AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the protein Mrc1 in fission yeast plays a crucial role in the inheritance of histones during DNA replication, which is essential for maintaining epigenetic memory.
  • It reveals that mutations in Mrc1 can disrupt the proper segregation of parental histones to the lagging strand, leading to loss of gene silencing.
  • The research proposes that Mrc1 is involved in controlling histone recycling between leading and lagging strands, ensuring that both daughter cells receive the necessary epigenetic information.

Article Abstract

The inheritance of parental histones across the replication fork is thought to mediate epigenetic memory. Here, we reveal that fission yeast Mrc1 (CLASPIN in humans) binds H3-H4 tetramers and operates as a central coordinator of symmetric parental histone inheritance. Mrc1 mutants in a key connector domain disrupted segregation of parental histones to the lagging strand comparable to Mcm2 histone-binding mutants. Both mutants showed clonal and asymmetric loss of H3K9me-mediated gene silencing. AlphaFold predicted co-chaperoning of H3-H4 tetramers by Mrc1 and Mcm2, with the Mrc1 connector domain bridging histone and Mcm2 binding. Biochemical and functional analysis validated this model and revealed a duality in Mrc1 function: disabling histone binding in the connector domain disrupted lagging-strand recycling while another histone-binding mutation impaired leading strand recycling. We propose that Mrc1 toggles histones between the lagging and leading strand recycling pathways, in part by intra-replisome co-chaperoning, to ensure epigenetic transmission to both daughter cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11383432PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2024.07.017DOI Listing

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