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Morc3 silences endogenous retroviruses by enabling Daxx-mediated H3.3 incorporation

Authors :
Gustavo Pereira de Almeida
Ignasi Forné
Sophia Groh
Lisa Katherina Marinelli
Andreas Schmidt
Gunnar Schotta
Cara V. Sickinger
Anna Viktoria Milton
Heike Bollig
Axel Imhof
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) comprise a significant portion of mammalian genomes. Although, specific ERV loci feature regulatory roles for host gene expression, most ERV integrations are transcriptionally repressed by Setdb1 mediated H3K9me3 and DNA methylation. However, the protein network which regulates deposition of these chromatin modifications is still incompletely understood. Here, we performed a genome-wide sgRNA screen for genes involved in ERV silencing and identified the GHKL ATPase protein Morc3 as top scoring hit. Morc3 knock-out cells display de-repression, reduced H3K9me3 and increased chromatin accessibility of distinct ERV classes. We found that the GHKL ATPase domain of Morc3 is critical for ERV silencing, since mutants which cannot bind ATP, or which are defective in ATP hydrolysis cannot rescue the Morc3 ko phenotype. Proteomic analysis revealed that Morc3 mutant protein which cannot bind ATP fails to interact with the H3.3 chaperone Daxx. This interaction depends on Morc3 SUMOylation, as Daxx lacking the SUMO interaction domain shows reduced association with Morc3. Notably, in Morc3 ko cells, we observed strongly reduced H3.3 on Morc3 binding sites. Thus, our data demonstrate Morc3 as critical regulator of Daxx-mediated H3.3 incorporation to ERV regions.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........930d267089ce00c4e0b8fe506e8137fc