PLoS Genetics (Aug 2016)

Smc5/6 Is a Telomere-Associated Complex that Regulates Sir4 Binding and TPE.

  • Sarah Moradi-Fard,
  • Jessica Sarthi,
  • Mireille Tittel-Elmer,
  • Maxime Lalonde,
  • Emilio Cusanelli,
  • Pascal Chartrand,
  • Jennifer A Cobb

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006268
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. e1006268

Abstract

Read online

SMC proteins constitute the core members of the Smc5/6, cohesin and condensin complexes. We demonstrate that Smc5/6 is present at telomeres throughout the cell cycle and its association with chromosome ends is dependent on Nse3, a subcomponent of the complex. Cells harboring a temperature sensitive mutant, nse3-1, are defective in Smc5/6 localization to telomeres and have slightly shorter telomeres. Nse3 interacts physically and genetically with two Rap1-binding factors, Rif2 and Sir4. Reduction in telomere-associated Smc5/6 leads to defects in telomere clustering, dispersion of the silencing factor, Sir4, and a loss in transcriptional repression for sub-telomeric genes and non-coding telomeric repeat-containing RNA (TERRA). SIR4 recovery at telomeres is reduced in cells lacking Smc5/6 functionality and vice versa. However, nse3-1/ sir4 Δ double mutants show additive defects for telomere shortening and TPE indicating the contribution of Smc5/6 to telomere homeostasis is only in partial overlap with SIR factor silencing. These findings support a role for Smc5/6 in telomere maintenance that is separate from its canonical role(s) in HR-mediated events during replication and telomere elongation.