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1.
Life Sci Alliance ; 2(1)2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30718377

ABSTRACT

RecQ-like helicase 4 (RECQL4) is mutated in patients suffering from the Rothmund-Thomson syndrome, a genetic disease characterized by premature aging, skeletal malformations, and high cancer susceptibility. Known roles of RECQL4 in DNA replication and repair provide a possible explanation of chromosome instability observed in patient cells. Here, we demonstrate that RECQL4 is a microtubule-associated protein (MAP) localizing to the mitotic spindle. RECQL4 depletion in M-phase-arrested frog egg extracts does not affect spindle assembly per se, but interferes with maintaining chromosome alignment at the metaphase plate. Low doses of nocodazole depolymerize RECQL4-depleted spindles more easily, suggesting abnormal microtubule-kinetochore interaction. Surprisingly, inter-kinetochore distance of sister chromatids is larger in depleted extracts and patient fibroblasts. Consistent with a role to maintain stable chromosome alignment, RECQL4 down-regulation in HeLa cells causes chromosome misalignment and delays mitotic progression. Importantly, these chromosome alignment defects are independent from RECQL4's reported roles in DNA replication and damage repair. Our data elucidate a novel function of RECQL4 in mitosis, and defects in mitotic chromosome alignment might be a contributing factor for the Rothmund-Thomson syndrome.


Subject(s)
Metaphase/genetics , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/genetics , RecQ Helicases/genetics , RecQ Helicases/metabolism , Rothmund-Thomson Syndrome/enzymology , Animals , Chromatin/metabolism , Chromosomal Instability/genetics , Chromosome Segregation/genetics , Codon, Nonsense/genetics , DNA Repair , DNA Replication , Frameshift Mutation/genetics , HEK293 Cells , HeLa Cells , Humans , Kinetochores/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Ovum/enzymology , Spindle Apparatus/enzymology , Xenopus/genetics
2.
J Vis Exp ; (106): e53407, 2015 Dec 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26710245

ABSTRACT

During the vertebrate cell cycle chromatin undergoes extensive structural and functional changes. Upon mitotic entry, it massively condenses into rod shaped chromosomes which are moved individually by the mitotic spindle apparatus. Mitotic chromatin condensation yields chromosomes compacted fifty-fold denser as in interphase. During exit from mitosis, chromosomes have to re-establish their functional interphase state, which is enclosed by a nuclear envelope and is competent for replication and transcription. The decondensation process is morphologically well described, but in molecular terms poorly understood: We lack knowledge about the underlying molecular events and to a large extent the factors involved as well as their regulation. We describe here a cell-free system that faithfully recapitulates chromatin decondensation in vitro, based on mitotic chromatin clusters purified from synchronized HeLa cells and X. laevis egg extract. Our cell-free system provides an important tool for further molecular characterization of chromatin decondensation and its co-ordination with processes simultaneously occurring during mitotic exit such as nuclear envelope and pore complex re-assembly.


Subject(s)
Cell-Free System , Chromatin/metabolism , Mitosis/physiology , Animals , Chromatin/chemistry , HeLa Cells , Humans , Interphase/physiology , Nuclear Envelope/metabolism , Spindle Apparatus/metabolism , Xenopus laevis
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