Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2024352715> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2024352715 endingPage "6140" @default.
- W2024352715 startingPage "6131" @default.
- W2024352715 abstract "Article15 November 2000free access Chromosomal localization links the SIN3–RPD3 complex to the regulation of chromatin condensation, histone acetylation and gene expression Lori A. Pile Lori A. Pile National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, Building 18T, Room 101, Bethesda, MD, 20892 USA Search for more papers by this author David A. Wassarman Corresponding Author David A. Wassarman National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, Building 18T, Room 101, Bethesda, MD, 20892 USA Search for more papers by this author Lori A. Pile Lori A. Pile National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, Building 18T, Room 101, Bethesda, MD, 20892 USA Search for more papers by this author David A. Wassarman Corresponding Author David A. Wassarman National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, Building 18T, Room 101, Bethesda, MD, 20892 USA Search for more papers by this author Author Information Lori A. Pile1 and David A. Wassarman 1 1National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Cell Biology and Metabolism Branch, Building 18T, Room 101, Bethesda, MD, 20892 USA *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2000)19:6131-6140https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/19.22.6131 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info Acetylation of core histone N-terminal tails influences chromatin condensation and transcription. To examine how the SIN3–RPD3 deacetylase complex contributes to these events in vivo, we examined binding of SIN3 and RPD3 to Drosophila salivary gland polytene chromosomes. The binding patterns of SIN3 and RPD3 were highly coincident, suggesting that the SIN3–RPD3 complex is the most abundant chromatin-bound RPD3 complex in salivary gland cells. SIN3– RPD3 binding was restricted to less condensed, hypoacetylated euchromatic interbands and was absent from moderately condensed, hyperacetylated euchromatic bands and highly condensed, differentially acetylated centric heterochromatin. Consistent with its demonstrated role in transcriptional repression, SIN3–RPD3 did not co-localize with RNA polymer ase II. Chromatin binding of the complex, mediated by SMRTER, decreased upon ecdysone-induced transcriptional activation but was restored when transcription was reduced. These results implicate SIN3–RPD3 in maintaining histone acetylation levels or patterns within less condensed chromatin domains and suggest that SIN3–RPD3 activity is required, in the absence of an activation signal, to repress transcription of particular genes within transcriptionally active chromatin domains. Introduction Transcription in eukaryotic cells takes place on a chromatin template composed of DNA packaged by core histones (Wolffe, 1998). Although chromatin is held together tightly through protein–protein and protein– DNA interactions, its structure is dynamic. Structural constraints on DNA imposed by histones can be altered by chromatin remodeling complexes such as SWI/SNF family members or by a variety of core histone post-translational modifications, including acetylation of evolutionarily conserved lysine residues in the N-terminal tails of histones H3 and H4 (Grunstein, 1997; Wu, 1997; Spencer and Davie, 1999). One model to explain how histone acetylation status affects gene expression proposes that the extent of chromatin condensation is directly correlated to the level of histone acetylation. Accordingly, hyperacetylation reduces the affinity of histone tails for DNA, resulting in less compact chromatin and increased accessibility of transcription factors to DNA (Lee et al., 1993; Vettese-Dadey et al., 1996; Hansen et al., 1998; Tse et al., 1998). A second, not necessarily mutually exclusive, model proposes that specific patterns of acetylation within histone tails dictate chromatin compaction and transcriptional activity (Turner, 1998; Strahl and Allis, 2000). It is well established that particular chromatin domains exhibit distinct patterns of histone acetylation. In Drosophila, antibodies against specific acetylated lysine (K) residues in histone H4 reveal that transcriptionally repressed centric heterochromatin is enriched in acetylated K12, while the transcriptionally hyperactive X chromosome in males is enriched in acetylated K16 (Turner et al., 1992). In yeast, the transcriptionally silenced mating type loci are enriched in acetylated K12 of H4 (Braunstein et al., 1996). Thus, specific acetylation patterns, perhaps combined with additional histone modifications, could serve as signals for binding of non-histone chromatin-binding factors that affect transcriptional activity (Strahl and Allis, 2000). It is also possible that specific acetylation patterns could serve as signals for recruitment of chromatin remodeling machines and/or heterochromatic factors (e.g. HP1) that modulate higher order chromatin packaging (Hansen et al., 1998; Strahl and Allis, 2000). The acetylation status of histones is determined by the relative activities of multiprotein complexes that possess acetylase or deacetylase activities. Mutations in the yeast RPD3 deacetylase lead to a global increase in acetylation of H3 (K14 and K9/18) and H4 (K5, K12 and K16) (Rundlett et al., 1996). RPD3 (HDAC 1 and 2 in mammals) is a component of a 2 MDa complex that also contains SIN3, RbAp46/48, and SIN3-associated polypeptides 18 (SAP18) and 30 (SAP30) (Ayer, 1999). The SIN3–RPD3 complex does not directly bind DNA, but instead is targeted to particular genes by interactions with sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins (such as Mad, p53 and UME6) or nuclear hormone receptor-specific corepressors (such as N-CoR, SMRT and SMRTER) (Pazin and Kadonaga, 1997; Knoepfler and Eisenman, 1999; Murphy et al., 1999; Tsai et al., 1999). Repression of UME6-regulated genes in yeast is associated with localized SIN3- and RPD3-dependent deacetylation of H3 and H4 (preferentially K5 and K12) (Kadosh and Struhl, 1998; Rundlett et al., 1998). SIN3-mediated repression is not completely RPD3 dependent. Mutations in SIN3 that prohibit RPD3 binding do not abolish transcriptional repression, suggesting that SIN3 has intrinsic repressor activity or may associate with other deacetylases (Laherty et al., 1997; Wong and Privalsky, 1998). Similarly, RPD3 functions independently of SIN3. RPD3 is a component of the Mi-2–NURD complex, which genetically interacts with the Drosophila repressor Hunchback (Kehle et al., 1998; Ayer, 1999). In addition, RPD3 directly interacts with corepressors, such as Drosophila Groucho (Chen et al., 1999). It is critical to note that the SIN3–RPD3 complex may not function exclusively in transcriptional repression. Studies in yeast have shown that the SIN3–RPD3 complex is required for maximal repression of uninduced genes and activation of induced genes (Vidal and Gaber, 1991; Vidal et al., 1991; Wang et al., 1994). Furthermore, the yeast SIN3–RPD3 complex reduces variegated transcriptional silencing of genes placed in close proximity to telomeres as well as stable silencing of genes at HM mating and rDNA loci (Vannier et al., 1996; Sun and Hampsey, 1999). In Drosophila, the role of RPD3 in regulating transcriptional silencing of euchromatic genes placed adjacent to heterochromatin by chromosomal rearrangements [position– effect variegation (PEV)] is less clear (Wakimoto, 1998). Mutations in RPD3 have been reported to enhance, suppress or not affect PEV (De Rubertis et al., 1996; Chen et al., 1999; Mannervik and Levine, 1999; Mottus et al., 2000). Mottus et al. (2000) propose that this discrepancy is due, in part, to the redundant activity of other deacetylases in RPD3 mutant flies. Drosophila encodes four other deacetylases with sequence similarity to RPD3 (Adams et al., 2000). To understand how the Drosophila SIN3–RPD3 complex regulates transcription in vivo, we have asked whether there is a correlation between chromatin binding of the SIN3–RPD3 complex and chromatin condensation, histone acetylation status or transcriptional activity. An ideal system to address such relationships is polytene chromosomes prepared from wild-type Drosophila salivary gland cells. First, differences in chromatin condensation along polytene chromosomes can be visualized using a light microscope (Ashburner, 1989). Secondly, antibodies can be used to define the location of chromatin-associated proteins and have been used to map positions of histones, including various forms of acetylated histones and RNA polymerase II (pol II), which serves as a marker for active transcription (Jamrich et al., 1977; Turner et al., 1992; Weeks et al., 1993). Thirdly, polytene chromosomes reflect the transcriptional activity and factor-binding properties associated with chromatin of diploid interphase cells (Hill et al., 1987). This study uncovers properties of the SIN3–RPD3 complex that are critical to understanding how and to what extent it regulates transcription in vivo. Results Specificity of antibodies against SIN3 and RPD3 Antibodies specific for Drosophila RPD3 or SIN3 proteins were raised against recombinant proteins containing regions of the proteins that are divergent in primary sequence from their respective mammalian homologs (Figure 1A). The RPD3 antibody recognized a single protein of ∼56 kDa on western blots of Drosophila embryo and salivary gland extracts, consistent with the predicted size of 58 kDa (De Rubertis et al., 1996) (Figure 1B). The SIN3 antibody recognized two bands of ∼200 and 220 kDa in embryo extracts, but only a single 220 kDa band in salivary gland extracts (Figure 1B). Three Drosophila SIN3 isoforms are predicted, based on alternatively spliced cDNA clones; two differ by only 35 amino acids and are predicted to co-migrate at ∼190 kDa, while the third has an additional 330 C-terminal amino acids and is predicted to be 220 kDa (Neufeld et al., 1998; Pennetta and Pauli, 1998). Whole-mount immunostaining of Drosophila embryos revealed that SIN3 and RPD3 are present in all nuclei of the ovary, pre- and post-blastoderm embryos, and larval salivary glands (data not shown; Pennetta and Pauli, 1998; Chen et al., 1999). This is consistent with a general requirement for these proteins throughout Drosophila development. In fact, SIN3 and RPD3 may play more roles in Drosophila than they do in yeast, since they are essential for viability of flies but not yeast (Vidal et al., 1990; De Rubertis et al., 1996; Neufeld et al., 1998; Mottus et al., 2000). Figure 1.SIN3 and RPD3 polyclonal antibodies are highly specific. (A) Schematic diagrams of SIN3 and RPD3 proteins. Solid bars indicate regions used as antigens for generating polyclonal antibodies. The RPD3 region does not include the deacetylase domain, indicated by a shaded box. The SIN3 region contains paired-amphipathic helix (PAH) 4, indicated by a solid box, and a conserved region of undefined function, indicated by a hatched box, but does not include PAH1–3 or the histone deacetylase interaction domain (HID). (B) Western blots of total protein extracted from 0–12 h Drosophila embryos (Emb.) and from larval salivary glands (S.G.) were probed with purified RPD3 antibody (lanes 1 and 2) or SIN3 antibody (lanes 3 and 4). The positions of protein molecular weight size markers are indicated on the left. Download figure Download PowerPoint The SIN3–RPD3 complex binds less-condensed interbands and is absent from more-condensed euchromatic bands and heterochromatin To identify loci associated with SIN3 and RPD3 in vivo, third instar larval salivary gland polytene chromosomes were stained with the antibodies described above. Chromosomes were counterstained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) to visualize the DNA (Figure 2A). DAPI staining is brightest in the condensed banded regions of euchromatin and in the constitutively condensed α-heterochromatin that comprises proximal regions of the six chromosome arms adjacent to the centromere (Ashburner, 1989; Gatti and Pimpinelli, 1992; Urata et al., 1995). β-heterochromatin, which connects α-heterochromatin to the euchromatic arms and is dispersed throughout chromosome 4, also stains brightly with DAPI. In salivary gland nuclei, the centric heterochromatin of all four chromosomes coalesces to form the chromocenter (‘C’ in Figure 2). DAPI staining is weak or absent in interbands and puffs. Chromatin condensation levels inferred from DAPI staining intensity are supported by atomic force microscopy, which reveals that interbands contain chromatin fibers that range from 11 to 300 nm, while bands contain predominantly 700 nm fibers (de Grauw et al., 1998). Figure 2.SIN3 and RPD3 co-localize throughout euchromatin but are absent from heterochromatin. (A–E) A single polytene chromosome spread stained for both SIN3 and RPD3 and counterstained with DAPI. In (E), the diamond and sphere indicate loci that stain predominantly for SIN3 and RPD3, respectively. (F) Higher magnification image of a spread co-stained for SIN3 and RPD3. (G–I) Higher magnification images of another spread stained for SIN3 and counterstained with DAPI. Arrows highlight the non-overlapping pattern of SIN3 and DAPI. Co-localization of two antibodies appears as yellow fluorescence. Chromosome arms (X, 2L, 2R, 3L, 3R and 4) are indicated at the tip, and the chromocenter is indicated by ‘C’. In (A–E), the chromocenter is broken into two pieces. Antibodies used for staining are indicated at the bottom of each panel. The color of the lettering matches the color of the fluorescence. Download figure Download PowerPoint Genes are present at different densities in each of these chromatin domains. Heterochromatin comprises approximately one-third of the total DNA in a diploid cell and is gene poor (Weiler and Wakimoto, 1995; Adams et al., 2000). α-heterochromatin is thought to lack genes and β-heterochromatin contains ∼40 genes. Euchromatic bands and interbands comprise approximately two-thirds of the total DNA and contain the balance of the RNA pol II genes. A limited number of studies comparing the distribution of genes in bands with that in interbands have found that some band–interband junctions have a high gene density and some bands have few genes per unit length (Hall et al., 1983; Spierer et al., 1983; Friedman et al., 1991). Detailed analysis of the Notch gene indicates that the transcriptional regulatory region maps to an interband, while the protein-coding region maps to the adjacent band (Rykowski et al., 1988). However, on a genome-wide basis, the question of gene density in bands versus interbands remains open. SIN3 and RPD3 localized to portions of interbands throughout the genome (Figure 2B–D and H and I). The staining patterns of antibodies against SIN3 and RPD3 did not overlap the DAPI pattern, with the exception of some telomeres, and to varying degrees of intensity appeared to include most regions weakly stained by DAPI. Identical results were observed in single chromosome spreads stained for both SIN3 and RPD3. No staining above background was observed with pre-immune sera (data not shown). These results argue that SIN3 and RPD3 function in Drosophila at loci with a particular degree of chromatin condensation. While SIN3 and RPD3 co-localized at almost all sites along the chromosome arms, the binding patterns were not identical (Figure 2E and F). The vast majority of interbands stained equally for SIN3 and RPD3 (yellow), but some are enriched for SIN3 (green) or RPD3 (red). If the intensity of fluorescence is a reflection of the number of binding sites for SIN3 and RPD3, as has been shown in the case of heat shock factor (Shopland et al., 1995), then these data suggest that SIN3 and RPD3 function together at most sites, as a SIN3–RPD3 complex, and independently at a minority of loci, perhaps as components of other complexes. The SIN3–RPD3 complex was not present in centric heterochromatin, along most of chromosome 4, at some telomeres or in euchromatic bands (Figure 2A–F). Within constitutively condensed heterochromatic and telomeric regions, SIN3 and RPD3 were observed in a small band at the extreme tips of chromosome arms 2R and X as well as in a broad band at the tips of 2L and 3L (Figure 2A–F). Drosophila telomeres contain heterochromatic repeats and HeT-A and TART genes, which are actively transcribed during Drosophila development; it is not known whether the genes are active in salivary gland cells (Weiler and Wakimoto, 1995; Pardue et al., 1996). Therefore, the SIN3–RPD3 complex may perform similar functions at telomeres and interbands, both of which contain genes that are not constitutively silenced. The SIN3–RPD3 complex is associated with chromatin containing hypoacetylated histones To determine the level of histone acetylation at loci bound by the SIN3–RPD3 complex, polytene chromosomes were stained with antibodies against both SIN3 and specific isoforms of histones H3 or H4, including non-acetylated H4 (H4nonAc), di-acetylated H3 and monoacetylated H4. The specificity of each of these antibodies has previously been demonstrated (Turner et al., 1989; Boggs et al., 1996; Taplick et al., 1998). This approach was used by Turner et al. (1992) to show that isoforms of H4 acetylated at K5, K8, K12 or K16 have distinct distribution patterns. In accord with these data, we found that antibodies against H4nonAc, H4 acetylated at lysine 5 (H4Ac5), H4Ac8, H4Ac12 or H3Ac9/14 stained subsets of bands, interbands and band–interband junctions (Figure 3). As previously reported using Chironomus polytene chromosomes (Turner et al., 1990), H4nonAc localized principally to interbands and was also commonly found at band– interband junctions (vertical arrow in Figure 3C). Finally, acetylated H3 and H4 predominantly localized to euchromatic bands that stain strongly with DAPI (Figure 3F–H and data not shown). Figure 3.Chromosomal sites of SIN3 binding and histone hyperacetylation are mutually exclusive. (A–E) A section of a single polytene chromosome spread stained for both H4nonAc and SIN3. Horizontal arrows indicate a region with strong H4nonAc and SIN3 binding. The vertical arrow indicates binding of H4nonAc at the band–interband junction. (F–J) A section of a single polytene chromosome spread stained for both SIN3 and H4Ac8. In (A–J), spheres indicate loci that stain strongly with DAPI and α-H4Ac8, but do not stain with α-H4nonAc or α-SIN3. (K–M) Polytene chromosome spreads co-stained for SIN3 and H4Ac12, H4Ac5 or H3Ac9/14, respectively. Co-localization of two antibodies appears as yellow fluorescence. Chromosome arms (2L, 2R and 4) are indicated at the tip and the chromocenter is indicated by ‘C’ in (K). Antibodies used for staining are indicated at the bottom of each panel. The color of the lettering matches the color of the fluorescence. Download figure Download PowerPoint Polytene chromosome spreads stained for both SIN3 and specific acetylated histone H3 or H4 isoforms revealed that sites of major SIN3 and H4nonAc binding are very similar, although not entirely overlapping, as might be predicted from their positions relative to DAPI staining. Note that while the binding patterns of SIN3 and H4nonAc are very similar, the extent of co-localization does not match the high degree of SIN3 and RPD3 co-localization (Figure 3E, compare with Figure 2E and F). Often, the region bound by SIN3 was slightly shifted relative to H4nonAc, such that only a portion of the bands overlapped (horizontal arrow in Figure 3B, D and E). In striking contrast, strong staining with anti-SIN3 antibodies and strong staining with antibodies against acetylated histone were mutually exclusive (Figure 3H–M). Although there were some locations of overlap, the relative intensity of staining was not similar. Taken together, these data indicate that SIN3 is associated with loci that contain unacetylated or weakly acetylated histones and is not associated with loci that contain histones hyperacetylated at any of the lysine positions examined. Presumably, the same is true for RPD3, since the patterns of SIN3 and RPD3 binding were highly coincident (Figure 2). The SIN3–RPD3 complex is not associated with actively transcribed loci Previous studies have shown that active transcription is concentrated in the less-condensed interband and puff regions of polytene chromosomes (Zhimulev and Belyaeva, 1975; Visa et al., 1991). Furthermore, ribonucleoprotein particles and both the paused and elongating forms of RNA pol II have been localized to these same regions (Jamrich et al., 1977; Mott and Hill, 1986; Weeks et al., 1993). To examine directly the relationship between the SIN3–RPD3 complex and active transcription, polytene chomosomes were stained for both SIN3 and RNA pol II. The antibody against RNA pol II is directed against subunit IIc and recognizes both paused and elongating forms of the polymerase (Skantar and Greenleaf, 1995). As presented in Figure 4, the bulk of SIN3 and RNA pol II bound distinct regions of euchromatic interbands. There were numerous unequal bands (green or red) and very few equal intensity bands (yellow). Thus, while the SIN3– RPD3 complex was bound at loci containing protein-coding genes, the majority of the complex did not bind regions that are actively transcribed by RNA pol II. These data support the model that the SIN3–RPD3 complex is involved in transcriptional repression in vivo. Figure 4.SIN3 and RNA pol II do not co-localize on polytene chromosomes. (A–C) A single polytene chromosome spread stained for SIN3 and RNA pol IIc. (D–F) Higher magnification images of a different spread co-stained for SIN3 and RNA pol IIc. Co-localization of two antibodies appears as yellow fluorescence. Chromosome arms (X, 2L, 2R, 3L, 3R and 4) are indicated at the tip; the chromocenter is indicated by a C. The red arrow indicates the puff at 74EF and the yellow arrow indicates the puff at 75B, as in Figure 6. Antibodies used for staining are indicated at the bottom of each panel. The color of the lettering matches the color of the fluorescence. Download figure Download PowerPoint The dynamic pattern of SIN3–RPD3 complex binding to ecdysone-regulated loci suggests that it functions to repress uninduced genes To address the question of whether binding of the SIN3–RPD3 complex is abrogated when a gene becomes transcriptionally active, we focused on ecdysone-inducible genes, which comprise interband chromatin at 74EF and 75B. In Drosophila, pulses of the steroid hormone ecdysone control gene expression patterns, which trigger the metamorphosis from larva to adult (Ashburner, 1972; Thummel, 1996). The beginning of the ecdysone response is marked by chromatin decondensation at 74EF and 75B during puff stage 2 [PS2, as designated by Ashburner (1972)]. Puffing largely parallels transcriptional activation of the E74 and E75 genes, except for E74A transcripts, which remain abundant until PS11 while the 74EF puff regresses between PS8 and PS10. These morphological and molecular events are directed by the nuclear hormone receptors, ecdysone receptor (EcR) and ultraspiracle (USP), the Drosophila retinoid X receptor (RXR) homolog (Yao et al., 1992, 1993; Thomas et al., 1993). EcR–USP heterodimers regulate transcription in an ecdysone-dependent manner, repressing target genes in the absence of ecdysone and activating them in its presence (Yao et al., 1992, 1993; Thomas et al., 1993; Tsai et al., 1999). Tsai et al. (1999) have shown that the corepressor SMRTER (a protein with sequence similarity to the mammalian nuclear hormone receptor corepressor SMRT) mediates repression by interacting with EcR and SIN3. These studies predict that SMRTER and SIN3 should co-localize on polytene chromosomes, and that SMRTER and SIN3 chromatin-binding levels may change during the ecdysone pulse. Co-staining of polytene chromosomes showed that SIN3 and SMRTER binding patterns largely overlapped throughout the genome (Figure 5A–D). Sites of strong staining with anti-SMRTER antibodies are sites of strong staining with anti-SIN3 antibodies. Thus, it appears that a major mechanism for targeting SIN3 to specific chromosomal loci is through association with SMRTER. However, there were sites of strong staining with anti-SIN3 antibody that were weakly stained or not stained by anti-SMRTER antibody, implying that SIN3 is targeted by other corepressors or DNA-binding proteins. Figure 5.SIN3 binds steroid hormone-regulated loci. (A) A single polytene chromosome spread stained for both SIN3 and SMRTER. (B–D) Higher magnification images of a section of the spread in (A). Spheres indicate loci strongly stained for both SIN3 and SMRTER (yellow); a diamond indicates a locus stained for SIN3 but not SMRTER (green). Co-localization of two antibodies appears as yellow fluorescence. Chromosome arms (X, 2L, 2R, 3L, 3R and 4) are indicated at the tip and the chromocenter is indicated by a C. Antibodies used for staining are indicated at the bottom of each panel. The color of the lettering matches the color of the fluorescence. (E and F) High magnification images of chromosome 4 of spreads stained with SIN3 prepared from flies of a wild-type (E) or an Sgs-4 transgenic (F) line. The transgenic line has a fluorescent signal at the P-element insertion site at 102D3-5 (yellow arrow) in addition to the single strong band present in the wild-type line (red arrow). Download figure Download PowerPoint To confirm that the polytene staining assay accurately reflects SIN3 association with individual genes that are developmentally regulated, we asked whether a new SIN3-binding site is present in a fly strain containing a salivary gland secretion protein-4 (Sgs-4) transgene (Lehmann and Korge, 1996). Sgs-4 is one of the best studied of the Sgs genes that are induced by ecdysone in the middle of the third larval instar and are downregulated at the end of the third larval instar. The Sgs-4 P-element transgene is composed of four copies of the Sgs-4 regulatory region (−567 to −151). This region contains sites that bind the EcR–USP heterodimer in vitro (Lehmann and Korge, 1995). Figure 5E and F reveals that in this strain a new fluorescent signal was detected at the P-element integration site, 102D3-5 on the fourth chromosome, in late third instar larval salivary glands. Thus, SIN3 binding is detected on a single gene at a time in development when the gene is transcriptionally repressed. Furthermore, binding of SIN3 to polytene chromosomes changes as a gene progresses through the transcription cycle from a transcriptionally repressed to an active state and then back to a repressed state. This is evident upon analysis of SIN3 binding at 74EF and 75B from PS1 to PS9, during which time the transcription cycle is correlated with the formation and regression of puffs (Ashburner, 1972; Thummel, 1996; Richards, 1997). At PS1, SIN3 moderately bound unpuffed 74EF and 75B (Figure 6A and B), but binding was absent or weak at PS4 (Figure 6C and D) and up through PS6 (Figure 6E and F) when puffing was apparent. Strong USP staining persisted during PS4–PS6, supporting the idea that USP is required for transcriptional activation at these loci (data not shown). USP and RNA pol II staining of PS4–PS6 puffs also argues that the lack of SIN3 staining at these stages is not due to an inability to detect proteins bound at highly decondensed loci (Figure 4A and C). At PS8, SIN3 moderately bound the regressing puffs (Figure 6G and H) and by PS9 strongly bound the almost completely regressed puffs (Figure 6I and J). Similar analysis revealed that RPD3 bound 74EF and 75B with kinetics indistinguishable from those of SIN3 (data not shown). Thus, high levels of SIN3–RPD3 complex binding correlate with transcriptional repression and low levels with transcriptional activation. Figure 6.SIN3 binding changes during the transcription cycle. (A, C, E, G and I) Images of DAPI-stained polytene chromosome spreads. (B, D, F, H and J) Images of corresponding polytene chromosome spreads stained with SIN3 antibody. Spreads are arranged according to developmental timing, from PS1 (A and B) to PS9 (I and J). In each panel, the red arrow indicates the puff at 74EF, the yellow arrow the puff at 75B and the white arrow the puff at 78D. The degree of puffing at 78D relative to that at 74EF and 75B was one of several criteria used to determine the puff stage, as designated by Ashburner (1972). Panels are shown at the same magnification. Download figure Download PowerPoint Acetylated H3 or H4 staining was rarely observed in the transcriptionally active 74EF and 75B puffs (data not shown and Turner et al., 1992). As suggested by recent studies in yeast and Drosophila, this may be due to the transient or localized nature of histone acetylation during gene activation (Cavalli and Paro, 1999; Krebs et al., 1999). Discussion The determination of SIN3 and RPD3 chromosome-binding patterns in wild-type interphase cells has provided a framework for understanding how these proteins affect chromatin condensation, histone acetylation and transcription in vivo. The SIN3–RPD3 complex is the predominant form of chromatin-bound SIN3 and RPD3 The binding patterns of SIN3 and RPD3 on polytene chromosomes were highly coincident, suggesting that the SIN3–RPD3 complex is the major form of chromatin-bound SIN3 and RPD3 in salivary gland cells. The extent of co-localiza" @default.
- W2024352715 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2024352715 creator A5017462551 @default.
- W2024352715 creator A5035298580 @default.
- W2024352715 date "2000-11-15" @default.
- W2024352715 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2024352715 title "Chromosomal localization links the SIN3-RPD3 complex to the regulation of chromatin condensation, histone acetylation and gene expression" @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1044115852 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1511815964 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1540264737 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1567517848 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1587031596 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1620498319 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W168881211 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1830935920 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1855624261 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1863647524 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1867241955 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1870470978 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1905288112 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1909709288 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1933321168 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1949082125 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1967769642 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1968112541 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1971894855 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1973672022 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1974127944 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1976519371 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1976851982 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1981939829 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1982073044 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1982514391 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1991085321 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1993306864 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1993521976 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1996504826 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1996978236 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1997521162 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1997970296 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W1998904806 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2000160108 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2000517171 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2002483275 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2002698073 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2005272111 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2021550045 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2022506476 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2023865101 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2032272882 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2037810819 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2038661934 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2040506727 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2042271211 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2044465687 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2044872574 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2044890693 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2048438868 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2052820593 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2054339826 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2054600961 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2055441692 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2055579158 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2055597783 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2057564306 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2069875752 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2070934419 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2073386445 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2074380974 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2074868123 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2094017143 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2097948853 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2100931229 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2104788426 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2109192389 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2121392264 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2124412471 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2136392800 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2141652419 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2143206501 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2146358743 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2149732532 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2151915359 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W2406143789 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W4232420716 @default.
- W2024352715 cites W972310272 @default.
- W2024352715 doi "https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/19.22.6131" @default.
- W2024352715 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/305822" @default.
- W2024352715 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11080159" @default.
- W2024352715 hasPublicationYear "2000" @default.
- W2024352715 type Work @default.
- W2024352715 sameAs 2024352715 @default.
- W2024352715 citedByCount "76" @default.
- W2024352715 countsByYear W20243527152012 @default.
- W2024352715 countsByYear W20243527152013 @default.
- W2024352715 countsByYear W20243527152014 @default.
- W2024352715 countsByYear W20243527152016 @default.
- W2024352715 countsByYear W20243527152017 @default.