Nuclear localization of PRDM9 and its role in meiotic chromatin modifications and homologous synapsis.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-2015
JAX Source
Chromosoma 2015 Sep; 124(3):397-415.
Volume
124
Issue
3
First Page
397
Last Page
415
ISSN
1432-0886
PMID
25894966
Grant
HD42137, GM99640, CA034196
Abstract
Developmental progress of germ cells through meiotic phases is closely tied to ongoing meiotic recombination. In mammals, recombination preferentially occurs in genomic regions known as hotspots; the protein that activates these hotspots is PRDM9, containing a genetically variable zinc finger (ZNF) domain and a PR-SET domain with histone H3K4 trimethyltransferase activity. PRDM9 is required for fertility in mice, but little is known about its localization and developmental dynamics. Application of spermatogenic stage-specific markers demonstrates that PRDM9 accumulates in male germ cell nuclei at pre-leptonema to early leptonema but is no longer detectable in nuclei by late zygonema. By the pachytene stage, PRDM9-dependent histone H3K4 trimethyl marks on hotspots also disappear. PRDM9 localizes to nuclei concurrently with the deposition of meiotic cohesin complexes, but is not required for incorporation of cohesin complex proteins into chromosomal axial elements, or accumulation of normal numbers of RAD51 foci on meiotic chromatin by late zygonema. Germ cells lacking PRDM9 exhibit inefficient homology recognition and synapsis, with aberrant repair of meiotic DNA double-strand breaks and transcriptional abnormalities characteristic of meiotic silencing of unsynapsed chromatin. Together, these results on the developmental time course for nuclear localization of PRDM9 establish its direct window of function and demonstrate the independence of chromosome axial element formation from the concurrent PRDM9-mediated activation of recombination hotspots. Chromosoma 2015 Sep; 124(3):397-415.
Recommended Citation
Sun F,
Fujiwara Y,
Reinholdt LG,
Hu J,
Saxl RL,
Baker CL,
Petkov PM,
Paigen K,
Handel M.
Nuclear localization of PRDM9 and its role in meiotic chromatin modifications and homologous synapsis. Chromosoma 2015 Sep; 124(3):397-415.