Developmental differences in genome replication program and origin activation

Author:

Rausch Cathia1,Weber Patrick1,Prorok Paulina1,Hörl David2,Maiser Andreas2,Lehmkuhl Anne1,Chagin Vadim O13,Casas-Delucchi Corella S1,Leonhardt Heinrich2,Cardoso M Cristina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Technical University of Darmstadt, 64287 Darmstadt, Germany

2. Department of Biology II, LMU Munich, 81377 Munich, Germany

3. Institute of Cytology, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, Russia

Abstract

Abstract To ensure error-free duplication of all (epi)genetic information once per cell cycle, DNA replication follows a cell type and developmental stage specific spatio-temporal program. Here, we analyze the spatio-temporal DNA replication progression in (un)differentiated mouse embryonic stem (mES) cells. Whereas telomeres replicate throughout S-phase, we observe mid S-phase replication of (peri)centromeric heterochromatin in mES cells, which switches to late S-phase replication upon differentiation. This replication timing reversal correlates with and depends on an increase in condensation and a decrease in acetylation of chromatin. We further find synchronous duplication of the Y chromosome, marking the end of S-phase, irrespectively of the pluripotency state. Using a combination of single-molecule and super-resolution microscopy, we measure molecular properties of the mES cell replicon, the number of replication foci active in parallel and their spatial clustering. We conclude that each replication nanofocus in mES cells corresponds to an individual replicon, with up to one quarter representing unidirectional forks. Furthermore, with molecular combing and genome-wide origin mapping analyses, we find that mES cells activate twice as many origins spaced at half the distance than somatic cells. Altogether, our results highlight fundamental developmental differences on progression of genome replication and origin activation in pluripotent cells.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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