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Alpha-satellite RNA transcripts are repressed by centromere-nucleolus associations.

eLife (2020-11-12)
Leah Bury, Brittania Moodie, Jimmy Ly, Liliana S McKay, Karen Hh Miga, Iain M Cheeseman
RESUMEN

Although originally thought to be silent chromosomal regions, centromeres are instead actively transcribed. However, the behavior and contributions of centromere-derived RNAs have remained unclear. Here, we used single-molecule fluorescence in-situ hybridization (smFISH) to detect alpha-satellite RNA transcripts in intact human cells. We find that alpha-satellite RNA-smFISH foci levels vary across cell lines and over the cell cycle, but do not remain associated with centromeres, displaying localization consistent with other long non-coding RNAs. Alpha-satellite expression occurs through RNA polymerase II-dependent transcription, but does not require established centromere or cell division components. Instead, our work implicates centromere-nucleolar interactions as repressing alpha-satellite expression. The fraction of nucleolar-localized centromeres inversely correlates with alpha-satellite transcripts levels across cell lines and transcript levels increase substantially when the nucleolus is disrupted. The control of alpha-satellite transcripts by centromere-nucleolar contacts provides a mechanism to modulate centromere transcription and chromatin dynamics across diverse cell states and conditions.

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Anti-α-tubulina monoclonal antibody produced in mouse, clone DM1A, ascites fluid
Sigma-Aldrich
BMH-21, ≥98% (HPLC)