Maternal CENP-C restores centromere symmetry in mammalian zygotes to ensure proper chromosome segregation.

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作者:Tower Catherine A, Manske Gabriel, Ferrell Emily L, Anbarci Dilara N, Jorgensen Kelsey, Ma Binbin, Aboelenain Mansour, Ranjan Rajesh, Chakraborty Saikat, Moritz Lindsay, Das Arunika, Boiani Michele, Black Ben E, Chavez Shawn, Marsh Erica E, Shikanov Ariella, Schindler Karen, Chen Xin, Hammoud Saher Sue
Across metazoan species, the centromere-specific histone variant CENP-A is essential for accurate chromosome segregation, yet its regulation during the mammalian parental-to-zygote transition is poorly understood. To address this, we generated a CENP-A-mScarlet mouse model that revealed sex-specific dynamics: mature sperm retain 10% of the CENP-A levels present in MII oocytes. However, this difference is resolved in zygotes prior to the first mitosis, using maternally inherited cytoplasmic CENP-A. Notably, the increase in CENP-A at paternal centromeres is independent of sensing CENP-A asymmetry or the presence of maternal chromosomes. Instead, CENP-A equalization relies on the asymmetric recruitment of maternal CENP-C to paternal centromeres. Depletion of maternal CENP-A decreases total CENP-A in both pronuclei without disrupting equalization. In contrast, reducing maternal CENP-C or disruption of its dimerization function impairs CENP-A equalization and chromosome segregation. Therefore, maternal CENP-C acts as a key epigenetic regulator that resets centromeric symmetry at fertilization to preserve genome integrity.

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