生物
染色质
相间
遗传学
染色体
细胞生物学
计算生物学
DNA
基因
作者
Ryu-Suke Nozawa,Lora Boteva,Dinesh C. Soares,Catherine Naughton,Alison R. Dun,Adam Buckle,Bernard Ramsahoye,Peter Christopher Bruton,Rebecca S. Saleeb,María Arnedo,Bill Hill,R. R. Duncan,Sutherland K. Maciver,Nick Gilbert
出处
期刊:Cell
[Cell Press]
日期:2017-06-01
卷期号:169 (7): 1214-1227.e18
被引量:211
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2017.05.029
摘要
Higher eukaryotic chromosomes are organized into topologically constrained functional domains; however, the molecular mechanisms required to sustain these complex interphase chromatin structures are unknown. A stable matrix underpinning nuclear organization was hypothesized, but the idea was abandoned as more dynamic models of chromatin behavior became prevalent. Here, we report that scaffold attachment factor A (SAF-A), originally identified as a structural nuclear protein, interacts with chromatin-associated RNAs (caRNAs) via its RGG domain to regulate human interphase chromatin structures in a transcription-dependent manner. Mechanistically, this is dependent on SAF-A's AAA+ ATPase domain, which mediates cycles of protein oligomerization with caRNAs, in response to ATP binding and hydrolysis. SAF-A oligomerization decompacts large-scale chromatin structure while SAF-A loss or monomerization promotes aberrant chromosome folding and accumulation of genome damage. Our results show that SAF-A and caRNAs form a dynamic, transcriptionally responsive chromatin mesh that organizes large-scale chromosome structures and protects the genome from instability.
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