Communications Biology (May 2023)

Fission yeast Srr1 and Skb1 promote isochromosome formation at the centromere

  • Piyusha Mongia,
  • Naoko Toyofuku,
  • Ziyi Pan,
  • Ran Xu,
  • Yakumo Kinoshita,
  • Keitaro Oki,
  • Hiroki Takahashi,
  • Yoshitoshi Ogura,
  • Tetsuya Hayashi,
  • Takuro Nakagawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-04925-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Rad51 maintains genome integrity, whereas Rad52 causes non-canonical homologous recombination leading to gross chromosomal rearrangements (GCRs). Here we find that fission yeast Srr1/Ber1 and Skb1/PRMT5 promote GCRs at centromeres. Genetic and physical analyses show that srr1 and skb1 mutations reduce isochromosome formation mediated by centromere inverted repeats. srr1 increases DNA damage sensitivity in rad51 cells but does not abolish checkpoint response, suggesting that Srr1 promotes Rad51-independent DNA repair. srr1 and rad52 additively, while skb1 and rad52 epistatically reduce GCRs. Unlike srr1 or rad52, skb1 does not increase damage sensitivity. Skb1 regulates cell morphology and cell cycle with Slf1 and Pom1, respectively, but neither Slf1 nor Pom1 causes GCRs. Mutating conserved residues in the arginine methyltransferase domain of Skb1 greatly reduces GCRs. These results suggest that, through arginine methylation, Skb1 forms aberrant DNA structures leading to Rad52-dependent GCRs. This study has uncovered roles for Srr1 and Skb1 in GCRs at centromeres.