Histone H3.3 regulates mitotic progression in mouse embryonic fibroblasts

Date

2017

Authors

Ors, A.
Papin, C.
Favier, B.
Roulland, Y.
Dalkara, D.
Ozturk, M.
Hamiche, A.
Dimitrov, S.
Padmanabhan, K.

Editor(s)

Advisor

Supervisor

Co-Advisor

Co-Supervisor

Instructor

Source Title

Biochemistry and Cell Biology

Print ISSN

0829-8211

Electronic ISSN

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Volume

95

Issue

4

Pages

491 - 499

Language

English

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Series

Abstract

H3.3 is a histone variant that marks transcription start sites as well as telomeres and heterochromatic sites on the genome. The presence of H3.3 is thought to positively correlate with the transcriptional status of its target genes. Using a conditional genetic strategy against H3.3B, combined with short hairpin RNAs against H3.3A, we essentially depleted all H3.3 gene expression in mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Following nearly complete loss of H3.3 in the cells, our transcriptomic analyses show very little impact on global gene expression or on the localization of histone variant H2A.Z. Instead, fibroblasts displayed slower cell growth and an increase in cell death, coincident with large-scale chromosome misalignment in mitosis and large polylobed or micronuclei in interphase cells. Thus, we conclude that H3.3 may have an important under-explored additional role in chromosome segregation, nuclear structure, and the maintenance of genome integrity. © 2017 Published by NRC Research Press.

Course

Other identifiers

Book Title

Citation