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Reduced Levels of Lagging Strand Polymerases Shape Stem Cell Chromatin.

Jonathan SnedekerBrendon E M DavisRajesh RanjanMatthew WootenJoshua BlundonXin Chen
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Stem cells display asymmetric histone inheritance while non-stem progenitor cells exhibit symmetric patterns in the Drosophila male germline lineage. Here, we report that components involved in lagging strand synthesis, such as DNA polymerase α and δ (Polα and Polδ), have significantly reduced levels in stem cells compared to progenitor cells. Compromising Polα genetically induces the replication-coupled histone incorporation pattern in progenitor cells to be indistinguishable from that in stem cells, which can be recapitulated using a Polα inhibitor in a concentration-dependent manner. Furthermore, stem cell-derived chromatin fibers display a higher degree of old histone recycling by the leading strand compared to progenitor cell-derived chromatin fibers. However, upon reducing Polα levels in progenitor cells, the chromatin fibers now display asymmetric old histone recycling just like GSC-derived fibers. The old versus new histone asymmetry is comparable between stem cells and progenitor cells at both S-phase and M-phase. Together, these results indicate that developmentally programmed expression of key DNA replication components is important to shape stem cell chromatin. Furthermore, manipulating one crucial DNA replication component can induce replication-coupled histone dynamics in non-stem cells in a manner similar to that in stem cells.
Keyphrases
  • stem cells
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • genome wide
  • dna damage
  • transcription factor
  • cell therapy
  • bone marrow
  • single molecule
  • copy number
  • solid state