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Dual roles of TRF1 in tethering telomeres to the nuclear envelope and protecting them from fusion during meiosis.

Lina WangZhaowei TuChao LiuHongbin LiuPhilipp KaldisZijiang ChenWei Li
Published in: Cell death and differentiation (2018)
Telomeres integrity is indispensable for chromosomal stability by preventing chromosome erosion and end-to-end fusions. During meiosis, telomeres attach to the inner nuclear envelope and cluster into a highly crowded microenvironment at the bouquet stage, which requires specific mechanisms to protect the telomeres from fusion. Here, we demonstrate that germ cell-specific knockout of a shelterin complex subunit, Trf1, results in arrest of spermatocytes at two different stages. The obliterated telomere-nuclear envelope attachment in Trf1-deficient spermatocytes impairs homologue synapsis and recombination, resulting in a pachytene-like arrest, while the meiotic division arrest might stem from chromosome end-to-end fusion due to the failure of recruiting meiosis specific telomere associated proteins. Further investigations uncovered that TRF1 could directly interact with Speedy A, and Speedy A might work as a scaffold protein to further recruit Cdk2, thus protecting telomeres from fusion at this stage. Together, our results reveal a novel mechanism of TRF1, Speedy A, and Cdk2 in protecting telomere from fusion in a highly crowded microenvironment during meiosis.
Keyphrases
  • cell cycle
  • stem cells
  • germ cell
  • dna damage
  • cell proliferation
  • genome wide
  • dna repair
  • protein protein
  • protein kinase