CENP-C and CENP-I are key connecting factors for kinetochore and CENP-A assembly

ABSTRACT Although it is generally accepted that chromatin containing the histone H3 variant CENP-A is an epigenetic mark maintaining centromere identity, the pathways leading to the formation and maintenance of centromere chromatin remain unclear. We previously generated human artificial chromosomes (HACs) whose centromeres contain a synthetic alpha-satellite (alphoid) DNA array containing the tetracycline operator (alphoidtetO). We also obtained cell lines bearing the alphoidtetO array at ectopic integration sites on chromosomal arms. Here, we have examined the regulation of CENP-A assembly at centromeres as well as de novo assembly on the ectopic arrays by tethering tetracycline repressor (tetR) fusions of substantial centromeric factors and chromatin modifiers. This analysis revealed four classes of factors that influence CENP-A assembly. Interestingly, many kinetochore structural components induced de novo CENP-A assembly at the ectopic site. We showed that these components work by recruiting CENP-C and subsequently recruiting M18BP1. Furthermore, we found that CENP-I can also recruit M18BP1 and, as a consequence, enhances M18BP1 assembly on centromeres in the downstream of CENP-C. Thus, we suggest that CENP-C and CENP-I are key factors connecting kinetochore to CENP-A assembly. Highlighted Article: Tethering analysis using various centromere and kinetochore factors, and chromatin modifiers reveals that CENP-C and CENP-I are key connecting factors for kinetochore and CENP-A assembly.

The CENP-A nucleosome assembly exhibits a number of surprises. The number of CENP-A nucleosomes is reduced by half through DNA replication and not replenished until mitosis is completed (Jansen et al., 2007). Why centromeres go through mitosis with half the maximal number of CENP-A nucleosomes is not known. Several factors including the Mis18 complex (Mis18α-Mis18β-M18BP1) and the CENP-A-specific histone chaperone HJURP are involved in this replenishment of CENP-A nucleosomes (Barnhart et al., 2011;Dunleavy et al., 2009;Foltz et al., 2009;Fujita et al., 2007;Hayashi et al., 2004;Shuaib et al., 2010). Among these factors, M18BP1 has been reported to interact with CENP-C (Dambacher et al., 2012;Moree et al., 2011). In addition to these factors, which are involved in CENP-A replenishment during early G1 phase, the remodeling and spacing factor (RSF) (Perpelescu et al., 2009) and small GTPase MgcRacGAP (also known as RACGAP1) act during mid to late G1 phase to stabilize newly assembled CENP-A (Lagana et al., 2010).
Recent studies have demonstrated that chromatin states also affect CENP-A assembly. We have previously introduced synthetic alphoid DNAs containing the tetO motif in every second monomer (alphoid tetO ) into culture cells and established a synthetic human artificial chromosome (the alphoid tetO -HAC) carrying a functional centromere (Nakano et al., 2008). Subsequent studies have used this HAC to probe the chromatin state that is permissive for CENP-A assembly and maintenance. Induction of histone H3K9me3 heterochromatin by tethering a fusion protein comprising the Tet repressor protein (tetR) (which binds to the alphoid tetO sequence) and the KRAB-AB silencing domain of Kid-1 (also known as ZNF354A), KAP1 (the repressive scaffold recruited by the TetR and Kid-1 silencing domain fusion; also known as TRIM28) or the H3K9 histone methyltransferase (HMT) Suv39h1 to the alphoid tetO -HAC all reduce CENP-A assembly dramatically on the alphoid tetO -HAC (Cardinale et al., 2009;Nakano et al., 2008;Ohzeki et al., 2012). Removal of the transcription-associated mark H3K4me2 by tethering the demethylase LSD1 also reduced CENP-A assembly (Bergmann et al., 2011). In contrast, tethering the catalytic domain of histone acetyltransferase (HAT) p300 (also known as EP300) or PCAF induced assembly of expressed HA-tagged CENP-A on the alphoid tetO -HAC and at a ectopic alphoid tetO integration site in a chromosomal arm (Ohzeki et al., 2012). To date, many factors (e.g. CCAN and ICEN) have been shown to be localized in centromeric chromatin by biochemical fractionation and mass spectrometry as described above. For many of the factors identified in these pulldowns, it remains unclear whether they also contribute to CENP-A assembly or not.
Here, we have exploited a synthetic biology, or tethering, analysis to probe the ability of a number of kinetochore components and chromatin factors to recruit CENP-A to the HAC centromere and to assemble CENP-A de novo at an ectopic alphoid tetO array on a chromosomal arm. From these analyses, we classified the factors into four groups that increase or decrease CENP-A assembly on the alphoid tetO array. Surprisingly, tethering of outer kinetochore components of the KMN network can induce de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic array. This assembly proceeds through recruitment of CENP-C, which then recruits M18BP1 to promote de novo CENP-A assembly. Moreover, we found that CENP-I can also recruit M18BP1 and, as a consequence, enhances M18BP1 assembly at centromeres, in a process that acts downstream of CENP-C. CENP-C and CENP-I are, thus, revealed to be key factors connecting the outer kinetochore structure through the KMN network to promote epigenetic maintenance of CENP-A chromatin through M18BP1.

Identification of factors that increase or decrease CENP-A assembly on the HAC kinetochore
To evaluate factors that modulate CENP-A assembly, we have adopted a synthetic biology, or tethering, approach using the alphoid tetO -HAC, which segregates comparably to endogenous chromosomes (HeLa-HAC-2-4; Ohzeki et al., 2012) (Fig. 1A). By using tetR-EYFP, we tethered various fusion proteins to the alphoid tetO array and subsequently quantified CENP-A levels on the HAC by indirect immunofluorescence ( Fig. 1B; Fig.S1A). As controls, we tethered the CENP-A-specific chaperone HJURP, as a positive regulator, and the H3K9 methyltransferase Suv39h1, as a negative regulator (Fig. 1C). Tethering tetR-EYFP-HJURP significantly increased the CENP-A signal on the HAC, whereas tethering tetR-EYFP-Suv39h1 caused a corresponding decrease (Fig. 1D). These changes in CENP-A levels on the HAC were confirmed using chromatin immunoprecipitation quantitative PCR (ChIP-qPCR) analysis (Fig. S1B).
We next applied this approach by tethering a number of centromeric factors to the alphoid tetO -HAC as tetR-EYFP fusions (Fig. 1E,F). Tethering of CENP-C, CENP-I, CENP-N, CENP-T and KMN network components, all of which are structural components of the kinetochore, increased CENP-A levels on the HAC. So did tethering of MgcRacGAP and CENP-B, both of which have been reported to be involved in stabilizing CENP-A nucleosomes (Fachinetti et al., 2015;Fujita et al., 2015;Lagana et al., 2010). Thus, many centromeric factors were found to regulate the CENP-A assembly positively on the HAC. The Mis18 complex is involved in priming centromeres for CENP-A assembly. Interestingly, tethering of M18BP1 increased CENP-A levels on the alphoid tetO -HAC, but tethering of Mis18α and Mis18β did not.
Identification of the factors that can induce de novo CENP-A assembly Among the factors that regulate CENP-A assembly positively at the alphoid tetO -HAC centromere, HJURP has been previously reported to induce de novo CENP-A assembly when tethered to noncentromeric sites on chromosomal arms (Barnhart et al., 2011;Bassett et al., 2012;Ohzeki et al., 2012). We therefore tested whether the tethering of tetR-EYFP fusion proteins to a noncentromeric alphoid tetO integration site on a chromosomal arm covered with heterochromatin (HeLa-Int-03; Ohzeki et al., 2012) could induce de novo CENP-A assembly ( Fig. 2A,B).
In controls, tethering of tetR-EYFP or tetR-EYFP-Suv39h1 did not induce de novo CENP-A assembly. As expected, tethering of tetR-EYFP-HJURP induced de novo CENP-A assembly in 86% of cells (Fig. 2C). Interestingly, tethering of CENP-C, CENP-I and KMN network components induced robust de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site (Fig. 2C,F). These results on inducing CENP-A assembly by the tethering of CENP-C and CENP-I using human cells (HeLa) are consistent with the previous findings using chicken DT40 cells . The HJURP or the CENP-C tethering resulted in capturing bundles with an excess amount of microtubules at the ectopic site in the mitotic phase, suggesting the assembly of kinetochore components (Fig. 2D). In contrast, tethering of CENP-B, CENP-T, CENP-N, MgcRacGAP and MLL did not induce de novo CENP-A assembly at the heterochromatic ectopic site even though they all increased CENP-A assembly at the centromere of the alphoid tetO -HAC (Fig. 1F, Fig. 2C,F). Although the Mis18 complex is normally involved in CENP-A assembly, tethering of M18BP1, Mis18α and Mis18β did not significantly induce de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site.
All of the above studies looked at assembly of endogenous CENP-A on alphoid tetO arrays. Remarkably different results were obtained when we tethered the various components to the array in cells that were also overexpressing Halo-tagged CENP-A (Halo-CENP-A). Expression of Halo-CENP-A enhanced de novo CENP-A assembly at the ectopic site to 100% of cells following the tethering of tetR-EYFP-HJURP. Halo-CENP-A overexpression was not sufficient to induce CENP-A assembly following the tethering of tetR-EYFP alone or tetR-EYFP-Suv39h1 (1-2% of cells) (Ohzeki et al., 2012) (Fig. 2F). However, in cells overexpressing Halo-CENP-A a wide range of factors were found to induce substantial CENP-A assembly. These included Mis18α, Mis18β and M18BP1, the HATs MYST1, MYST2, MYST3, MYST4, HAT1, PCAF and p300 as well as CENP-H, RSF1 and SSRP1 (Fig. 2E,F).
As HATs, RSF1 and SSRP1 are general chromatin factors (LeRoy, 1998), so we thought that these factors might also induce . Mitotic cells were spread on cover glass and stained with DAPI (blue), anti-CENP-A antibody (green) and the BAC DNA probe (red) (Ohzeki et al., 2012). Magnified images of the area enclosed by a yellow line are shown in the right panels. Scale bar: 10 μm. (B) A schematic drawing of the tetR-EYFP-alphoid tetO array tethering system on alphoid tetO -HAC. X, Y and Z represent candidate proteins. (C,E) Representative images of HeLa-HAC-2-4 cells transfected with indicated tetR-EYFP fusion proteins (green). Cells were stained with DAPI and anti-CENP-A (red) at 48 h after transfection. Arrowheads indicate the alphoid tetO -HAC. Scale bars: 5 μm. (D,F) Normalized CENP-A signals on the HAC after tethering tetR-EYFP fusion proteins were quantified at 48 h after transfection. The HAC-associated CENP-A signal was normalized to the average of centromere signals on the endogenous centromeres in the same nucleus (Fig. S1). Relative values to the median of control (Alone) (red dashed line) are shown in a boxplot (n=23-49 cells). Alternative names are indicated by a solidus ('/'). The box represents the 25-75th percentiles, and the median is indicated. The whiskers show the 5-95th percentiles. *P<0.05; **P<0.01; ***P<0.001 from control (Mann-Whitney test; red, increase; blue, decrease). . Mitotic cells were spread on cover glass and stained with DAPI (blue), anti-CENP-A antibody (green) and BAC DNA probe (red). Magnified images of the area enclosed by a yellow line are shown in right panels. Scale bar: 10 μm. (B) A schematic drawing of the tetR-EYFP-alphoid tetO array tethering system on the ectopic site. X, Y and Z represent candidate proteins. (C) Representative images of HeLa-Int-03 cells transfected with the indicated tetR-EYFP fusion proteins (green). Cells were stained with DAPI and anti-CENP-A (red) at 48 h after transfection. The frequency of de novo endogenous CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site (arrowheads) is shown on the right of the images. Scale bars: 5 μm. (D) Representative images of HeLa-Int-03 cells transfected with tetR-EYFP alone, tetR-EYFP-CENP-C or tetR-EYFP-HJURP (green). Cells were stained with DAPI and anti-α-tubulin (red) at 48 h after transfection. Arrowheads indicate the ectopic site. Scale bars: 5 μm. (E) Representative images of HeLa-Int-03 cells co-transfected with the indicated tetR-EYFP fusion proteins (green) and Halo-CENP-A. Cells were stained with DAPI and the Halo-tag TMR ligand (red) 24 h after transfection. The frequency of de novo Halo-CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site (arrowheads) is shown on the right of the images. Scale bars: 5 μm. (F) Frequency of de novo assembly of endogenous CENP-A or Halo-CENP-A on the ectopic site at 48 or 24 h after transfection, respectively. Endogenous CENP-A or Halo-CENP-A signals on tetR-EYFP spots as a percentage of the total tetR-EYFP spots in each sample (n=100 cells for endogenous CENP-A, n=50 cells for Halo-CENP-A). Alternative names are indicated by a solidus ('/'). Results are mean±s.e.m. (n=3 experiments). the assembly of canonical histone H3. Thus, we performed similar experiments in cells overexpressing Halo-H3.1 or Halo-H3.3 instead of Halo-CENP-A (Fig. 3A,B). Tethering tetR-EYFP-CHAF1A or tetR-EYFP-DAXX, the specific histone chaperones for H3.1 (replication dependent) or H3.3 (replication independent), respectively (Drane et al., 2010;Kaufman et al., 1995), resulted in robust assembly of Halo-H3.1 or Halo-H3.3 on the alphoid tetO array in 83% and 87% of cells, respectively. Importantly, this result indicates that the specificities of each chaperone for its respective H3 variant are retained even in this tethering assay.
Most factors that induced Halo-CENP-A assembly also induced high levels of Halo-H3.3 assembly on the ectopic site. Intriguingly, tetR-EYFP-Mis18α and -Mis18β also efficiently induced H3.3 assembly in 30-40% of cells. It is possible that common mechanisms might be involved in Halo-CENP-A assembly and Halo-H3.3 assembly when this class of factors is tethered to the alphoid tetO array.

Classification of tested factors based on the influences on CENP-A assembly
These three analyses to CENP-A assembly allowed us to divide the tested factors into four classes (Fig. 4). The first group, class I factors, increase endogenous CENP-A assembly on the HAC and induce de novo CENP-A assembly at the ectopic site. These factors include CENP-C, CENP-I, KNL1, Mis12 and NDC80. We excluded HJURP from class I because it is known to directly bind to CENP-A as a chaperone. The second group, class II factors, increase endogenous CENP-A assembly on the HAC centromere, but do not induce efficient de novo CENP-A assembly when tethered to the ectopic site even when CENP-A is overexpressed. These factors include MgcRacGAP, CENP-N, CENP-T, MLL and CENP-B. Class III factors induce efficient de novo CENP-A assembly (≥20%) when tethered to the ectopic site provided that CENP-A is overexpressed. These factors include M18BP1, Mis18α, Mis18β, CENP-H, SKA1, RSF1, SSRP1, MYST1, MYST2, MYST3, MYST4, HAT1, PCAF, p300 and G9a. Finally, class IV factors decrease endogenous CENP-A assembly on the HAC and do not induce efficient de novo CENP-A assembly by their tethering even when CENP-A is overexpressed. These factors include Suv39h1, SETDB1, HDAC1, HDAC2, SIRT1 and SIRT2. Most of the factors involved in transcriptional silencing fall into class IV.
CENP-C is the crucial factor for de novo CENP-A assembly As our classification revealed, class I factors are sufficient for de novo CENP-A assembly when tethered to the ectopic site. Interestingly, all class I factors are involved in the kinetochore Nishihashi et al., 2002;Okada et al., 2006). This suggests that there might be a link between the kinetochore and de novo CENP-A assembly.
To further explore this link, we explored the ability of several other kinetochore and CCAN components to induce de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic alphoid tetO array. Interestingly, components of KMN network all efficiently induced de novo CENP-A assembly in this assay (Fig. 5A,B). In contrast to these structural components of the kinetochore, ZWINT, BubR1, PP1γ and SKA1 (Fig. 5B), which are thought to be involved in regulating kinetochore activity through the spindle assembly checkpoint, did not induce de novo CENP-A assembly.
Using various deletion mutants of tetR-EYFP-NSL1 or tetR-EYFP-Mis12, both of which are Mis12 complex components and, hence, expected to interact with the KMN network and CENP-C (Petrovic et al., 2010;Screpanti et al., 2011), we found that NSL1 and Mis12 deletion mutants that had lost the ability to interact with CENP-C also lost the ability to induce de novo CENP-A assembly (Fig. S2A,B). We confirmed that NSL1 and Mis12 interact with CENP-C even following CENP-A depletion by small interfering RNA (siRNA)-mediated knockdown. This control minimizes the likelihood of possible secondary CENP-C recruitment through preassembled CENP-A ( Fig. S2C-F; CENP-A depletions were also performed similarly in Figs 5, 6 and 7, and Fig. S3). We concluded that CENP-C recruited by tetR-EYFP-NSL1 or tetR-EYFP-Mis12 induces de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site.
Remarkably, tethering of all class I factors to the ectopic alphoid tetO array recruits CENP-C in the CENP-A depletion condition ( Fig. 5C-E). These experiments revealed a strong correlation between the efficiency of CENP-C recruitment and de novo CENP-A assembly activity following the tethering of class I factors (Fig. 5F). These results suggest that CENP-C is a crucial factor for inducing de novo CENP-A assembly.
Interestingly, CENP-C recruited by tethering of tetR-EYFP fusion class I factors retains its binding to the ectopic site in the absence of CENP-A assembly even after dissociation of the tetR-EYFP fusion proteins by the addition of doxycycline (Fig. S3). In this case, de novo CENP-A assembly might be promoted by the remarkable increase of CENP-C recruitment that occurs after 24 h to 48 h (Fig. 5E).

CENP-C and CENP-I can both induce de novo CENP-A assembly
To test whether CENP-C is essential for de novo CENP-A assembly, we tethered the main class I factors to the ectopic alphoid tetO array in cells depleted of CENP-C ( Fig. 5G-J). CENP-C depletion caused a mitotic arrest (Fukagawa and Brown, 1997), thus we performed a double depletion with MAD2 to release the mitotic arrest (Choi et al., 2011) (Fig. 5G; Fig. S4A,B). We confirmed that the level of soluble CENP-A did not decrease following CENP-C depletion (Fig. 5I). Under these conditions de novo CENP-A assembly induced by tethering its chaperone HJURP did not decrease (Fig. 5J). In contrast, induction of CENP-A assembly by tethering KMN network components dramatically decreased following CENP-C depletion. De novo CENP-A assembly induced by tethering CENP-I also decreased substantially, however, interestingly, considerable CENP-A assembly remained (Fig. 5J). This suggests that CENP-I can induce de novo CENP-A assembly without CENP-C. CENP-I and CENP-C do not act equivalently in inducing new CENP-A assembly. Indeed, CENP-I depletion had no effect on the de novo assembly of CENP-A induced by tethering KMN components to the ectopic alphoid tetO array ( Fig. S4C-G).

CENP-C or CENP-I can independently recruit M18BP1
Taken together, the above results indicate that CENP-C and CENP-I independently recruit one or more factors that promote de novo CENP-A assembly. M18BP1 has been reported to interact with CENP-C (Dambacher et al., 2012;Moree et al., 2011), and the Mis18 complex is involved in the assembly of newly synthesized CENP-A at centromeres during early G1 phase (Fujita et al., 2007). We therefore asked whether tethered CENP-C and CENP-I recruit Halo-Mis18α, Halo-Mis18β or Halo-M18BP1 to the ectopic alphoid tetO array ( Fig. 6A-C). As expected, CENP-C tethering recruited Halo-M18BP1 in 100% of cells. Surprisingly, CENP-I tethering also recruited Halo-M18BP1 in 98% of cells. This recruitment of Halo-M18BP1 by CENP-C tethering did not decrease following siRNA depletion of CENP-I. Similarly, the recruitment of Halo-M18BP1 by CENP-I tethering also did not decrease following siRNA depletion of CENP-C (Fig. 6D). We conclude that CENP-C or CENP-I can independently recruit M18BP1.
In order to test whether M18BP1 is essential for CENP-A recruitment, we next tested de novo CENP-A assembly induced by tethering of tetR-EYFP fusion class I factors following M18BP1 depletion by siRNA (Fig. 6E-G). Importantly, this did not decrease the levels of soluble CENP-A or de novo CENP-A assembly induced by tethering HJURP. In contrast, we observed a dramatic decrease in de novo CENP-A assembly following the tethering of class I factors. Thus CENP-C and CENP-I induce de novo CENP-A assembly through M18BP1 recruitment. CENP-C induces de novo CENP-A assembly through multiple pathways, including one through CENP-I CENP-C strongly interacts with CENP-I (Fig. 5D,E). It is therefore likely that CENP-C induces de novo CENP-A assembly through CENP-I recruitment. For further investigation of the role of CENP-C and CENP-I in de novo CENP-A assembly, we prepared tetR-EYFP fusion proteins to known functional domains of CENP-C (Carroll et al., 2010;Screpanti et al., 2011;Suzuki et al., 2004;Trazzi et al., 2009) (Fig. 7A). Tethering of domain II (amino acids 72-425), III (amino acids 426-537) or a fusion of domains VI and VII (VI+VII) (amino acids 760-943) were each found to be sufficient for de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic alphoid tetO array (Fig. 7B,C).
We next checked whether these domains recruit CENP-I or M18BP1 (Fig. 7D-F). Tethering of domain II or VI+VII both led to recruitment of Halo-CENP-I or Halo-M18BP1 in 100% of cells. CENP-I interaction with CENP-C domain II is consistent with a previous in vitro analysis (Klare et al., 2015) and M18BP1 interaction with the C-terminus of CENP-C is consistent with a previous report (Dambacher et al., 2012). Tethering of domain II also recruited Halo-M18BP1 in 75% of cells, probably through CENP-I. We also observed interaction between CENP-C domain I (amino acids 1-71) and NSL1 (data not shown), which is consistent with previous in vitro analyses (Screpanti et al., 2011).
To test the involvement of CENP-I and M18BP1 in de novo CENP-A assembly by the various CENP-C domains, we repeated the above experiments after siRNA depletion of the two proteins (Fig. 7G). CENP-I depletion strongly decreased de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic alphoid tetO array by the CENP-C domain II, but had no effect following tethering of full-length CENP-C or domain VI+VII. M18BP1 depletion dramatically reduced de novo CENP-A assembly following tethering of all of these fusion constructs. Unexpectedly, de novo CENP-A assembly by domain III depended on weak Halo-M18BP1 recruitment (Fig. 7F,G). CENP-A nucleosome binding by this domain has recently been reported to stabilize CENP-A nucleosomes (Falk et al., 2015;Kato et al., 2013). We confirmed that this CENP-A nucleosome-binding activity is also required for de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site by point mutation of R522 (Fig. 7H). Thus the CENP-A recruitment caused by CENP-C domain III might not depend  (Fig. 1F). Numbers in the middle and right columns show the percentage of de novo endogenous CENP-A or Halo-CENP-A assembly at the ectopic site (Fig. 2F). Note that endogenous CENP-B also binds to CENP-B box, the recognition sequence for CENP-B, on the HAC and ectopic site (※) (Ohzeki et al., 2012). Alternative names are indicated by a solidus ('/').
only on the interaction with M18BP1. Taken together, these results suggest that CENP-C induces de novo CENP-A assembly through at least two M18BP1 recruitment pathways: CENP-I recruitment by domain II and directly through its C terminus (Fig. 7I).
Centromere assembly of newly synthesized CENP-A requires CENP-C and is enhanced via CENP-I In order to check whether the conclusions of tethering experiments could be extended to CENP-A assembly at endogenous centromeres, we first tested the interdependency of kinetochore assembly of CENP-C and CENP-I. Interestingly, CENP-I levels at kinetochores fell dramatically after CENP-C depletion. In contrast, CENP-C levels at kinetochores were unaffected after 72 h of CENP-I depletion (Fig. 8A,B). To ask whether CENP-C and CENP-I are required for the association of M18BP1 with centromeres, we depleted the two proteins in HeLa-Int-03 M18BP1-Halo cells, in which the endogenous M18BP1-encoding gene was fused with a Halo tag using CRISPR-and Cas-mediated genome editing. M18BP1 assembles on centromeres from telophase to early G1 (Fujita et al., 2007). We identified cells in early G1 phase by looking for small cells linked by α-tubulin in a mid-body. Depletion of either CENP-C or CENP-I caused a significant reduction in M18BP1-Halo signals at centromeres (to 42% or 66%, respectively) compared to the control (Fig. 8C,D).
Finally, we examined the assembly of newly synthesized CENP-A at centromeres during early G1 phase after depletion of CENP-C or CENP-I using HeLa-Int-03 SNAP-CENP-A cells stably expressing SNAP-tagged CENP-A. Newly synthesized SNAP-CENP-A was detected using quench-chase-pulse labeling (Jansen et al., 2007). Following CENP-C or CENP-I depletion, newly synthesized SNAP-CENP-A signals at centromeres were significantly reduced (to 44% or 75%, respectively) compared to the control (Fig. 8E,F). As the assembly of CENP-I at centromeres depends on CENP-C, the role of CENP-I for the newly synthesized CENP-A assembly is to enhance (reinforce) M18BP1 recruitment in parallel through interactions with CENP-C.

DISCUSSION
Here, we have used synthetic biology (tethering) analysis to examine the role of a number of kinetochore proteins and chromatinmodifying enzymes in CENP-A assembly at a centromere and at an ectopic site on a chromosome arm. This analysis revealed four classes of factors that influence CENP-A assembly.
Class I factors lead to M18BP1 recruitment through CENP-C and CENP-I Class I factors are sufficient for de novo assembly of endogenous CENP-A on the ectopic alphoid tetO array. CENP-C, CENP-I and components of the KMN network, a microtubule-binding complex, belong to this class (Fig. 4). In contrast, many other CENPs, which localize at centromeres across the cell cycle, did not induce substantial CENP-A assembly on the heterochromatic ectopic site, although CENP-L and CENP-O displayed a weak ability to mediate CENP-A assembly (Fig. 5B).
Tethering of KMN components induced de novo CENP-C assembly at the ectopic site. A similar result has been reported using tethering analysis that targeted these factors to the centrosome in Drosophila cells (Venkei et al., 2012). This process did not require CENP-A. Meanwhile, the number of CENP-A nucleosomes was reduced by half through DNA replication and until mitosis is completed. Our result suggests that interactions between CENP-C and the KMN network might reinforce reassembly or retention of CENP-C at the same site (Fig. 8G).
We found that CENP-C and CENP-I are sufficient for de novo CENP-A assembly upon the tethering of class I factors. Three CENP-C domains, from amino acids 72-425, 426-537 and 760-943, were sufficient for de novo CENP-A assembly (Fig. 7). The amino acid domain 760-943 seems to directly interact with M18BP1 as shown in Xenopus CENP-C (Moree et al., 2011). We also found that the domain comprising amino acids 72-425 can recruit M18BP1 through CENP-I (Figs 6 and 7). Therefore, it is quite reasonable that de novo CENP-A assembly by the tethering of class I factors is eventually dependent on M18BP1, which has been reported to be involved in recruitment of the CENP-A chaperon HJURP as part of the Mis18 complex (Barnhart et al., 2011;Wang et al., 2014).

Class II factors support activities promoting CENP-A assembly
Class II factors increase CENP-A assembly on the HAC, but do not induce substantial de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic alphoid tetO array. These are thought to be factors that cooperate with other activities present at the established HAC centromere to promote CENP-A assembly. Class II might include factors that do not directly recruit, but enhance the stability, assembly or activity of other factors that promote CENP-A assembly, including the Mis18 complex or HJURP.
MgcRacGAP and CENP-B reportedly stabilize CENP-A nucleosomes (Fachinetti et al., 2015;Fujita et al., 2015;Lagana et al., 2010). Thus, tethering these factors might increase CENP-A assembly by stabilizing CENP-A nucleosomes created by the canonical centromere assembly activity on the HAC but not at the ectopic site (Fig. 8G).
We have previously reported that CENP-B promotes heterochromatin formation on alphoid DNA integrated into chromosomal arms. However, CENP-B activity depends on chromatin context and it promotes de novo CENP-A assembly on the naked alphoid DNA introduced into cells (Okada et al., 2007). This suggests that CENP-B might also promote de novo CENP-A assembly in addition to stabilizing CENP-A nucleosomes at the HAC centromere.

Class III factors may form chromatin states promoting histone exchange
Class III factors induce robust de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic alphoid tetO array in cells overexpressing CENP-A. All tested HATs belong to this class. Transient acetylation of H3 occurs at centromeres during early G1 phase and inhibition of this activity by Suv39h1 tethering leads to decreased CENP-A assembly (Ohzeki et al., 2012). The class III factors SSRP1 and RSF1 are general histone chaperones involved in transcription (LeRoy, 1998)   2009; Perpelescu et al., 2009). SSRP1 is a component of the 'facilitates chromatin transcription' (FACT) complex, which promotes histone exchange by evicting histones ahead of polymerases and redepositing them after transcription or replication has occurred (Belotserkovskaya et al., 2003;Formosa, 2013).
When Halo-tagged canonical histone H3 instead of Halo-CENP-A was expressed, class III factors also induced Halo-H3 assembly at the ectopic site. Assembly of H3.3 and CENP-A were more efficiently induced on the alphoid tetO array than H3.1 following the tethering of class III factors. H3.3 is normally deposited by histone exchange coupled with chromatin remodeling and transcription independently of DNA replication (Gurard-Levin et al., 2014;Tagami et al., 2004;Wirbelauer et al., 2005). Thus, CENP-A deposition might exploit similar mechanisms. Indeed, H3.3 has been suggested to be a placeholder for CENP-A until its replenishment in early G1 human cells (Dunleavy et al., 2011). We suggest that class III factors induce CENP-A or H3.3 assembly (depending on the expressed histones) by changing the chromatin state to promote histone exchange, possibly by locally inducing transcription (Fig. 8G).
Other class III factors, including the Mis18 complex, CENP-H and SKA1 are centromere-or kinetochore-specific factors and not known to have direct functions in establishing chromatin states. These factors might promote CENP-A assembly by recruiting other general chromatin factors. Thus, they are potential candidates to investigate the mechanism by which centromere-specific and general chromatin factors coordinately regulate centromere chromatin.

Class IV factors might inhibit CENP-A assembly through repression of transcription
Class IV factors decrease CENP-A levels on the HAC and do not induce robust de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site. Many of the HMTs and HDACs involved in transcriptional silencing belong to this class. Thus, we propose that class IV factors inhibit CENP-A deposition on the HAC through modulating heterochromatin formation and repression of histone exchange, in contrast to class III factors, which induce chromatin opening and exchange (Fig. 8G).
HDACs were found to decrease CENP-A signals on the HAC. This is consistent with our previous observation that treatment with the HDAC inhibitor trichostatin A induced CENP-A assembly on a heterochromatinized ectopic site (Nakano et al., 2003;Okamoto et al., 2007). The results of the present study strongly support our notion that centromere formation and heterochromatin formation (e.g. transcriptional silencing) are in balance and antagonize each other Ohzeki et al., 2012Ohzeki et al., , 2015Okada et al., 2007).

Interactions of class I, II and III factors in CENP-A assembly at centromeres
Following from the discussion above, we suggest that, other than recruitment of CENP-A, basic histone exchange reactions to deposit CENP-A by class III factors and subsequent stabilization of deposited CENP-A nucleosome by class II factors are also required for CENP-A assembly (Fig. 8G). Indeed, many factors of these classes have been reported to be required for CENP-A assembly at endogenous centromeres. CENP-H (class III) and CENP-I (class I) form a complex at the centromere and are reported to be required for newly synthesized CENP-A assembly (Okada et al., 2006). Thus, class I factors, including CENP-C and CENP-I, might recruit not only CENP-A through M18BP1, but also these activities to change chromatin states (class III) on the ectopic site and to stabilize de novo assembled CENP-A nucleosomes (class II).

M18BP1 activity is dependent upon CENP-C and CENP-I
M18BP1 is required for de novo CENP-A assembly induced by CENP-C and/or CENP-I. It might therefore be expected that tethering of M18BP1 would bypass the requirement for CENP-C or CENP-I in de novo CENP-A assembly. Surprisingly, tethering of tetR-EYFP-M18BP1 on its own did not induce de novo assembly of endogenous CENP-A on the ectopic alphoid tetO array. This suggests that CENP-C, CENP-I or some interacting factor(s) might be involved in regulating or reinforcing M18BP1 activity. Indeed, M18BP1 tethering increased endogenous CENP-A assembly on the HAC centromere where CENP-C and CENP-I are pre-assembled (Fig. 4). Subsequent studies will reveal whether the downstream factors are involved in phosphorylation (McKinley and Cheeseman, 2014;Silva et al., 2012) or other modifications of M18BP1.

The hierarchy of CENP-C and CENP-I is subtly different between species
In chicken cells (DT40), the centromere localization of CENP-C is reported to depend on CENP-I (Nishihashi et al., 2002) and newly synthesized CENP-A assembly on centromeres depends on CENP-I rather than CENP-C (Okada et al., 2006). By contrast, in human cells (HeLa), we found that the centromere assembly of CENP-I depends on CENP-C and that CENP-I has a role in enhancing newly synthesized CENP-A assembly through M18BP1 assembly downstream of CENP-C. This suggests that the hierarchy of these two factors is subtly different between these species, although both CENP-C and CENP-I are conserved factors for centromere epigenetics.
CENP-C and CENP-I coordinate centromere 'function' and 'epigenetics' CENP-C is widely conserved from yeasts to higher eukaryotes (Przewloka et al., 2011;Talbert et al., 2004), but is not present in some  (Carroll et al., 2010). The graph shows the frequency of de novo CENP-A assembly on the ectopic site. CENP-A signals on tetR-EYFP spots as a percentage of the total tetR-EYFP spots in each sample (n=100 cells). Results are mean±s.e.m. (n=3 experiments). (I) Summary of recruited factors and pathway of de novo CENP-A assembly from CENP-C. The red roman number denotes domains sufficient for de novo CENP-A assembly. insects carrying holocentromeres lacking CENP-A. This suggests that a primary conserved function of CENP-C is recognition of CENP-A nucleosomes (Drinnenberg et al., 2014). In this study, we found that CENP-C can induce kinetochore formation coupled with de novo CENP-A chromatin assembly. Thus, CENP-C binding to CENP-A nucleosomes recruits both kinetochore components and also CENP-A molecules. CENP-I is also important for kinetochore assembly (Basilico et al., 2014;Hori et al., 2003;Liu et al., 2003;Nishihashi et al., 2002), and indeed we observed mitotic arrest upon CENP-I depletion (Fig. S4A). CENP-C, in parallel with CENP-I enhancement (reinforcement), thereby coordinates two important mechanisms required for accurate chromosome segregation, kinetochore and epigenetic centromere maintenance or memory (Fig. 8G).

Cell staining
Indirect immunofluorescent staining was performed as previously described (Ohzeki et al., 2012) with slight modifications. Antibodies used in this study are shown in Table S1. For Halo tag staining, cells expressing Halo-tag fusion proteins were treated with 2 nM Halo-tag TMR Ligand (Promega) for 12 h before fixation. For SNAP-CENP-A staining, cells were treated with 1 μM SNAP-cell-Block (NEB) to block the SNAP tag from 24 to 9 h before fixation and washed. 0.6 μM SNAP-Cell TMR-Star (NEB) was added 2 h before fixation and washed out 30 min before fixation. For chromosome spreads and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), cells were treated with 350 nM of TN-16 (WAKO) (Kitagawa et al., 1995) for 6 h in the growth medium. Mitotic cells were harvested by pipetting, incubated in a hypotonic buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.4, 1 mM EGTA and 40 mM KCl) for 10 min on ice and then spread on cover glass by Cytospin3 (Shandon). The subsequent immunostaining and FISH were carried out according to a previously described method (Ikeno et al., 1998;Ohzeki et al., 2002).

Plasmids expressing Halo and tetR-EYFP fusion proteins
For Halo fusion protein expression, Flexi Halo tag clones (Kazusa DNA research institute, http://www.kazusa.or.jp/kop/dsearch-e/) were used. Each gene is cloned into the C-terminus of the Halo tag. pJETY3, pJETY3-HJURP, -Suv39h1 or -Mis18α, which express each tetR-EYFP fusion protein, were as previously described in Ohzeki et al. (2012). For other tetR-EYFP fusions, PCR product or cDNA fragment cut out from each Flexi Halo tag clone vector was cloned into pJETY3.

Microscopy
For quantification analysis, z-stack images covering an entire nuclear signal were acquired on an Axio Observer.Z1 (Zeiss) microscope equipped with a CSU-X1 confocal scanner unit (Yokogawa), iXon3 DU897E-CS0 camera (Andor) and Plan-Apochromat 100×/1.46 oil lens (Zeiss) with a spacing of 0.22 μm using Andor iQ2 software (Andor). Images in Fig. 1C,E and Fig. 8A,C,E were acquired by same method. Other images were acquired on an Axio Observer.Z1 (Zeiss) equipped with a LSM700 scanning module and an Objective Plan-Apochromat 63×/1.46 oil lens (Zeiss) using ZEN 2009 software (Zeiss). z-stack images were acquired with a spacing of 0.38 μm. Images shown are maximum projection of several slices around the ectopic alphoid tetO integration site or whole nucleus. Counting assays were performed in the same microscopic condition. Visible signals on the ectopic site in interphase cells were counted.

Quantification of images
ImageJ (National Institutes of Health) was used for quantification. Before quantification, unequal illumination derived from optical system was corrected using the image of a uniform fluorescent. For HAC analysis (Fig. 1), the sum of the intensity of CENP-A signal on the alphoid tetO -HAC and endogenous centromeres in the same nucleus was measured (see Fig. S1A,B). The CENP-A signal on the HAC was normalized to the average CENP-A signal on endogenous centromeres. For endogenous centromeres analysis (Fig. 8), the sum of the intensity and the number of dot signals in the same nucleus were measured and calculated as the average of dot signals.

Immunoblotting and cell fractionation
Whole-cell extracts were prepared by lysing cells in Laemmli sample buffer (Bio-Rad) after 5 min incubation with 50 U/ml Pierce Universal Nuclease for Cell Lysis (Thermo) and 0.1% NP40 in PBS. Samples were separated by SDS-PAGE using Mini-PROTEAN TGX precast gels (Bio-Rad) and transferred onto membranes using Trans-Blot Turbo Transfer Pack (Bio-Rad). The membrane was blocked with 3% BSA and 0.1% Tween 20 in PBS and incubated with primary antibodies (in 1% BSA and 0.1% Tween 20 in PBS) overnight at 4°C and with secondary antibodies (with 1% low-fat milk and 0.1% Tween 20 in PBS) for 1 h at room temperature. Antibodies used in this study are shown in Table S1. SuperSignal West Femto Maximum Sensitivity Substrate (Thermo) was used for detection. For cell fractionation, cells were homogenized by passing through a G27 needle syringe 20 times in ice-cold lysis buffer [3.75 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 20 mM KCl, 0.5 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM DTT, 0.05 mM spermidine, 0.125 mM spermine, 0.1% NP40 and a 1/100 volume of Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Sigma)]. A onequarter volume of 1.5 M NaCl prepared in lysis buffer was added to the lysates and incubated for 30 min on ice. The lysates were centrifuged at 12,000 g for 10 min to fractionate supernatants and pellets. Laemmli sample buffer was added to supernatants. Pellets were washed once in PBS and lysed with Laemmli sample buffer and sonicated with a Bioruptor (Cosmo Bio) machine.