m 6 A-modified cenRNA stabilizes CENPA to ensure centromere integrity in cancer cells

m A modification is best known for its critical role in controlling multiple post-transcriptional processes of the mRNAs. Here, we discovered elevated levels of m A modification on centromeric RNA (cenRNA) in cancerous cells compared with non-cancerous cells. We then identified CENPA, an H3 variant,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell 2024-09
Hauptverfasser: Kang, Zihong, Li, Ruimeng, Liu, Chang, Dong, Xiaozhe, Hu, Yuxuan, Xu, Lei, Liu, Xinyu, Xiang, Yunfan, Gao, Liming, Si, Wenzhe, Wang, Lei, Li, Qing, Zhang, Liang, Wang, Huan, Yang, Xuerui, Liu, Jun
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:m A modification is best known for its critical role in controlling multiple post-transcriptional processes of the mRNAs. Here, we discovered elevated levels of m A modification on centromeric RNA (cenRNA) in cancerous cells compared with non-cancerous cells. We then identified CENPA, an H3 variant, as an m A reader of cenRNA. CENPA is localized at centromeres and is essential in preserving centromere integrity and function during mitosis. The m A-modified cenRNA stabilizes centromeric localization of CENPA in cancer cells during the S phase of the cell cycle. Mutations of CENPA at the Leu61 and the Arg63 or removal of cenRNA m A modification lead to loss of centromere-bound CENPA during S phase. This in turn results in compromised centromere integrity and abnormal chromosome separation and hinders cancer cell proliferation and tumor growth. Our findings unveil an m A reading mechanism by CENPA that epigenetically governs centromere integrity in cancer cells, providing potential targets for cancer therapy.
ISSN:1097-4172
DOI:10.1016/j.cell.2024.08.040