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Pairing of homologous chromosomes in C. elegans meiosis requires DEB-1 - an orthologue of mammalian vinculin

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posted on 2019-05-09, 03:57 authored by Jana Rohožková, Lenka Hůlková, Jana Fukalová, Petr Flachs, Pavel Hozák

During meiosis, homologous chromosomes undergo a dramatic movement in order to correctly align. This is a critical meiotic event but the molecular properties of this ‘chromosomal dance’ still remainunclear. We identified DEB-1 – an orthologue of mammalian vinculin – as a new component of the mechanistic modules responsible for attaching the chromosomes to the nuclear envelope as apart of the LINC complex. In early meiotic nuclei of C. elegans, DEB-1 is localized to the nuclear periphery and alongside the synaptonemal complex of paired homologues. Upon DEB-1 depletion, chromosomes attached to SUN-1 foci remain highly motile until late pachytene. Although the initiation of homologue pairing started normally, irregularities in the formation of the synaptonemal complex occur, and these results in meiotic defects such as increased number of univalents at diakinesis and high embryonic lethality. Our data identify DEB-1 as a new player regulating chromosome dynamics and pairing during meiotic prophase I.

Funding

This work was supported by the BIOCEV – Biotechnology and Biomedicine Centre of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Charles University in Prague [project Z.1.05/1.1.00/02.0109 and the European Regional Development Fund], by the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic [grants 16-03403S and 18-19714S]; the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of Czech Republic COST Inter-excellence internship program [project LTC17054]; and the Microscopy Center, Light and Electron Core Facilities at the IMG AS CR supported by the MEYS CR [project LM2015062 - Czech-BioImaging].

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