Transcription at the centromere: Opportunity and danger for the maintenance of epigenetic identity

Lead Research Organisation: University of Edinburgh
Department Name: Sch of Biological Sciences

Abstract

How to make an organism out of a single cell is one of the most amazing processes in biology. Starting with a single fertilized egg, this cell will start to divide many times to give rise to a multicellular animal, plant or fungus. The cell divisions will not stop once fully grown but continue through the lifetime of the organism. This is essential to ensure that body shape and size are maintained, while experiencing natural cell death or caused by interacting with its environment.
Importantly, what is important at the macroscopic level of an organism also plays a role at the cellular level. Developing but also maintaining its identity is an essential task for a cell. Cellular identity is encoded in the genome which comes in the shape of chromosomes. Chromosomes are formed by long fibers of chromatin, made of DNA that is packaged together with proteins called histones. Four different histones H2A, H2B, H3 and H4 form a larger disk-shaped complex called a nucleosome around which the DNA is wrapped giving the chromatin fiber the appearance of beads on a string. During the cell cycle, chromosomes are duplicated in a mother cell and passed on to two daughter cells as cells divide. While most genetic information is encoded in the DNA sequence, it is widely appreciated that chromatin carries information that is passed on independently of the underlying DNA sequence. This form of inheritance is called "epigenetic" and can determine whether certain genes are expressed or define the identity of specific regions of the chromosome. Centromeres are among those specialised regions. They are visible as constrictions in X-shaped chromosomes under the microscope and essential for the separation of chromosomes during cell division.
Centromere identity is determined epigenetically through the presence of a homolog of histone H3, the centromere-specific histone CENP-A (dCENP-A in Drosophila). Centromeric chromatin is composed of interspersed arrays of CENP-A and canonical histone H3 nucleosomes. While H3 is replenished during DNA replication in S-phase, loading of CENP-A in Drosophila and humans takes place in a replication-independent manner from late mitosis to G1. This process requires the removal of so-called placeholder H3-nucleosomes, which have been positioned on centromeric DNA-sequences during the previous S-phase. In recent years, we and other labs have presented evidence that one particular cellular process called transcription could allow for this chromatin remodeling to take place and allow the exchange of H3 by CENP-A.
Cellular processes that require direct DNA contact like DNA replication or transcription induce large-scale chromatin remodeling events to allow the progression of DNA- and RNA- polymerases. The major role of transcription in the genome is to transcribe genes and produce RNA transcripts encoding proteins, transfer or ribosomal RNA. As there are no genes at the centromere, we hypothesise that transcription is instead used to remodel chromatin and destabilise nucleosomes enough to evict H3-placeholders. This would constitute another fascinating example, how nature solves complex problems by repurposing existing toolkits.
Although an intriguing hypothesis, this process is still not understood and raises many questions: How does centromeric transcription distinguish CENP-A nucleosome that should be retained from placeholder H3-nucleosomes that should be removed? How is this process regulated? In a search for binding partners of CENP-A, we previously identified Spt6, a protein involved in recycling histones during transcription. Here, we propose to investigate the molecular details of human and Drosophila Spt6 binding to CENP-A and H3 histones and how transcription at the centromere contributes to CENP-A loading.
By studying this essential evolutionary conserved process, centromeres can be used as a paradigm to understand the underlying mechanism of epigenetic inheritance to preserve the identity of the cell.

Technical Summary

The genome is constantly subjected to dynamic changes of actively dividing cells. Cellular processes like transcription induce large-scale chromatin remodeling that involve disassembly of nucleosomes, thereby challenging the stable transmission of epigenetic marks in the genome. Centromeres are among the best studied examples for epigenetic inheritance and are essential for chromosome segregation in mitosis. Centromere identity is propagated by the centromere-specific histone H3-variant CENP-A. While canonical H3-Histones, are loaded during DNA replication, CENP-A is loaded in mitosis and G1. How previously deposited H3-placeholder nucleosomes are removed to provide space for new CENP-A loading remains still unclear. Centromeric transcription in mitosis is evolutionary conserved. Recent evidence from our lab and others suggests that transcription-mediated chromatin-remodeling could evict nucleosomes, yet this also bears the danger of losing previously incorporated CENP-A nucleosomes. Indeed, we could recently show that the transcription elongation factor and histone chaperone Spt6 act to stabilise CENP-A at the centromere. However, it remains unclear how placeholders are evicted, while CENP-A are selectively maintained. We hypothesise that binding affinities between Spt6 and H3-variant/H4 complexes are intrinsically different and phosphoregulated. Using biochemical and biophysical approaches we will characterise Spt6-histone binding in vitro and in vivo to unravel the molecular details of how the chaperone Spt6 and histone phosphorylation are connected in CENP-A and histone variant retention. We will further use established stable Drosophila cell lines to follow wildtype and phospho-residue mutants of old and new H3-histone variants over multiple cells cycles and monitor their effect on centromeric transcription. Finally, to test how transcription contributes to dCENP-A loading over multiple cell generations, we will specifically silence centromeric transcription

Publications

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Title Analog sensitive CDK1 inhibition to synchronise Schneider S2 cells 
Description This method was originally developed by the Shokat lab (Bishop et al., 2001) using chemical genetics to introduce so called "gatekeeper" mutations at the active site of kinases combined with specific bulky inhibitors that can only inhibit mutated kinases. This approach was later successfully introduced to create an analog sensitive cyclin dependent kinase 1 (CDK1as) to block chicken DT40 cells in G2 and release them synchronously into mitosis upon wash-out of the kinase inhibitor. In collaboration with Jens Januschke (University of Dundee), we have successfully introduced an analog sensitive mutation into Drosophila Schneider S2 cells. This allows for the first time to specifically enrich Drosophila S2 cells in mitosis and investigate centromeric transcription at a time when all other transcription in the cell is silent. 
Type Of Material Cell line 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Being able to synchronise cells is an extremely valuable tool for any approach where population of cells are studied for cell cycle dependent processes. For instance if mitotic cells are of particularly interest, population based approaches such as chromatin immunoprecipitation, biochemical purifications and mass spectroscopy can be used, with a much reduced level of contaminating cells of other phases of the cell cycle. 
 
Title dCENP-A-HALO cell line for ChEP and CENP-A maintenance 
Description The HALO tag is a versatile protein tag initially developed by Promega, which can covalently bind synthetic haloalkanes. These haloalkanes can be modified with a variety of molecules such as fluorophores, biotin, or solid surfaces, allowing multiple labelling approaches with one single tag. We fused the HALOtag to the centromeric histone CENP-A and successfully employed multiple HALO-ligands. 
Type Of Material Cell line 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Being able to distinguish between newly synthesised CENP-A and chromatin bound CENP-A is essential to understand centromere dynamics. This tool allows to distinguish between these two form of the same protein, and in addition provide a handle for purification approaches. 
 
Title pUC19_AlphaSatellite_171bp 
Description Plasmid to produce large scale quantities of human alpha satellite DNA to use in biochemical assays. 
Type Of Material Technology assay or reagent 
Year Produced 2023 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The plasmid has been used to produce unlabeled and fluorophore labeled DNA for elecromobility shift assays. 
 
Description Biotin-JF646 for proteomic of the centromere 
Organisation Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Department Janelia Research Campus
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We generated cell lines and methods to specifically enrich centromeric chromatin during various phases of the cell cycle using HALOtag technology, and combine this with proteomics approaches.
Collaborator Contribution The Lavis lab has produced the HALO-ligand Biotin-JF646 and shared it prior publication.
Impact Specific labeling of the centromere can be observed with Biotin-JF646, both by using the JF646 and biotin signals. The ligand, combined with dCENP-A-HALO cell line, is being used to enrich for centromeric chromatin.
Start Year 2022
 
Description Establishing analog sensitive CDK1 mutants in Drosophila S2 cells for synchronisation 
Organisation University of Dundee
Department College of Life Sciences
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We used a CRISPR construct kindly provided by the Januschke lab to specifically introduce "gatekeeper" mutations into the CDK1 gene in Drosophila Schneider S2 cells. We then optimised various growth conditions combined with different analog sensitive inhibitors to achieve optimal cell cycle blockage in G2. Likewise synchronous release from the cell cycle block has been carefully optimised to achieve a strong enrichment of cells in mitosis (currently up to 70%).
Collaborator Contribution The lab of Jens Januschke shared with our lab a construct that can be used to successfully CRISPR the cyclin dependent kinase CDK1 in Drosophila cells.
Impact Multiple S2 cell lines where all alleles of CDK1 are CRISPR'ed into analog sensitive mutants combined with various different CRISPR-tagged centromere proteins.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Proteomics of centromeric chromatin 
Organisation University of Edinburgh
Department School of Biology
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We generated HALO tagged S2 cell lines to use in chromatin enrichment for proteomics (ChEP) experiments. We are optimising conditions to specifically enrich centromere associated proteins during various cell cycle stages.
Collaborator Contribution The lab of Georg Kustatscher performed mass spec analysis and provided expertise.
Impact A cell line containing a HALO-tagged version of dCENP-A has been generated. A method to specifically enrich centromeres is being optimised.
Start Year 2023