Human centromeric CENP-A chromatin is a homotypic, octameric nucleosome at all cell cycle points.
Yael Nechemia-ArbelyDaniele FachinettiKaren H MigaNikolina SekulicGautam V SoniDong Hyun KimAdeline K WongAh Young LeeKristen NguyenCees DekkerBing RenBen E BlackDon W ClevelandPublished in: The Journal of cell biology (2017)
Chromatin assembled with centromere protein A (CENP-A) is the epigenetic mark of centromere identity. Using new reference models, we now identify sites of CENP-A and histone H3.1 binding within the megabase, α-satellite repeat-containing centromeres of 23 human chromosomes. The overwhelming majority (97%) of α-satellite DNA is found to be assembled with histone H3.1-containing nucleosomes with wrapped DNA termini. In both G1 and G2 cell cycle phases, the 2-4% of α-satellite assembled with CENP-A protects DNA lengths centered on 133 bp, consistent with octameric nucleosomes with DNA unwrapping at entry and exit. CENP-A chromatin is shown to contain equimolar amounts of CENP-A and histones H2A, H2B, and H4, with no H3. Solid-state nanopore analyses show it to be nucleosomal in size. Thus, in contrast to models for hemisomes that briefly transition to octameric nucleosomes at specific cell cycle points or heterotypic nucleosomes containing both CENP-A and histone H3, human CENP-A chromatin complexes are octameric nucleosomes with two molecules of CENP-A at all cell cycle phases.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle
- cell proliferation
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- circulating tumor
- single molecule
- dna damage
- transcription factor
- solid state
- cell free
- genome wide
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- dna methylation
- pluripotent stem cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- small molecule
- nucleic acid
- protein protein
- binding protein