Graduate School of Biostudies, Kyoto University, Yoshida-Konoecho, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
Graduate School of Biostudies, Kyoto University, Yoshida-Konoecho, Kyoto 606-8501, Japan.
Curr Biol. 2024 Nov 4;34(21):4998-5016.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2024.09.034. Epub 2024 Oct 11.
Sensing and control of size are critical for cellular function and survival. A striking example of size sensing occurs during meiosis in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. C. elegans chromosomes compare the lengths of the two chromosome "arms" demarcated by the position of their single off-center crossover, and they differentially modify these arms to ensure that sister chromatid cohesion is lost specifically on the shorter arm in the first meiotic division, while the longer arm maintains cohesion until the second division. While many of the downstream steps leading to cohesion loss have been characterized, the length-sensing process itself remains poorly understood. Here, we have used cytological visualization of short and long chromosome arms, combined with quantitative microscopy, live imaging, and simulations, to investigate the principles underlying length-sensitive chromosome partitioning. By quantitatively analyzing short-arm designation patterns on fusion chromosomes carrying multiple crossovers, we develop a model in which a short-arm-determining factor originates at crossover designation sites, diffuses within the synaptonemal complex, and accumulates within crossover-bounded chromosome segments. We demonstrate experimental support for a critical assumption of this model: that crossovers act as boundaries to diffusion within the synaptonemal complex. Further, we develop a discrete simulation based on our results that recapitulates a wide variety of observed partitioning outcomes in both wild-type and previously reported mutants. Our results suggest that the concentration of a diffusible factor is used as a proxy for chromosome length, enabling the correct designation of short and long arms and proper segregation of chromosomes.
大小感应和控制对于细胞功能和生存至关重要。在秀丽隐杆线虫的减数分裂过程中,就发生了一个显著的大小感应的例子。线虫染色体比较由其单个偏心交叉位置界定的两个染色体“臂”的长度,并对这些臂进行差异修饰,以确保姐妹染色单体在第一次减数分裂中特异性地在较短臂上丢失黏合,而较长臂保持黏合,直到第二次分裂。虽然已经描述了导致黏合丢失的许多下游步骤,但长度感应过程本身仍然知之甚少。在这里,我们使用短臂和长臂的细胞学可视化,结合定量显微镜、活体成像和模拟,研究了长度敏感染色体分区的原理。通过对携带多个交叉的融合染色体上的短臂指定模式进行定量分析,我们提出了一个模型,其中短臂决定因素起源于交叉指定位点,在联会复合体中扩散,并在交叉限定的染色体片段内积累。我们证明了该模型的一个关键假设的实验支持:交叉作为联会复合体中扩散的边界。此外,我们根据我们的结果开发了一个离散模拟,再现了野生型和先前报道的突变体中观察到的各种分区结果。我们的结果表明,可扩散因子的浓度可用作染色体长度的替代物,从而正确指定短臂和长臂,并正确分离染色体。