AI Article Synopsis

  • Centromeres rely on the histone variant CENP-A and the role of surrounding DNA repeats is not fully understood, while retroelements are abundant in centromeres and may help with transcription and CENP-A integration.* -
  • This study focuses on the retroelement Jockey-3 in Drosophila melanogaster, showing it is a significant part of the centromeric transcriptome and that its RNA localizes to centromeres during cell division.* -
  • The research suggests that Jockey-3 inserts itself at centromeres to aid its own replication, while also supporting transcription in these areas, which could provide insights into similar mechanisms in other species.*

Article Abstract

Background: Centromeres depend on chromatin containing the conserved histone H3 variant CENP-A for function and inheritance, while the role of centromeric DNA repeats remains unclear. Retroelements are prevalent at centromeres across taxa and represent a potential mechanism for promoting transcription to aid in CENP-A incorporation or for generating RNA transcripts to maintain centromere integrity.

Results: In this study, we probe into the transcription and RNA localization of the centromere-enriched retroelement G2/Jockey-3 (hereafter referred to as Jockey-3) in Drosophila melanogaster, currently the only in vivo model with assembled centromeres. We find that Jockey-3 is a major component of the centromeric transcriptome and produces RNAs that localize to centromeres in metaphase. Leveraging the polymorphism of Jockey-3 and a de novo centromere system, we show that these RNAs remain associated with their cognate DNA sequences in cis, suggesting they are unlikely to perform a sequence-specific function at all centromeres. We show that Jockey-3 transcription is positively correlated with the presence of CENP-A and that recent Jockey-3 transposition events have occurred preferentially at CENP-A-containing chromatin.

Conclusions: We propose that Jockey-3 preferentially inserts at the centromere to ensure its own selfish propagation, while contributing to transcription across these regions. Given the conservation of retroelements as centromere components through evolution, our findings may offer a basis for understanding similar associations in other species.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11575011PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13059-024-03433-1DOI Listing

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