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« Previous Abstract"[Indoor air pollution of volatile organic compounds: indoor/outdoor concentrations, sources and exposures]"    Next AbstractMeiotic proteins bqt1 and bqt2 tether telomeres to form the bouquet arrangement of chromosomes »

EMBO J


Title:Meiotic nuclear reorganization: switching the position of centromeres and telomeres in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe
Author(s):Chikashige Y; Ding DQ; Imai Y; Yamamoto M; Haraguchi T; Hiraoka Y;
Address:"Kansai Advanced Research Center, Communications Research Laboratory, Kobe, Japan"
Journal Title:EMBO J
Year:1997
Volume:16
Issue:1
Page Number:193 - 202
DOI: 10.1093/emboj/16.1.193
ISSN/ISBN:0261-4189 (Print) 1460-2075 (Electronic) 0261-4189 (Linking)
Abstract:"In fission yeast meiotic prophase, telomeres are clustered near the spindle pole body (SPB; a centrosome-equivalent structure in fungi) and take the leading position in chromosome movement, while centromeres are separated from the SPB. This telomere position contrasts with mitotic nuclear organization, in which centromeres remain clustered near the SPB and lead chromosome movement. Thus, nuclear reorganization switching the position of centromeres and telomeres must take place upon entering meiosis. In this report, we analyze the nuclear location of centromeres and telomeres in genetically well-characterized meiotic mutant strains. An intermediate structure for telomere-centromere switching was observed in haploid cells induced to undergo meiosis by synthetic mating pheromone; fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed that in these cells, both telomeres and centromeres were clustered near the SPB. Further analyses in a series of mutants showed that telomere-centromere switching takes place in two steps; first, association of telomeres with the SPB and, second, dissociation of centromeres from the SPB. The first step can take place in the haploid state in response to mating pheromone, but the second step does not take place in haploid cells and probably depends on conjugation-related events. In addition, a linear minichromosome was also co-localized with authentic telomeres instead of centromeres, suggesting that telomere clustering plays a role in organizing chromosomes within a meiotic prophase nucleus"
Keywords:"Cell Nucleus/genetics *Centromere Chromosomes, Fungal Gene Rearrangement In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence Mating Factor Mitosis/*genetics Mutation Peptides/pharmacology Pheromones/pharmacology Prophase/genetics Schizosaccharomyces/*genetics Spindle App;"
Notes:"MedlineChikashige, Y Ding, D Q Imai, Y Yamamoto, M Haraguchi, T Hiraoka, Y eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't England 1997/01/02 EMBO J. 1997 Jan 2; 16(1):193-202. doi: 10.1093/emboj/16.1.193"

 
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