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Human Artificial Chromosomes that Bypass Centromeric DNA
Author(s) -
Glennis A. Logsdon,
Craig W. Gambogi,
Mikhail Liskovykh,
Evelyne J. Barrey,
Vladimir Larionov,
Karen H. Miga,
Patrick Heun,
Ben E. Black
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2019.06.006
Subject(s) - biology , centromere , human artificial chromosome , yeast artificial chromosome , nucleosome , genetics , histone , chromosome , genome , dna , repeated sequence , chromosome segregation , computational biology , gene , gene mapping
Recent breakthroughs with synthetic budding yeast chromosomes expedite the creation of synthetic mammalian chromosomes and genomes. Mammals, unlike budding yeast, depend on the histone H3 variant, CENP-A, to epigenetically specify the location of the centromere-the locus essential for chromosome segregation. Prior human artificial chromosomes (HACs) required large arrays of centromeric α-satellite repeats harboring binding sites for the DNA sequence-specific binding protein, CENP-B. We report the development of a type of HAC that functions independently of these constraints. Formed by an initial CENP-A nucleosome seeding strategy, a construct lacking repetitive centromeric DNA formed several self-sufficient HACs that showed no uptake of genomic DNA. In contrast to traditional α-satellite HAC formation, the non-repetitive construct can form functional HACs without CENP-B or initial CENP-A nucleosome seeding, revealing distinct paths to centromere formation for different DNA sequence types. Our developments streamline the construction and characterization of HACs to facilitate mammalian synthetic genome efforts.

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