scholarly journals Single-molecule imaging reveals control of parental histone recycling by free histones during DNA replication

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dominika T. Gruszka ◽  
Sherry Xie ◽  
Hiroshi Kimura ◽  
Hasan Yardimci

SUMMARYFaithful replication of chromatin domains during cell division is fundamental to eukaryotic development. During replication, nucleosomes are disrupted ahead of the replication fork, followed by their rapid reassembly on daughter strands from the pool of recycled parental and newly synthesized histones. Here, we use single-molecule imaging and replication assays in Xenopus laevis egg extracts to determine the outcome of replication fork encounters with nucleosomes. Contrary to current models, the majority of parental histones are evicted from the DNA, with histone recycling, nucleosome sliding and replication fork stalling also occurring but at lower frequencies. The anticipated local histone transfer only becomes dominant upon depletion of free histones from extracts. Our studies provide the first direct evidence that parental histones remain in close proximity to their original locus during recycling and reveal that provision of excess histones results in impaired histone recycling, which has the potential to affect epigenetic memory.

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (38) ◽  
pp. eabc0330 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. T. Gruszka ◽  
S. Xie ◽  
H. Kimura ◽  
H. Yardimci

During replication, nucleosomes are disrupted ahead of the replication fork, followed by their reassembly on daughter strands from the pool of recycled parental and new histones. However, because no previous studies have managed to capture the moment that replication forks encounter nucleosomes, the mechanism of recycling has remained unclear. Here, through real-time single-molecule visualization of replication fork progression in Xenopus egg extracts, we determine explicitly the outcome of fork collisions with nucleosomes. Most of the parental histones are evicted from the DNA, with histone recycling, nucleosome sliding, and replication fork stalling also occurring but at lower frequencies. Critically, we find that local histone recycling becomes dominant upon depletion of endogenous histones from extracts, revealing that free histone concentration is a key modulator of parental histone dynamics at the replication fork. The mechanistic details revealed by these studies have major implications for our understanding of epigenetic inheritance.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Divya Ramalingam Iyer ◽  
Nicholas Rhind

AbstractIn response to DNA damage during S phase, cells slow DNA replication. This slowing is orchestrated by the intra-S checkpoint and involves inhibition of origin firing and reduction of replication fork speed. Slowing of replication allows for tolerance of DNA damage and suppresses genomic instability. Although the mechanisms of origin inhibition by the intra-S checkpoint are understood, major questions remain about how the checkpoint regulates replication forks: Does the checkpoint regulate the rate of fork progression? Does the checkpoint affect all forks, or only those encountering damage? Does the checkpoint facilitate the replication of polymerase-blocking lesions? To address these questions, we have analyzed the checkpoint in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe using a single-molecule DNA combing assay, which allows us to unambiguously separate the contribution of origin and fork regulation towards replication slowing, and allows us to investigate the behavior of individual forks. Moreover, we have interrogated the role of forks interacting with individual sites of damage by using three damaging agents—MMS, 4NQO and bleomycin—that cause similar levels of replication slowing with very different frequency of DNA lesions. We find that the checkpoint slows replication by inhibiting origin firing, but not by decreasing fork rates. However, the checkpoint appears to facilitate replication of damaged templates, allowing forks to more quickly pass lesions. Finally, using a novel analytic approach, we rigorously identify fork stalling events in our combing data and show that they play a previously unappreciated role in shaping replication kinetics in response to DNA damage.Author SummaryFaithful duplication of the genome is essential for genetic stability of organisms and species. To ensure faithful duplication, cells must be able to replicate damaged DNA. To do so, they employ checkpoints that regulate replication in response to DNA damage. However, the mechanisms by which checkpoints regulate DNA replication forks, the macromolecular machines that contain the helicases and polymerases required to unwind and copy the parental DNA, is unknown. We have used DNA combing, a single-molecule technique that allows us to monitor the progression of individual replication forks, to characterize the response of fission yeast replication forks to DNA damage that blocks the replicative polymerases. We find that forks pass most lesions with only a brief pause and that this lesion bypass is checkpoint independent. However, at a low frequency, forks stall at lesions, and that the checkpoint is required to prevent these stalls from accumulating single-stranded DNA. Our results suggest that the major role of the checkpoint is not to regulate the interaction of replication forks with DNA damage, per se, but to mitigate the consequences of fork stalling when forks are unable to successfully navigate DNA damage on their own.


2006 ◽  
Vol 172 (7) ◽  
pp. 999-1008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonia H. Holway ◽  
Seung-Hwan Kim ◽  
Adriana La Volpe ◽  
W. Matthew Michael

In most cells, the DNA damage checkpoint delays cell division when replication is stalled by DNA damage. In early Caenorhabditis elegans embryos, however, the checkpoint responds to developmental signals that control the timing of cell division, and checkpoint activation by nondevelopmental inputs disrupts cell cycle timing and causes embryonic lethality. Given this sensitivity to inappropriate checkpoint activation, we were interested in how embryos respond to DNA damage. We demonstrate that the checkpoint response to DNA damage is actively silenced in embryos but not in the germ line. Silencing requires rad-2, gei-17, and the polh-1 translesion DNA polymerase, which suppress replication fork stalling and thereby eliminate the checkpoint-activating signal. These results explain how checkpoint activation is restricted to developmental signals during embryogenesis and insulated from DNA damage. They also show that checkpoint activation is not an obligatory response to DNA damage and that pathways exist to bypass the checkpoint when survival depends on uninterrupted progression through the cell cycle.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. e18554 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cyrille Le Breton ◽  
Magali Hennion ◽  
Paola B. Arimondo ◽  
Olivier Hyrien

Science ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 366 (6471) ◽  
pp. 1345-1349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoori Kim ◽  
Zhubing Shi ◽  
Hongshan Zhang ◽  
Ilya J. Finkelstein ◽  
Hongtao Yu

Cohesin is a chromosome-bound, multisubunit adenosine triphosphatase complex. After loading onto chromosomes, it generates loops to regulate chromosome functions. It has been suggested that cohesin organizes the genome through loop extrusion, but direct evidence is lacking. Here, we used single-molecule imaging to show that the recombinant human cohesin-NIPBL complex compacts both naked and nucleosome-bound DNA by extruding DNA loops. DNA compaction by cohesin requires adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis and is force sensitive. This compaction is processive over tens of kilobases at an average rate of 0.5 kilobases per second. Compaction of double-tethered DNA suggests that a cohesin dimer extrudes DNA loops bidirectionally. Our results establish cohesin-NIPBL as an ATP-driven molecular machine capable of loop extrusion.


Author(s):  
Georgia R. Squyres ◽  
Matthew J. Holmes ◽  
Sarah R. Barger ◽  
Betheney R. Pennycook ◽  
Joel Ryan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Cameron ◽  
Hasan Yardimci

Abstract Cell-free extracts from Xenopus laevis eggs are a model system for studying chromosome biology. Xenopus egg extracts can be synchronised in different cell cycle stages, making them useful for studying DNA replication, DNA repair and chromosome organisation. Combining single-molecule approaches with egg extracts is an exciting development being used to reveal molecular mechanisms that are difficult to study using conventional approaches. Fluorescence-based single-molecule imaging of surface-tethered DNAs has been used to visualise labelled protein movements on stretched DNA, the dynamics of DNA–protein complexes and extract-dependent structural rearrangement of stained DNA. Force-based single-molecule techniques are an alternative approach to measure mechanics of DNA and proteins. In this essay, the details of these single-molecule techniques, and the insights into chromosome biology they provide, will be discussed.


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