AURKB-driven dissolution of CIZ1-RNA assemblies from the inactive X chromosome in mitosis
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Cip1-interacting zinc-finger protein 1 (CIZ1) interacts with Xist lncRNA to form large RNA-protein assemblies at the inactive X-chromosome (Xi) in female mammalian nuclei, plus smaller assemblies in both sexes. CIZ1 assemblies influence underlying chromatin, and their disruption alters the expression of autosomal and X-linked gene clusters. Here, we explore the regulated dissolution of CIZ1-Xi assemblies during mitosis and show that, like Xist , CIZ1 is released in prometaphase under the regulation of Aurora Kinase B (AURKB). The part of human/mouse CIZ1 comprising 179/181 C-terminal amino-acids encodes a matrin-3 domain that facilitates dimerization to form a compact folded core with disordered C-terminal extensions. Mass spectrometry revealed 56 high-confidence interacting partners of the C-terminal fragment, predominantly chromatin, nuclear matrix and RNA-binding proteins. Phosphomimetic mutation of three conserved AURKB sites in the C-terminal extensions released CIZ1 from its nuclear anchor points, but did not affect its interaction with chromatin or nuclear matrix proteins. In contrast, the same mutations, or deletion of the C-terminal extensions, abolished interaction with RNAs including Xist . Together, the data suggest CIZ1 is a regulatable component of the protein-RNA assemblies that preserve epigenetic stability across the nucleus, and that AURKB drives their dissolution in mitosis via dissociation of CIZ1 from RNA.
Bullets
The data show regulated dissolution of RNA-protein assemblies involved in protection of epigenetic state.
RNA spatially constrains CIZ1 assemblies via multivalent interactions at sub-nuclear sites.
CIZ1 dimerizes to present dual extensions whose phosphorylation by AURKB dissolves RNA interaction in mitosis.