Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2176781 Developmental Cell 2011 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryHeterochromatin, or silent chromatin, preferentially resides at the nuclear envelope. Telomeres and rDNA repeats are the two major perinuclear silent chromatin domains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The Cohibin protein complex maintains rDNA repeat stability in part through silent chromatin assembly and perinuclear rDNA anchoring. We report here a role for Cohibin at telomeres and show that functions of the complex at chromosome ends and rDNA maintain replicative life span. Cohibin binds LEM/SUN domain-containing nuclear envelope proteins and telomere-associated factors. Disruption of Cohibin or the envelope proteins abrogates telomere localization and silent chromatin assembly within subtelomeres. Loss of Cohibin limits Sir2 histone deacetylase localization to chromosome ends, disrupts subtelomeric DNA stability, and shortens life span even when rDNA repeats are stabilized. Restoring telomeric Sir2 concentration abolishes chromatin and life span defects linked to the loss of telomeric Cohibin. Our work uncovers roles for Cohibin complexes and reveals relationships between nuclear compartmentalization, chromosome stability, and aging.

► Subtelomeric chromatin and DNA stability is regulated by Cohibin ► Cohibin controls telomere localization and promotes Sir2-telomere interactions ► Cohibin modulates replicative life span via rDNA repeats and telomeres ► Restoring Sir2-telomere interactions rescues the life span of cells lacking Cohibin

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Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
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