Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1996347 Molecular Cell 2013 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryCentromere clustering during interphase is a phenomenon known to occur in many different organisms and cell types, yet neither the factors involved nor their physiological relevance is well understood. Using Drosophila tissue culture cells and flies, we identified a network of proteins, including the nucleoplasmin-like protein (NLP), the insulator protein CTCF, and the nucleolus protein Modulo, to be essential for the positioning of centromeres. Artificial targeting further demonstrated that NLP and CTCF are sufficient for clustering, while Modulo serves as the anchor to the nucleolus. Centromere clustering was found to depend on centric chromatin rather than specific DNA sequences. Moreover, unclustering of centromeres results in the spatial destabilization of pericentric heterochromatin organization, leading to partial defects in the silencing of repetitive elements, defects during chromosome segregation, and genome instability.

► Centromeres cluster at the periphery of the nucleolus ► NLP and CTCF are essential for centromere clustering ► Modulo serves as the nucleolus anchor for centromeres ► Centromere unclustering leads to destabilization of pericentric heterochromatin

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