Hacking the centromere chromatin code: dissecting the epigenetic regulation of centromere identity
dc.contributor.advisor
Earnshaw, William C.
en
dc.contributor.author
Bergmann, Jan H.
en
dc.date.accessioned
2011-01-19T16:17:05Z
dc.date.available
2011-01-19T16:17:05Z
dc.date.issued
2010
dc.description.abstract
The centromere is a specialized chromatin domain that serves as the
assembly site for the mitotic kinetochore structure, thereby playing a
fundamental role in facilitating the maintenance of the genetic information. A
histone H3 variant termed CENP-A is specifically found at all active
centromeres. Beyond this, however, little is known about how and to which
extent the chromatin environment of centromeres modulates and contributes
towards centromere identity and function.
Here, I have employed a novel Human Artificial Chromosome (HAC),
the centromere of which can be targeted by fusions to the tet repressor, to
characterize the chromatin environment underlying active kinetochores, as
well as to specifically probe the role of this environment in the maintenance
of kinetochore structure and function. My data demonstrate that centromeric
chromatin resembles the downstream regions of actively transcribed genes.
This includes the previously unrecognized presence of histone H3
nucleosomes methylated at lysine 36 within the chromatin underlying
functional kinetochores. Targeted manipulation of this chromatin through
tethering of a heterochromatin-seeding transcriptional repressor results in the
inactivation of HAC kinetochore function concomitant with a hierarchical
disassembly of the structure. Through an even more selective engineering of
the HAC centromere chromatin, I have provided evidence supporting a
critical role for nucleosomes dimethylated at lysine 4 on histone H3 in
facilitating local transcription of the underlying DNA.
Tethering of different chromatin-modifying activities into the HAC
kinetochore collectively reveals a critical role for both, histone H3
dimethylated on lysine 4 and low-level, non-coding transcription in the
maintenance of the CENP-A chromatin domain. On one hand, repression of
centromeric transcription negatively correlates with the maintenance of CENP-A and ultimately results in the loss of kinetochore function. On the
other hand, increasing kinetochore-associated RNA polymerase activity to
within physiological levels for euchromatin is associated with rapid loss of
CENP-A from the HAC centromere. Together, my data point towards the
requirement for a delicate balance of transcriptional activity that is required to
shape and maintain the chromatin environment of active centromeres.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/4670
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Cardinale, S., Bergmann, J.H., Kelly, D., Nakano, M., Valdivia, M.M., Kimura, H., Masumoto, H., Larionov, V., and Earnshaw, W.C. (2009). Hierarchical inactivation of a synthetic human kinetochore by a chromatin modifier. Mol Biol Cell 20, 4194-4204.
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dc.subject
centromere
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dc.subject
mitotic kinetochore
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dc.subject
chromatin
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dc.subject
kinetochore
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dc.title
Hacking the centromere chromatin code: dissecting the epigenetic regulation of centromere identity
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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