Publication | Open Access
Centromere-encoded RNAs are integral components of the maize kinetochore
237
Citations
38
References
2004
Year
GeneticsCentc RnaMolecular BiologyCentromere-encoded RnasMolecular GeneticsGenomicsPlant GenomicsEpigeneticsLong Non-coding RnaRna ProcessingRna-chromatin InteractionsRna BiologyNuclear OrganizationGene ExpressionBiologyChromatinChromatin StructureChromatin RemodelingNatural SciencesEpigenomicsMedicineNon-coding RnaChromatin Modification Events
RNA is involved in a variety of chromatin modification events, ranging from large-scale structural rearrangements to subtle local affects. Here, we extend the evidence for RNA-chromatin interactions to the centromere core. The data indicate that maize centromeric retrotransposons (CRMs) and satellite repeats (CentC) are not only transcribed, but that nearly half of the CRM and CentC RNA is tightly bound to centromeric histone H3 (CENH3), a key inner kinetochore protein. RNAs from another tandem repeat (180-bp knob sequence) or an abundant euchromatic retroelement (Opie) are undetectable within the same anti-CENH3 immune complexes. Both sense and antisense strands of CRM and CentC, but not small interfering RNAs homologous to either repeat, were found to coimmunoprecipitate with CENH3. The bulk of the immunoprecipitated RNA ranged in size from 40 to 200 nt. These data provide evidence for a pool of protected, single-stranded centromeric RNA within the centromere/kinetochore complex.
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