Publication | Open Access
Rapid Elimination of the Histone Variant MacroH2A from Somatic Cell Heterochromatin after Nuclear Transfer
47
Citations
31
References
2010
Year
Histone ModificationsEpigenetic ChangeGeneticsMolecular BiologyEpigeneticsEmbryologyPreimplantation Scnt EmbryosNuclear EnvelopeGerm Cell DevelopmentHistone Variant Macroh2aGerm Cell FateSomatic Cell HeterochromatinCell DivisionMeiosisNuclear OrganizationEmbryonic DevelopmentCell BiologyRapid EliminationChromatin FunctionChromatinDevelopmental BiologyChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingSomatic Cell GeneticsNatural SciencesEpigenomicsMedicine
Oocytes contain a maternal store of the histone variant MacroH2A, which is eliminated from zygotes shortly after fertilization. Preimplantation embryos then execute three cell divisions without MacroH2A before the onset of embryonic MacroH2A expression at the 16-cell stage. During subsequent development, MacroH2A is expressed in most cells, where it is assembled into facultative heterochromatin. Because differentiated cells contain heterochromatin rich in MacroH2A, we investigated the fate of MacroH2A during somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). The results show that MacroH2A is rapidly eliminated from the chromosomes of transplanted somatic cell nuclei by a process in which MacroH2A is first stripped from chromosomes, and then degraded. Furthermore, MacroH2A is eliminated from transplanted nuclei by a mechanism requiring intact microtubules and nuclear envelope break down. Preimplantation SCNT embryos express endogenous MacroH2A once they reach the morula stage, similar to the timing observed in embryos produced by natural fertilization. We also show that the ability to reprogram somatic cell heterochromatin by SCNT is tied to the developmental stage of recipient cell cytoplasm because enucleated zygotes fail to support depletion of MacroH2A from transplanted somatic nuclei. Together, the results indicate that nuclear reprogramming by SCNT utilizes the same chromatin remodeling mechanisms that act upon the genome immediately after fertilization.
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