Surveillance of cohesin-supported chromosome structure controls meiotic progression.
Maikel Castellano-PozoSarai PachecoGeorgios SioutasAngel Luis Jaso-TamameMarian H DoreMohammad M KarimiEnrique Martinez-PerezPublished in: Nature communications (2020)
Chromosome movements and programmed DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) promote homologue pairing and initiate recombination at meiosis onset. Meiotic progression involves checkpoint-controlled termination of these events when all homologue pairs achieve synapsis and form crossover precursors. Exploiting the temporo-spatial organisation of the C. elegans germline and time-resolved methods of protein removal, we show that surveillance of the synaptonemal complex (SC) controls meiotic progression. In nuclei with fully synapsed homologues and crossover precursors, removing different meiosis-specific cohesin complexes, which are individually required for SC stability, or a SC central region component causes functional redeployment of the chromosome movement and DSB machinery, triggering whole-nucleus reorganisation. This apparent reversal of the meiotic programme requires CHK-2 kinase reactivation via signalling from chromosome axes containing HORMA proteins, but occurs in the absence of transcriptional changes. Our results uncover an unexpected plasticity of the meiotic programme and show how chromosome signalling orchestrates nuclear organisation and meiotic progression.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- public health
- dna damage
- study protocol
- dna repair
- gene expression
- open label
- transcription factor
- randomized controlled trial
- clinical trial
- single molecule
- cell cycle
- circulating tumor
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- cell free
- protein protein
- dna damage response
- heat shock protein
- heat stress
- circulating tumor cells