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Initiation of Parental Genome Reprogramming in Fertilized Oocyte by Splicing Kinase SRPK1-Catalyzed Protamine Phosphorylation
Author(s) -
LanTao Gou,
DoHwan Lim,
Wubin Ma,
Brandon E. Aubol,
Yajing Hao,
Xin Wang,
Jun Zhao,
Zhengyu Liang,
Changwei Shao,
Xuan Zhang,
Meng Fan,
Hairi Li,
Xiaorong Zhang,
Rui-Ming Xu,
Dangsheng Li,
Michael G. Rosenfeld,
Pamela L. Mellon,
Joseph A. Adams,
MoFang Liu,
XiangDong Fu
Publication year - 2020
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.2020.02.020
Subject(s) - biology , protamine , chromatin , male pronucleus , genetics , microbiology and biotechnology , histone , genome , phosphorylation , biochemistry , dna , gene , zygote , heparin , embryogenesis
The paternal genome undergoes a massive exchange of histone with protamine for compaction into sperm during spermiogenesis. Upon fertilization, this process is potently reversed, which is essential for parental genome reprogramming and subsequent activation; however, it remains poorly understood how this fundamental process is initiated and regulated. Here, we report that the previously characterized splicing kinase SRPK1 initiates this life-beginning event by catalyzing site-specific phosphorylation of protamine, thereby triggering protamine-to-histone exchange in the fertilized oocyte. Interestingly, protamine undergoes a DNA-dependent phase transition to gel-like condensates and SRPK1-mediated phosphorylation likely helps open up such structures to enhance protamine dismissal by nucleoplasmin (NPM2) and enable the recruitment of HIRA for H3.3 deposition. Remarkably, genome-wide assay for transposase-accessible chromatin sequencing (ATAC-seq) analysis reveals that selective chromatin accessibility in both sperm and MII oocytes is largely erased in early pronuclei in a protamine phosphorylation-dependent manner, suggesting that SRPK1-catalyzed phosphorylation initiates a highly synchronized reorganization program in both parental genomes.

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