1. Heterochromatin establishment at pericentromeres depends on nuclear position
- Author
-
Joanna W. Jachowicz, Ambre Bender, Julius Muller, Angèle Santenard, and Maria-Elena Torres-Padilla
- Subjects
Male ,Time Factors ,Heterochromatin ,Nucleolus ,Centromere ,Biology ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,03 medical and health sciences ,Research Communication ,Mice ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Gene Silencing ,Pericentric heterochromatin ,030304 developmental biology ,Cell Nucleus ,0303 health sciences ,030302 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,Cell nucleus ,Protein Transport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Reprogramming ,Nuclear localization sequence ,Cell Nucleolus ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Mammalian development begins with fertilization of an oocyte by the sperm followed by genome-wide epigenetic reprogramming. This involves de novo establishment of chromatin domains, including the formation of pericentric heterochromatin. We dissected the spatiotemporal kinetics of the first acquisition of heterochromatic signatures of pericentromeric chromatin and found that the heterochromatic marks follow a temporal order that depends on a specific nuclear localization. We addressed whether nuclear localization of pericentric chromatin is required for silencing by tethering it to the nuclear periphery and show that this results in defective silencing and impaired development. Our results indicate that reprogramming of pericentromeric heterochromatin is functionally linked to its nuclear localization.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF