Abstract
The generation of somatic cell hybridization-derived cell lines between highly divergent species affords the opportunity to examine the concept of ‘genome dominance’ in the context of genetic and epigenetic changes. While whole-scale genome dominance has been well documented in natural hybrids among closely related species, an examination of centromere position and sequence retention in 2 marsupial-eutherian hybrids has revealed a mechanism for ‘centromere dominance’ as a driving force in the generation of stable somatic cell hybrids following an initial period of genomic instability. While one somatic cell hybrid cell line appeared to retain marsupial centromere sequences which remained competent to recruit the centromere-specific histone variant CENP-A in a Chinese hamster background, fusion events between marsupial and mouse-derived chromosomes in another hybrid line led to a centromere sequence conversion from one species to the other. We postulate that the necessity to maintain an epigenetically defined centromere following genome hybridization may be responsible for retention of specific chromosomes and may result in rapid sequence turnover to facilitate the recruitment of CENP-A containing histones.