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Single Molecular "Mark" Seen as Pivotal for Genome Compaction in Spores and Sperm:
Evolutionarily Conserved Effect Seen in Yeast, Flies, and Mice
( Philadelphia September 15, 2006) - In higher
order animals, genetic information is passed from parents to offspring
via sperm or eggs, also known as gametes. In some single-celled
organisms, such as yeast, the genes can be passed to the next generation
in spores. In both reproductive strategies, major physical changes
occur in the genetic material after it has been duplicated and
then halved on the way to the production of mature gametes or spores.
Near the end of the process, the material – called chromatin,
the substructure of chromosomes – becomes dramatically compacted,
reduced in volume to as little as five percent of its original
volume.
Researchers at The Wistar Institute, studying
the mechanisms that control how the genetic material is managed
during gamete production, have now identified a single molecule
whose presence is required for genome compaction. Their experiments
showed that the molecule “marks” the chromatin just
prior to compaction and that its presence is mandatory for successful
compaction. Additionally, after first noting the molecule’s
activity during the production of yeast spores, the scientists
saw the same activity during the creation of sperm in fruit flies
and mice, suggesting that the mechanisms governing genome compaction
are evolutionarily ancient, highly conserved in species whose lineages
diverged long ago. A report on the new study appears in the September
15 issue of Genes & Development. A “Perspective
s”review
in the same issue expands on the significance of the findings.
"This molecular mark is required at a critical time leading
up to genome compaction in spores and sperm," says Shelley
L. Berger, Ph.D. , the Hilary Koprowski Professor at The Wistar
Institute and senior author on the study. "Also, there seems
to be a similarity in the way the mark is used in organisms as
different from each other as yeast and mammals, suggesting that
compaction has been important throughout evolution."
Berger speculates that compaction might answer a number of important
biological purposes.
"During the formation of the gametes, the DNA is much more
susceptible to breaks and mutations," she says. "Compaction
may keep the genome resistant to damage of all kinds."
"Compaction might also affect sperm fertility and function
in the higher organisms, and thus the propagation of the species," says
Thanuja Krishnamoorthy, Ph.D., lead author on the study. "It's
vital that we better understand genome compaction during the production
of mature sperm."
The molecule in question is a phosphorous molecule that modifies
a histone. Histones are relatively small proteins around which
DNA is coiled to create structures called nucleosomes. Compact
strings of nucleosomes, then, form into chromatin, the substructure
of chromosomes.
To test the team's observations, Krishnamoorthy performed an experiment
in yeast in which she altered the histone's chemical composition
at a single point, the point at which the molecule attaches to,
or marks, the histone. The results were clear and compelling: With
the alteration, the molecule was unable to attach to the histone,
and compaction was severely limited.
"We saw a significant increase in genomic volume in the resulting
yeast spores, as though the compaction had been lost," Berger
says. "The frequency of successful spore creation was also
lowered significantly."
With lead author Krishnamoorthy and senior author Berger, the
other Wistar-based co-author on the study is Jean A. Dorsey . The
additional co-authors are Xin Chen and Margaret Fuller with Stanford
University School of Medicine; Jerome Govin and Saadi Khochbin
with the Institut Albert Bonniot Faculté de Médecine
in La Tronche, France; Wang L. Cheung and C. David Allis at the
University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Karen Schindler and Edward
Winter at Thomas Jefferson University; and Vincent Guacci at the
Carnegie Institution, Baltimore. (Cheung is currently at the Johns
Hopkins Hospital , and Allis is with the Rockefeller University
.)
The "Perspectives" review of the study was authored
by Kristy D. Wendt and Ali Shilatifard at the St. Louis University
School of Medicine.
Support for the research was provided by the National Institutes
of Health and the National Science Foundation. Additional support
came from Lyon Rhône-Alpes Cancéropôle and the
Regulome consortium, the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, and the
Commonwealth Universal Research Enhancement Program of the Pennsylvania
Department of Health.
The Wistar Institute is an international leader in biomedical research, with special expertise in cancer research and vaccine development. Founded in 1892 as the first independent nonprofit biomedical research institute in the country, Wistar has long held the prestigious Cancer Center designation from the National Cancer Institute. Discoveries at Wistar have led to the creation of the rubella vaccine that eradicated the disease in the U.S. , rabies vaccines used worldwide, and a new rotavirus vaccine approved in 2006. Wistar scientists have also identified many cancer genes and developed monoclonal antibodies and other important research tools. Today, Wistar is home to eminent melanoma researchers and pioneering scientists working on experimental vaccines against flu, HIV, and other diseases. The Institute works actively to transfer its inventions to the commercial sector to ensure that research advances move from the laboratory to the clinic as quickly as possible. The Wistar Institute: Today’s Discoveries – Tomorrow’s Cures. On the web at www.wistar.org.
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