei. However, although the X. laevis chromosomes maintained centromeric CENP-A in metaphase, X. borealis chromosomes did not and also displayed ultra-thin regions containing ribosomal DNA. Both centromere assembly and morphology of X. borealis mitotic chromosomes could be rescued by inhibiting RNA polymerase I or preventing the collapse of stalled DNA replication forks. These results indicate that specific paternal centromeres are inactivated in hybrids due to the disruption of associated chromatin regions that interfere with CENP-A incorporation, at least in some cases due to conflicts between replication and transcription machineries. Thus, our findings highlight the dynamic nature of centromere maintenance and its susceptibility to disruption in vertebrate interspecies hybrids.

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