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The heterochromatic chromosome caps in great apes impact telomere metabolism.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Arnoult, Nausica 
Bordes, Win-Yan 
Castro-Vega, Luis 
Gibaud, Anne 

Abstract

In contrast with the limited sequence divergence accumulated after separation of higher primate lineages, marked cytogenetic variation has been associated with the genome evolution in these species. Studying the impact of such structural variations on defined molecular processes can provide valuable insights on how genome structural organization contributes to organismal evolution. Here, we show that telomeres on chromosome arms carrying subtelomeric heterochromatic caps in the chimpanzee, which are completely absent in humans, replicate later than telomeres on chromosome arms without caps. In gorilla, on the other hand, a proportion of the subtelomeric heterochromatic caps present in most chromosome arms are associated with large blocks of telomere-like sequences that follow a replication program different from that of bona fide telomeres. Strikingly, telomere-containing RNA accumulates extrachromosomally in gorilla mitotic cells, suggesting that at least some aspects of telomere-containing RNA biogenesis have diverged in gorilla, perhaps in concert with the evolution of heterochromatic caps in this species.

Description

Keywords

Animals, Cell Line, Gorilla gorilla, Heterochromatin, Hominidae, Mitosis, Pan troglodytes, RNA, Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid, Telomere, Transcription, Genetic

Journal Title

Nucleic Acids Res

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0305-1048
1362-4962

Volume Title

41

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)