Diagenode

Conservation of dichromatin organization along regional centromeres


Dubocanin, Danilo et al.

The attachment of the kinetochore to the centromere is essential for genome maintenance, yet the highly repetitive nature of satellite regional centromeres limits our understanding of their chromatin organization. We demonstrate that single-molecule chromatin fiber sequencing (Fiber-seq) can uniquely co-resolve kinetochore and surrounding chromatin architectures along point centromeres, revealing largely homogeneous single-molecule kinetochore occupancy. In contrast, the application of Fiber-seq to regional centromeres exposed marked per-molecule heterogeneity in their chromatin organization. Regional centromere cores uniquely contain a dichotomous chromatin organization (dichromatin) composed of compacted nucleosome arrays punctuated with highly accessible chromatin patches. CENP-B occupancy phases dichromatin to the underlying alpha-satellite repeat within centromere cores but is not necessary for dichromatin formation. Centromere core dichromatin is conserved between humans and primates, including along regional centromeres lacking satellite repeats. Overall, the chromatin organization of regional centromeres is defined by marked per-molecule heterogeneity, buffering kinetochore attachment against sequence and structural variability within regional centromeres.

Tags
Megaruptor

Share this article

Published
March, 2025

Source

Products used in this publication

  • Megaruptor 3
    B06010003
    Megaruptor® 3

 


       Site map   |   Contact us   |   Conditions of sales   |   Conditions of purchase   |   Privacy policy