4.6 Article

Neocentromeres Provide Chromosome Segregation Accuracy and Centromere Clustering to Multiple Loci along a Candida albicans Chromosome

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 12, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006317

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Fellowship [F32 AI80074]
  2. Williston Postdoctoral Fellowship Grant from American Cancer Society [PF-12-108-01-CCG]
  3. Grinnell College CSFS grant
  4. National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [AI075096]
  5. Israel Science Foundation [314/13]
  6. Grinnell College
  7. NSF [1243710]
  8. National Institute of General Medical Sciences from National Institutes of Health [P41GM103533]
  9. University of Washington Commercialization Gap Fund
  10. Commercialization Fellow Program
  11. Institute Leadership Professorship Fund from La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology
  12. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  13. Direct For Biological Sciences [1243710] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Assembly of kinetochore complexes, involving greater than one hundred proteins, is essential for chromosome segregation and genome stability. Neocentromeres, or new centromeres, occur when kinetochores assemble de novo, at DNA loci not previously associated with kinetochore proteins, and they restore chromosome segregation to chromosomes lacking a functional centromere. Neocentromeres have been observed in a number of diseases and may play an evolutionary role in adaptation or speciation. However, the consequences of neocentromere formation on chromosome missegregation rates, gene expression, and three-dimensional (3D) nuclear structure are not well understood. Here, we used Candida albicans, an organism with small, epigenetically-inherited centromeres, as a model system to study the functions of twenty different neocentromere loci along a single chromosome, chromosome 5. Comparison of neocentromere properties relative to native centromere functions revealed that all twenty neocentromeres mediated chromosome segregation, albeit to different degrees. Some neocentromeres also caused reduced levels of transcription from genes found within the neocentromere region. Furthermore, like native centromeres, neocentromeres clustered in 3D with active/functional centromeres, indicating that formation of a new centromere mediates the reorganization of 3D nuclear architecture. This demonstrates that centromere clustering depends on epigenetically defined function and not on the primary DNA sequence, and that neocentromere function is independent of its distance from the native centromere position. Together, the results show that a neocentromere can format many loci along a chromosome and can support the assembly of a functional kinetochore that exhibits native centromere functions including chromosome segregation accuracy and centromere clustering within the nucleus.

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