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Functional Roles of Acetylated Histone Marks at Mouse Meiotic Recombination Hot Spots
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Functional Roles of Acetylated Histone Marks at Mouse Meiotic Recombination Hot Spots

Irina V. Getun, Zhen Wu, Mohammad Fallahi, Souad Ouizem, Qin Liu, Weimin Li, Roberta Costi, William R. Roush, John L. Cleveland and Philippe R. J. Bois
Molecular and cellular biology, Vol.37(3), e00942
02-01-2017
PMID: 27821479

Abstract

crossover double-strand break initiation histone acetylation meiotic recombination mouse meiosis
Meiotic recombination initiates following the formation of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) by the Spo11 endonuclease early in prophase I, at discrete regions in the genome coined "hot spots." In mammals, meiotic DSB site selection is directed in part by sequence-specific binding of PRDM9, a polymorphic histone H3 (H3K4Me3) methyltransferase. However, other chromatin features needed for meiotic hot spot specification are largely unknown. Here we show that the recombinogenic cores of active hot spots in mice harbor several histone H3 and H4 acetylation and methylation marks that are typical of open, active chromatin. Further, deposition of these open chromatin-associated histone marks is dynamic and is manifest at spermatogonia and/or pre-leptotene-stage cells, which facilitates PRDM9 binding and access for Spo11 to direct the formation of DSBs, which are initiated at the leptotene stage. Importantly, manipulating histone acetylase and deacetylase activities established that histone acetylation marks are necessary for both hot spot activity and crossover resolution. We conclude that there are functional roles for histone acetylation marks at mammalian meiotic recombination hot spots.
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