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 The nucleolus (dark blue) resides within the cell nucleus, surrounded by heterochromatin. Berkeley Lab researchers have discovered the molecular pathways that regulate its organization. Img: lbl.gov An organelle called the nucleolus resides deep within the cell nucleus
and performs one of the cell's most critical functions: it manufactures
ribosomes, the molecular machines that convert the genetic information
carried by messenger RNA into proteins that do the work of life.
Gary Karpen and Jamy Peng, researchers in the Life Sciences Division
of the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
have now discovered two pathways that regulate the organization of the
nucleolus and other features of nuclear architecture, maintaining
genome stability in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. Their results are published in Nature Cell Biology and are now available online to subscribers.
Because much of the genome of Drosophila
is shared with human beings, learning how nuclear organization is
controlled in the fruit fly can apply to human disorders like birth
defects and cancer. The organization of structures in the cell's
nucleus has profound effects on such essential functions as how and
when genes are expressed. When regulation fails, genome aberrations
accumulate, including repeated sequences of DNA or even entire extra
chromosomes.
"Our project continues to point to an
understanding of genome stability in humans," says Karpen, who heads
Berkeley Lab's Department of Genome and Computational Biology. Karpen
is also codirector of the Drosophila Genome Center (sponsored by the
National Human Genome Research Institute, the National Cancer
Institute, and the Department of Energy) and an adjunct professor of
molecular and cell biology at the University of California at Berkeley.
The epigenetics of heterochromatin
Controlling functions of the cell and organism through nuclear
architecture and spatial rearrangements is known as epigenetics — from
the Greek for "on, over, or at" the genes, instead of by the DNA
sequence. The chromosomal material known as heterochromatin mediates
gene silencing, chromosome inheritance, and other processes. Karpen and
Peng have identified the molecular pathways that regulate two of
heterochromatin's important functions.
One
of these is control of repeated DNA sequences in and outside the
heterochromatin. The other is the organization and structure of the
nucleolus, the ribosome factory, which is situated at the specific site
in the heterochromatin where ribosomal DNA — consisting of large genes,
repeated 300 to 400 times — codes for the production of the RNA from
which ribosomes are built.
"This work on pathways
that control the organization of the nucleolus is the first to be
published that deals with an organelle," says Karpen. "Even though the
gross organization of chromosomes and other nuclear elements is well
known in cell biology, learning about the regulation of nuclear
architecture is in its early stages."
The most striking
feature of any nucleus is its chromosomes. These are made of chromatin,
which combines DNA with a set of proteins known as histones; four
similar histones join together to form a cylindrical spool around which
the DNA wraps. Each of these bundles is called a nucleosome, and many
nucleosomes are bound together by the continuing strand of DNA, which
forms a string of beads that further coils to form one of two kinds of
chromatin, either euchromatin or heterochromatin.
Most
genes reside in euchromatin, which is of relatively low density and
where the DNA is more accessible to the machinery of gene
transcription. By contrast, heterochromatin is dense and contains
relatively few genes; most of the DNA in heterochromatin, including
numerous short repeated sequences, does not code for proteins.
Heterochromatin
is typically found at the ends of a chromosome, where it abuts the
telomeres — chromatin structures best known for limiting, by their
diminishing length, how many times a cell can replicate.
Heterochromatin also flanks the centromere in the central region of the
chromosome, the chromatin structure that plays a crucial role in
chromosome segregation during cell division. What other functions
abundant heterochromatin may perform are still an open question.
Even
epigenetics ultimately has its roots in the genes; the researchers'
first step was to identify which genes affect organization of the
heterochromatin, then to identify the proteins expressed by these
genes, and finally to learn how they act on the chromosomal material.
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