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Article Dans Une Revue PLoS Genetics Année : 2007

The Essential Role of Drosophila HIRA for De Novo Assembly of Paternal Chromatin at Fertilization

Résumé

Chromatin is composed of basic units called nucleosomes, in which DNA wraps around a core of histone proteins. HIRA is a histone chaperone that is specifically involved in the assembly of nucleosomes containing H3.3, a universally conserved type of histone 3. To understand the function of HIRA in vivo, the authors generated mutant fruit flies with a non-functional Hira gene. Surprisingly, mutant flies were viable, but females were completely sterile. By analysing the female fruit flies'ir eggs, the authors found that in the absence of HIRA protein, the sperm nucleus was unable to participate in the formation of the zygote. In Drosophila, as in many animals, the condensed sperm chromatin contains protamines instead of histones. The authors found that the only crucial role of HIRA in flies was to assemble nucleosomes containing H3.3 in the male pronucleus, after the removal of protamines. This fundamental process, which is presumably also controlled by HIRA in vertebrates, allows the paternal DNA to reconstitute its chromatin and to participate in the development of the embryo.

Domaines

Génétique
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Dates et versions

hal-00176483 , version 1 (03-10-2007)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00176483 , version 1

Citer

Emilie Bonnefoy, Guillaume Orsi, Pierre Couble, Benjamin Loppin. The Essential Role of Drosophila HIRA for De Novo Assembly of Paternal Chromatin at Fertilization. PLoS Genetics, 2007, pp.3(10): e182. ⟨hal-00176483⟩
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