scholarly journals The LRS and SIN Domains: Two Structurally Equivalent but Functionally Distinct Nucleosomal Surfaces Required for Transcriptional Silencing

2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (23) ◽  
pp. 9045-9059 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Fry ◽  
Anne Norris ◽  
Michael Cosgrove ◽  
Jef D. Boeke ◽  
Craig L. Peterson

ABSTRACT Genetic experiments have identified two structurally similar nucleosomal domains, SIN and LRS, required for transcriptional repression at genes regulated by the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex or for heterochromatic gene silencing, respectively. Each of these domains consists of histone H3 and H4 L1 and L2 loops that form a DNA-binding surface at either superhelical location (SHL) ±2.5 (LRS) or SHL ±0.5 (SIN). Here we show that alterations in the LRS domain do not result in Sin− phenotypes, nor does disruption of the SIN domain lead to loss of ribosomal DNA heterochromatic gene silencing (Lrs− phenotype). Furthermore, whereas disruption of the SIN domain eliminates intramolecular folding of nucleosomal arrays in vitro, alterations in the LRS domain have no effect on chromatin folding in vitro. In contrast to these dissimilarities, we find that the SIN and LRS domains are both required for recruitment of Sir2p and Sir4p to telomeric and silent mating type loci, suggesting that both surfaces can contribute to heterochromatin formation. Our study shows that structurally similar nucleosomal surfaces provide distinct functionalities in vivo and in vitro.

1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 4366-4378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert F. Ryan ◽  
David C. Schultz ◽  
Kasirajan Ayyanathan ◽  
Prim B. Singh ◽  
Josh R. Friedman ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Krüppel-associated box (KRAB) domains are present in approximately one-third of all human zinc finger proteins (ZFPs) and are potent transcriptional repression modules. We have previously cloned a corepressor for the KRAB domain, KAP-1, which is required for KRAB-mediated repression in vivo. To characterize the repression mechanism utilized by KAP-1, we have analyzed the ability of KAP-1 to interact with murine (M31 and M32) and human (HP1α and HP1γ) homologues of the HP1 protein family, a class of nonhistone heterochromatin-associated proteins with a well-established epigenetic gene silencing function in Drosophila. In vitro studies confirmed that KAP-1 is capable of directly interacting with M31 and hHP1α, which are normally found in centromeric heterochromatin, as well as M32 and hHP1γ, both of which are found in euchromatin. Mapping of the region in KAP-1 required for HP1 interaction showed that amino acid substitutions which abolish HP1 binding in vitro reduce KAP-1 mediated repression in vivo. We observed colocalization of KAP-1 with M31 and M32 in interphase nuclei, lending support to the biochemical evidence that M31 and M32 directly interact with KAP-1. The colocalization of KAP-1 with M31 is sometimes found in subnuclear territories of potential pericentromeric heterochromatin, whereas colocalization of KAP-1 and M32 occurs in punctate euchromatic domains throughout the nucleus. This work suggests a mechanism for the recruitment of HP1-like gene products by the KRAB-ZFP–KAP-1 complex to specific loci within the genome through formation of heterochromatin-like complexes that silence gene activity. We speculate that gene-specific repression may be a consequence of the formation of such complexes, ultimately leading to silenced genes in newly formed heterochromatic chromosomal environments.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 7610-7620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A. Moore ◽  
Josef Ozer ◽  
Moreh Salunek ◽  
Gwenael Jan ◽  
Dennis Zerby ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The TATA binding protein (TBP) plays a central role in eukaryotic and archael transcription initiation. We describe the isolation of a novel 23-kDa human protein that displays 41% identity to TBP and is expressed in most human tissue. Recombinant TBP-related protein (TRP) displayed barely detectable binding to consensus TATA box sequences but bound with slightly higher affinities to nonconsensus TATA sequences. TRP did not substitute for TBP in transcription reactions in vitro. However, addition of TRP potently inhibited basal and activated transcription from multiple promoters in vitro and in vivo. General transcription factors TFIIA and TFIIB bound glutathioneS-transferase–TRP in solution but failed to stimulate TRP binding to DNA. Preincubation of TRP with TFIIA inhibited TBP-TFIIA-DNA complex formation and addition of TFIIA overcame TRP-mediated transcription repression. TRP transcriptional repression activity was specifically reduced by mutations in TRP that disrupt the TFIIA binding surface but not by mutations that disrupt the TFIIB or DNA binding surface of TRP. These results suggest that TFIIA is a primary target of TRP transcription inhibition and that TRP may modulate transcription by a novel mechanism involving the partial mimicry of TBP functions.


1999 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 2817-2827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth S. Haswell ◽  
Erin K. O’Shea

ABSTRACT The Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene PHO5 is an excellent system with which to study regulated changes in chromatin structure. The PHO5 promoter is packaged into four positioned nucleosomes under repressing conditions; upon induction, the structure of these nucleosomes is altered such that the promoter DNA becomes accessible to nucleases. We report here the development and characterization of an in vitro system in which partially purified PHO5 minichromosomes undergo promoter chromatin remodeling. Several hallmarks of thePHO5 chromatin transition in vivo were reproduced in this system. Chromatin remodeling of PHO5minichromosomes required the transcription factors Pho4 and Pho2, was localized to the promoter region of PHO5, and was independent of the chromatin-remodeling complex Swi-Snf. In vitro chromatin remodeling also required the addition of fractionated nuclear extract and hydrolyzable ATP. This in vitro system should serve as a useful tool for identifying the components required for this reaction and for elucidating the mechanism by which the PHO5promoter chromatin structure is changed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. nrs.07010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine C. Thompson

The activity of nuclear receptors is modulated by numerous coregulatory factors. Corepressors can either mediate the ability of nuclear receptors to repress transcription, or can inhibit transactivation by nuclear receptors. As we learn more about the mechanisms of transcriptional repression, the importance of repression by nuclear receptors in development and disease has become clear. The protein encoded by the mammalian Hairless (Hr) gene was shown to be a corepressor by virtue of its functional similarity to the well-established corepressors N-CoR and SMRT. Mutation of the Hr gene results in congenital hair loss in both mice and men. Investigation of Hairless function both in vitro and in mouse models in vivo has revealed a critical role in maintaining skin and hair by regulating the differentiation of epithelial stem cells, as well as a putative role in regulating gene expression via chromatin remodeling.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (30) ◽  
pp. 8107-8112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raquel Martin-Arevalillo ◽  
Max H. Nanao ◽  
Antoine Larrieu ◽  
Thomas Vinos-Poyo ◽  
David Mast ◽  
...  

Transcriptional repression involves a class of proteins called corepressors that link transcription factors to chromatin remodeling complexes. In plants such asArabidopsis thaliana, the most prominent corepressor is TOPLESS (TPL), which plays a key role in hormone signaling and development. Here we present the crystallographic structure of theArabidopsisTPL N-terminal region comprising the LisH and CTLH (C-terminal to LisH) domains and a newly identified third region, which corresponds to a CRA domain. Comparing the structure of TPL with the mammalian TBL1, which shares a similar domain structure and performs a parallel corepressor function, revealed that the plant TPLs have evolved a new tetramerization interface and unique and highly conserved surface for interaction with repressors. Using site-directed mutagenesis, we validated those surfaces in vitro and in vivo and showed that TPL tetramerization and repressor binding are interdependent. Our results illustrate how evolution used a common set of protein domains to create a diversity of corepressors, achieving similar properties with different molecular solutions.


2003 ◽  
Vol 23 (17) ◽  
pp. 6210-6220 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pei-Wen Hsiao ◽  
Christy J. Fryer ◽  
Kevin W. Trotter ◽  
Weidong Wang ◽  
Trevor K. Archer

ABSTRACT Nuclear hormone receptors are ligand-dependent transcriptional regulators that modulate chromatin structure. However, the precise molecular mechanisms by which receptors recruit chromatin-remodeling activity are not fully elucidated. We show that in the absence of its ligand-binding domain, the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) is able to interact with both nuclear receptor coactivators and the BRG1 chromatin-remodeling complex in vivo. Individually, the GR makes direct interactions with BRG1-associated factor 60a (BAF60a) and BAF57, but not with BRG1, BAF155, or BAF170. Further, BAF60a possesses at least two interaction surfaces, one for GR and BRG1 and a second for BAF155 and BAF170. A GR mutant, GR(R488Q), that fails to interact with BAF60a in vitro has reduced chromatin-remodeling activity and reduced transcriptional activity from the promoter assembled as chromatin in vivo. Stable expression of a BAF60a truncation mutant, BAF60a4-140, caused chromatin-specific loss of GR functions in vivo. In the presence of the BAF60a mutant, the GR fails to interact with the BRG1 complex and consequently is also deficient in its ability to activate transcription from chromatin. Thus, in addition to previously identified BAF250, BAF60a may provide another critical and direct link between nuclear receptors and the BRG1 complex that is required for promoter recruitment and subsequent chromatin remodeling.


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 637-637
Author(s):  
Daichi Inoue ◽  
Chew Guo-Liang ◽  
Bo Liu ◽  
Stanley C Lee ◽  
Brittany C Michel ◽  
...  

Mutations in the RNA splicing factor SF3B1 are common in MDS and other myeloid malignancies. SF3B1 mutations promote expression of mRNAs that use an aberrant, intron proximal 3' splice site (ss). Despite the consistency of this finding, linking aberrant splicing changes to disease pathogenesis has been a challenge. Here we identify aberrant splicing and downregulated expression of BRD9, a member of the recently described ATP-dependent non-canonical BAF (ncBAF) chromatin remodeling complex, across SF3B1 mutant leukemias. In so doing, we identify a novel role for altered ncBAF function in hematopoiesis and MDS. To systematically identify functionally important aberrant splicing events created by mutant SF3B1, we integrated differential splicing events in SF3B1 mutant versus wild-type MDS with a positive enrichment CRISPR screen mimicking splicing changes induced by mutant SF3B1 that promote NMD (non-sense mediated mRNA decay). We tested whether loss of any gene functionally inactivated by SF3B1 mutations promoted transformation of Ba/F3 and 32D cells. This identified a specific NMD-inducing aberrant splicing event in BRD9 which promoted cytokine independence (Fig. A) and exhibited striking aberrant splicing across CLL and MDS and across all mutational hotspots in SF3B1 (Fig. B). SF3B1 mutations cause exonization of a normally intronic sequence in BRD9, resulting in inclusion of a poison exon that interrupts BRD9's reading frame (Fig. C) and reduced BRD9 mRNA and protein expression through NMD (Fig. D). We confirmed that mutant SF3B1 suppressed full-length BRD9 levels without generating truncated BRD9 protein. Loss of BRD9 impaired ncBAF complex formation as indicated by abolished interaction between the ncBAF specific component GLTSCR1 and the ATPase subunit BRG1 upon chemical or spliceosomal BRD9 ablation (Fig. D). Given that prior work has linked mutant SF3B1 to use of aberrant 3' ss, we sought to understand the molecular basis for aberrant exon inclusion in BRD9 by mutant SF3B1. Lariat sequencing of SF3B1 mutant versus WT K562 cells and BRD9 minigene analyses identified use of a deep intronic branchpoint adenosine by mutant SF3B1 to promote BRD9 poison exon inclusion (Fig. E). The data above suggest a role for BRD9 downregulation in SF3B1 mutant leukemia. While prior work indicated that BRD9 is required in MLL-rearranged AML (Hohmman et al. Nature Chemical Biology 2016), the role of BRD9 in normal hematopoiesis or other subtypes of myeloid neoplasms has not been evaluated. Genetic downregulation of BRD9 in normal human hematopoietic progenitors from cord blood promoted myelopoiesis while impairing megakaryopoiesis. Interestingly and unexpectedly, BRD9 loss in CD34+ cells promoted terminal erythroid differentiation in vitro. To further evaluate BRD9's role in hematopoiesis in vivo, we also generated mice with inducible knockout of the bromodomain of BRD9 (required for BRD9 function) and generation of a frameshift transcript resulting in reduced Brd9 expression (Fig. F). Loss of Brd9 resulted in macrocytosis with bone marrow erythroid dysplasia in a dosage-dependent manner, along with impaired lymphopoiesis and myeloid skewing. Moreover, competitive transplantation of hematopoietic precursors from these mice revealed that ablation of Brd9 function impaired lymphoid reconstitution while promoting advantage of myeloid cells and hematopoietic precursors (Fig. G-I). In myeloid leukemia cells, introduction of SF3B1K700E or downregulation of BRD9 resulted in increased chromatin accessibility at promoters with a significant overlap in commonly upregulated genes. This finding suggests shared epigenetic effects of SF3B1K700E mutations and BRD9 loss (Fig. J). These data identify aberrant splicing of BRD9 across the spectrum of SF3B1 mutant cancers and identify a novel role for downregulation of ncBAF function in MDS pathogenesis. Consistent with human genetic data, genetic ablation of BRD9 function in mouse and human hematopoietic cells resulted in myeloid skewing and dyserythropoiesis. These data suggest that targeted correction of aberrant BRD9 splicing might serve as a novel therapeutic approach for SF3B1-mutant leukemias. Of note, treatment with drugs impairing the binding of mutant SF3B1 to RNA resulted in a dose-dependent rescue of aberrant BRD9 splicing in vitro (Fig. K) and in treatment of an SF3B1 mutant AML patient-derived xenograft in vivo. Figure Disclosures Kadoch: Foghorn Therapeutics: Consultancy, Equity Ownership, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.


2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1673-1688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuan Shirley Li ◽  
Patrick Trojer ◽  
Tatsushi Matsumura ◽  
Jessica E. Treisman ◽  
Naoko Tanese

ABSTRACT The mammalian SWI/SNF chromatin-remodeling complex facilitates DNA access by transcription factors and the transcription machinery. The characteristic member of human SWI/SNF-A is BAF250/ARID1, of which there are two isoforms, BAF250a/ARID1a and BAF250b/ARID1b. Here we report that BAF250b complexes purified from mammalian cells contain elongin C (Elo C), a BC box binding component of an E3 ubiquitin ligase. BAF250b was found to have a BC box motif, associate with Elo C in a BC box-dependent manner, and, together with cullin 2 and Roc1, assemble into an E3 ubiquitin ligase. The BAF250b BC box mutant protein was unstable in vivo and was autoubiquitinated in a manner similar to that for the VHL BC box mutants. The discovery that BAF250 is part of an E3 ubiquitin ligase adds an enzymatic function to the chromatin-remodeling complex SWI/SNF-A. The immunopurified BAF250b E3 ubiquitin ligase was found to target histone H2B at lysine 120 for monoubiquitination in vitro. To date, all H2B monoubiquitination was attributed to the human homolog of yeast Bre1 (RNF20/40). Mutation of Drosophila osa, the homolog of BAF250, or depletion of BAF250 by RNA interference (RNAi) in cultured human cells resulted in global decreases in monoubiquitinated H2B, implicating BAF250 in the cross talk of histone modifications.


2009 ◽  
Vol 23 (S1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Swetansu Kumar Hota ◽  
Christine S Hemeryck ◽  
B Franklin Pugh ◽  
Blaine Bartholomew

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elzbieta Sarnowska ◽  
Szymon Kubala ◽  
Pawel Cwiek ◽  
Sebastian Sacharowski ◽  
Paulina Oksinska ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Arabidopsis ERECTA family (ERf) of leucine-rich repeat receptor-like kinases (LRR-RLKs), comprising ERECTA (ER), ERECTA-LIKE 1 (ERL1) and ERECTA-LIKE 2 (ERL2), control epidermal patterning, inflorescence architecture, stomata development, and hormonal signaling. Here we show that the er/erl1/erl2 triple mutant exhibits impaired gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis and perception alongside broad transcriptional changes. ERf proteins interact in the nucleus, via kinase domains, with the SWI3B subunit of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex (CRCs). The er/erl1/erl2 triple mutant exhibits reduced SWI3B protein level and affected nucleosomal chromatin structure. The ER kinase phosphorylates SWI3B in vitro, and the inactivation of all ERf proteins leads to the decreased phosphorylation of SWI3B protein in vivo. Correlation between DELLA overaccumulation and SWI3B proteasomal degradation together with the physical interaction of SWI3B with DELLA proteins explain the lack of RGA accumulation in the GA- and SWI3B-deficient erf mutant plants. Co-localization of ER and SWI3B on GID1 (GIBBERELLIN INSENSITIVE DWARF 1) DELLA target gene promoter regions and abolished SWI3B binding to GID1 promoters in er/erl1/erl2 plants supports the conclusion that ERf-SWI/SNF CRC interaction is important for transcriptional control of GA receptors. Thus, the involvement of ERf proteins in transcriptional control of gene expression, and observed similar features for human HER2 (Epidermal Growth Family Receptor-member), indicate an exciting target for further studies of evolutionarily conserved non-canonical functions of eukaryotic membrane receptors.ONE SENTENCE SUMMARYERECTA leucine-rich receptor-like kinase and SWI3B subunit of SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex cooperate in direct transcriptional control of GID1 genes in Arabidopsis.


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