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Mutational Analysis of a Histone Deacetylase in Drosophila melanogaster: Missense Mutations Suppress Gene Silencing Associated With Position Effect Variegation
Randy Mottusa, Richard E. Sobel1,a, and Thomas A. Grigliattiaa Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada
Corresponding author: Thomas A. Grigliatti, Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Blvd., Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4, Canada., grigliat{at}zoology.ubc.ca (E-mail)
Communicating editor: S. HENIKOFF
| ABSTRACT |
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For many years it has been noted that there is a correlation between acetylation of histones and an increase in transcriptional activity. One prediction, based on this correlation, is that hypomorphic or null mutations in histone deacetylase genes should lead to increased levels of histone acetylation and result in increased levels of transcription. It was therefore surprising when it was reported, in both yeast and fruit flies, that mutations that reduced or eliminated a histone deacetylase resulted in transcriptional silencing of genes subject to telomeric and heterochromatic position effect variegation (PEV). Here we report the first mutational analysis of a histone deacetylase in a multicellular eukaryote by examining six new mutations in HDAC1 of Drosophila melanogaster. We observed a suite of phenotypes accompanying the mutations consistent with the notion that HDAC1 acts as a global transcriptional regulator. However, in contrast to recent findings, here we report that specific missense mutations in the structural gene of HDAC1 suppress the silencing of genes subject to PEV. We propose that the missense mutations reported here are acting as antimorphic mutations that "poison" the deacetylase complex and propose a model that accounts for the various phenotypes associated with lesions in the deacetylase locus.
THE basic unit of chromatin is the nucleosome, which consists of ~146 bp of DNA wrapped around the four core histones arranged in an octamer. The amino-terminal tails of the histones, in particular H3 and H4, are highly conserved and contain four lysine (K) residues that can be reversibly acetylated (![]()
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It has now been demonstrated that some transcriptional activators and members of the transcriptional machinery, including GCN5 (![]()
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Conversely, histone hypoacetylation is generally correlated with transcriptional inactivity, telomeric and centromeric heterochromatin, and silenced areas of the genome, such as the donor mating-type loci in yeast (![]()
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It has been suggested that acetylation of the lysines in the N-terminal tails of the histones may function by opening up chromatin structure because it eliminates positive charges that may reduce nucleosome/DNA or nucleosome/nucleosome interactions (![]()
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However, a number of unexpected observations have been documented in HDAC null mutations. In RPD3 deletion lines of S. cerevisiae, a small subset of genes were more strongly repressed rather than activated. In addition, careful analysis of the genes normally subject to regulation by RPD3 demonstrated that when they were activated in the RPD3 null strains, the level of transcription of target genes was lower than in wild-type strains (![]()
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Position effect variegation (PEV) most often occurs when a chromosomal rearrangement abuts a normally euchromatic region of a chromosome, containing active genes, to a breakpoint in centromeric heterochromatin (![]()
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Here we report the isolation and characterization of six new mutations in the HDAC1 gene of Drosophila melanogaster. This is the first instance of a mutational analysis of an HDAC in a multicellular eukaryotic organism. In contrast to previous findings, we report that specific missense mutations in the structural gene of HDAC1 suppress silencing and increase the expression of a w+ gene subject to PEV. We propose that these missense mutations are acting as antimorphic mutations that poison the deacetylase complex, without eliminating it, and that this in turn causes hyperacetylation of histones and activation of genes normally subject to silencing as a result of PEV. Furthermore, we show that null, or very severe, hypomorphic mutations have no significant effect on PEV. We further propose that the unexpected observations noted above in the RPD3 deletion strains in S. cerevisiae, the P insertion line in D. melanogaster, and the phenotypes of our missense, hypomorphic, and null mutations can be explained by a model based on the observations that HDAC1, and its homologues, are members of a structurally related, multidomain family of proteins that forms part of a large multiprotein complex. Finally, we argue that this model will be relevant in a wide variety of biological applications and as such suggests a need for the isolation and characterization of dominant mutations.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Fly stocks:
Flies were reared on standard Drosophila media at 22°. Genetic markers used here are described in the text or can be found in ![]()
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The HDAC1 mutations that suppress PEV (hereafter called the Su(var) HDAC1s) described here were induced in a previously described ethyl methane sulfonate screen for dominant suppressors of PEV (![]()
P-element insertion strains were obtained from the Bloomington Stock Center and were screened for lethality with the Su(var) HDAC1s. One insert line, l(3)04556 (hereafter called P-UTR), was almost completely lethal under normal culture conditions with all members of the Su(var) HDAC1 group. However, significant numbers of male and female adults could be reared to adulthood if the fly cultures were uncrowded and the media supplemented with live yeast, but survivors are sterile and die within a few days.
The Su(var) HDAC1 group was originally localized because all members failed to complement a small deficiency, Df(3L)GN24. Because this deficiency completely removes the HDAC1 gene it was employed in the lethal phase analysis as a null allele. Males of the constitution wm4/Y; Df(3L)GN24/+ were generated by crossing wm4/wm4; +/+ females to +/Y; Df(3L)GN24/TM3 Sb Ser males. F1 males bearing the deficiency chromosome were collected and crossed to 57-day-old virgin females of each of the various mutant HDAC1 strains and allowed to lay eggs on Petri plates overlaid with an agar, vinegar, and ethanol mixture supplemented with live yeast. Eggs were collected by washing with dH2O and batches of ~100 eggs were counted out on construction paper and placed in shell vials. A minimum of five shell vials were set up for each mutant strain. The construction paper was removed after 3 days and the number of unhatched eggs counted. Unhatched eggs that failed to darken were considered unfertilized and subtracted from the total number of eggs. Eggs that darkened, but failed to hatch, were scored as embryonic lethals. The number of animals reaching pupation and adulthood was counted and the lethality at each developmental stage determined from the totals. In all cases, the results of each group were pooled. In these crosses, the only animals expected to die were those that carried the mutant HDAC1 allele and Df(3L)GN24. All other genotypes were expected to survive. We did not observe any flies that survived and bore a mutant HDAC1 allele and DF(3L)GN24. These flies would have been readily identifiable because of the suite of defects observed in homozygous HDAC1 mutant lines (see RESULTS).
In the recombination experiment in which we tried to separate the lethal lesion in HDAC1 in the HDAC1328 strain from a possible second site suppressor of PEV, the female parents were produced by crossing wm4/wm4; +/+ females to wm4/Y; HDAC1328/TM3 Sb Ser males. Virgin F1 females of the constitution wm4/wm4; HDAC1328/+ were collected and crossed to wm4/Y; P-UTR/TM3 Sb Ser males. All flies that displayed suppression of wm4 variegation were progeny tested to determine whether they were recombinants or rare surviving HDAC1328/P-UTR flies.
Determination of the level of variegation:
To determine the levels of variegated gene expression in the wm4 and bwvDe2 strains, eye pigment assays were performed employing previously published techniques (![]()
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Remobilization of the P element:
The P element in the P-UTR strain carries the ry+ gene and therefore excision of all or part of the P element can be monitored by loss of ry+. The P element in the P-UTR strain was remobilized by crossing +/+; P-UTR/TM3 Sb Ser females to wm4/Y; Ly/TM3 ryRK Sb e P[ry+
2-3] males. The TM3 ryRK Sb e P[ry+
2-3] chromosome carries a P-element transposase source (
2-3) that is required to remobilize the defective P element in the P-UTR strain. The F1 +/Y; P-UTR/TM3 ryRK Sb e P[ry+
2-3] males were collected and crossed to +/+; ry506/ry506 females and ry- F2 males collected and stocks established.
DNA manipulations:
All standard DNA manipulations were performed as described in ![]()
Plasmid rescue of the DNA surrounding the insertion of the P element in P-UTR was performed according to previously published techniques (![]()
Genomic DNA for sequencing from each of the HDAC1 mutant strains was obtained from cultures in which the HDAC1 mutation is balanced over the TM6 Tb balancer chromosome (see above). Homozygous mutant late third instar larvae were collected and the DNA isolated by standard protocols. Specific fragments of HDAC1 were amplified using Pfu polymerase and primers designed from the published sequence of HDAC1. The PCR products were gel purified and sequenced employing dye terminators in an automated sequencing facility (UBC NAPS unit).
Isolation and analysis of RNA:
Total RNA was isolated from either adult females or adult males of each strain using the TRIzol reagent according to manufacturer's instructions (Life Technologies). Poly(A) RNA was subsequently isolated employing the Oligotex mRNA mini kit produced by QIAGEN (Chatsworth, CA) following the manufacturer's instructions. Approximately 1.5 µg of poly(A) RNA for each gender and strain was separated on a formaldehyde agarose denaturing gel prepared according to the protocol provided by QIAGEN in the Oligotex mini kit. The gels were run at 7 V/cm, transferred to nylon membranes according to the manufacturer's instructions (Amersham, Buckinghamshire, UK), and probed with DNA labeled with [32P]dATP using Boehringer Mannheim's (Laval, Quebec) random primed DNA labeling kit. The DNA probe for the HDAC1 mRNA was prepared by PCR employing Pfu polymerase and primers for the carboyxl terminal coding regions generated from a cloned cDNA kindly provided to us by Pierre Spierer's laboratory. The relative amounts of poly(A) RNA loaded in each lane were determined by reprobing the Northern blots with a probe for the mRNA for the ribosomal protein DUb80 (![]()
| RESULTS |
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Isolation and characterization of mutations in Drosophila HDAC1 that suppress PEV:
Several groups, including ours, have conducted large genetic screens to isolate Suppressors of position effect variegation [Su(var)s] in D. melanogaster. These screens were based on the assumption that these mutations should identify factors involved in the process of chromatin packaging (![]()
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To determine whether the effect of these mutations was generally applicable to PEV or specific to the w+ gene, we monitored the effects of two of the strongest alleles of the Su(var) HDAC1s, HDAC1326 and HDAC1328, on two other variegating rearrangements: In(2R)bwvDe2 (bwv), which juxtaposes the bw+ locus to the centromeric heterochromatin of chromosome 2, and T(2,3)Sbv (Sbv), which abuts the dominant third chromosome mutation, Sb-, to the centromeric heterochromatin of chromosome 2 (Table 1). In females, the mutations caused significant suppression of both bwv and Sbv. In males, Sbv was also strongly suppressed by the mutations, but bwv was either not affected or somewhat enhanced. Heterogeneity in the response of genes subject to PEV when exposed to suppressor mutations is not uncommon. Each rearrangement abuts the euchromatic variegating gene to a unique region of heterochromatin and therefore a variation in the level of response to trans-acting factors is not unexpected (![]()
Mapping the Su(var) HDAC1s:
We mapped the recessive lethality associated with the Su(var) HDAC1s to 64B17-64C13-15 employing deficiencies and confirmed the Su(var) phenotype recombinationally mapped to approximately the same location in all four mutant lines. This placed the complementation group very close to a recently cloned RPD3-like HDAC (![]()
We then crossed the Su(var) HDAC1s to a series of recessive lethal, modified P inserts generated by the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Database and localized to the 64B-64C region. The Su(var) HDAC1s were almost completely lethal when heterozygous with the P insert line, l(3)04556 (hereafter called P-UTR). Plasmid rescue of the genomic DNA surrounding the insertion point of the P element revealed it had inserted into the 5' UTR of HDAC1 (Figure 2). Surprisingly, while P-UTR is homozygous lethal and lethal with the Su(var) HDAC1s, it has no dominant effect on variegation of w+ in the In(1)wm4 strain (Figure 1 and Table 4). Because P-UTR had an insertion into HDAC1, but did not have a dominant affect on PEV, this raised the possibility that the P-UTR strain contained a second site mutation that was causing the lethality with the Su(var) HDAC1s. Alternatively, it was possible that the Su(var) HDAC1s, in addition to a recessive lethal lesion in HDAC1, carried a second site mutation that was causing the dominant Su(var) phenotype. We addressed these possibilities in two ways.
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First, to determine whether P-UTR also contained a second site lethal mutation, we generated revertants of P-UTR by remobilizing the P element, which is marked with ry+, and recovering males that were ry-. We recovered 25 ry-revertants. Four of the revertants are homozygous viable, viable as heterozygotes with P-UTR, and viable as heterozygotes with all members of the Su(var) HDAC1s. Subsequent analysis by PCR indicated that three of the revertants are precise excisions of the P element while the fourth retains a small piece of the P element. Because a precise or nearly precise excision of the P-element insertion results in a homozygous viable chromosome, the only lethal lesion on the P-UTR chromosome is caused by the insertion of the P element into HDAC1 and therefore the Su(var) HDAC1s also have a lethal lesion in the HDAC1 gene.
Second, to determine whether the Su(var) HDAC1s, in addition to the lethal lesion in HDAC1, carried a dominant second site Su(var) mutation, we tried to separate the lethal phenotype from the Su(var) phenotype by recombination. The cross is outlined in Figure 3 and is based on the observations that: (1) HDAC1328 is almost completely lethal when heterozygous with P-UTR and (2) P-UTR does not have any dominant effect on PEV. Accordingly, any flies that survive and display suppression of wm4 variegation would be the result of a recombination event between the lethal lesion in HDAC1 and the putative second site Su(var). We scored 6125 recombinants but we were unable to separate the lethal phenotype from the Su(var) phenotype. Accordingly, if the lethality and the dominant Su(var) phenotypes are caused by different mutations, then these mutations are <1.6 x 10-2 map units apart, a distance representing ~47 kb of DNA in a typical region of the Drosophila genome (![]()
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Based on the results of the reversion experiments with P-UTR and the failure to separate the lethal lesion and the Su(var) phenotypes by recombination, we conclude that both phenotypes are the result of lesions in HDAC1.
Mutant phenotypes associated with lesions in HDAC1:
During the course of the recombination experiment we observed that some P-UTR/HDAC1328 adult male flies did eclose but only survived for a few days. These animals displayed very strong suppression of PEV and several other phenotypes. To further examine these phenotypes we generated HDAC1303/P-UTR flies. In this cross, under carefully maintained culture conditions, adult males eclosed at ~40% of expected and females at ~30% of expected. Both sexes only survived for several days and the females produced a small number of eggs, which appeared to be unfertilized. These animals displayed a suite of defects, including very strong suppression of wm4; wings that were severely notched; bristles that were smaller, malformed, often curved, and duplicated; allila that were larger than normal; and a reduction in the number of sex combs on the legs of the males from a mean of 10.7 ± 0.9 to a mean of 7.7 ± 1.0. This suggests that mutations in the histone deacetylase, HDAC1, cause defects in a variety of cellular systems and is consistent with its proposed role as a global transcriptional regulator. It also suggests that the Su(var) HDAC1s retain at least some of their functions, because P-UTR is lethal when homozygous, yet appreciable numbers of adults can be recovered when P-UTR is heterozygous with members of the Su(var) HDAC1s.
Because P-UTR and the Su(var) HDAC1s are recessive lethal, it appears that HDAC1 function is essential for survival in D. melanogaster, unlike in S. cerevisiae, where null alleles of the RPD3 gene are viable but display a suite of phenotypes. To further characterize the requirements for HDAC1, we determined the developmental time at which HDAC1 is required for survival in D. melanogaster. Because P-UTR is a very strong hypomorph (![]()
An unexpected observation from the lethal phase analysis was that the Su(var) HDAC1s appeared to have a dominant semilethal affect on males regardless of their genotype. In the lethal phase analysis, three of the four genotypes produced are expected to survive (see MATERIALS AND METHODS) and one of the classes (+/TM3) does not carry any chromosomes with a mutation in HDAC1. In the crosses with the null alleles HDAC1def8 and HDAC1def24, males and females in the classes that are expected to live appear in approximately the same numbers (Table 2). However, in the Su(var) HDAC1 crosses, males of genotypes expected to survive, including males that have completely wild-type HDAC1 genes, survived at significantly lower rates than expected. For example, males in the cross involving HDAC1313 only survived at ~50% the level of their genotypically identical female siblings in the same cross. Males in crosses involving the other Su(var) HDAC1s also survived at significantly lower levels than females. Because in these crosses the mothers carried the Su(var) HDAC1 mutations, one explanation for this observation may be that these mutations may be exerting a dominant maternal effect on the dosage compensation mechanism. In Drosophila, dosage compensation occurs as a result of hypertranscription of the male X chromosome. The male X chromosome adopts a special conformation that is believed to be necessary for enhanced transcription (![]()
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Sequence analysis of the Su(var) group:
EMS-induced changes in the Su(var) complementation group were identified by sequencing the genomic DNA encoding HDAC1 from the four Su(var) lines and from the chromosome that was originally employed in the screen for Su(var) mutations. The results of this analysis are presented in Figure 2 (accession no. AF086715). The genomic organization in our strains is slightly different than that presented in the previously published report (![]()
Each single nucleotide substitution resulted in changing an amino acid that is not only perfectly conserved in homologues from S. cerevisiae and human, but the substitutions are located in regions of the protein that are almost perfectly conserved in these diverse organisms (Table 3). The functions of these particular residues and the regions in which they occur have not yet been determined. However, evolutionary analysis of the deacetylase proteins and some limited mutational analysis suggest that the amino one-half of the protein is the domain responsible for catalytic activity (![]()
Interaction with P-1.8, an E(var) allele:
The HDAC1 locus has previously been cloned as a dominant enhancer of PEV or E(var) (![]()
Generation of null alleles:
Work by ![]()
2-3 Sb, and recovering males that were ry-. From 560 potential excision events we recovered 25 ry- males, 19 of which were still lethal over P-UTR and the Su(var) HDAC1s and therefore represented potential improper excisions. DNA sequence analysis has shown we generated two deficiencies that begin at the insertion point of P-UTR and remove amino-terminal coding regions of HDAC1; HDAC1def8 deletes ~440 bp and HDAC1def24 deletes ~870 bp (see Figure 2). Conceptual translations from the first seven AUG codons remaining in HDAC1def8 and the first three start codons of HDAC1def24 would produce peptides that bear no similarity to HDAC1, and therefore we believe these represent null alleles of the gene. Surprisingly, we found that null alleles of HDAC1 have no dominant effect on silencing of the w+ gene in the wm4 strain (Figure 1).
Northern analysis:
Because we had generated a variety of mutations in the HDAC1 locus, it was of considerable interest to determine how the mutations affected the level of transcription. Figure 4 shows Northern blots indicating the levels of transcription of HDAC1 in the mutant lines identified in this study. To determine the relative loading in each lane, the Northerns were also challenged with a probe for the ribosomal protein DUb80 (see MATERIALS AND METHODS). The transcript levels of HDAC1326 are approximately the same as that observed in the wild-type strains, indicating that the Su(var) phenotype is not a result of hypertranscription of the locus. In the P-UTR strain, as is often the case with P insertions, the level of transcription is reduced relative to wild-type levels and therefore P-UTR is likely a hypomorph. This is in accord with the findings of ![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
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In this study we report the isolation and characterization of a number of new mutations in the D. melanogaster putative histone deacetylase, HDAC1, and test their effects on gene silencing that occurs as a result of PEV. Models of gene regulation, based on the correlation between histone acetylation and gene activity, would predict that mutations in a histone deacetylase gene, which reduce or eliminate histone deacetylase activity, ought to lead to increased levels of histone acetylation that, in turn, would lead to derepression of silenced genes. Surprisingly, this straightforward prediction was not born out. Instead the effect on gene silencing is dependent upon the nature of the mutation in HDAC1 (for summary see Table 4).
How then can one explain the apparently contradictory effects on PEV and TPEV of the various kinds of mutations in the histone deacetylase genes in yeast and Drosophila? It may be that histone deacetylases belong to a growing class of genes that have the following characteristics: (1) they are members of a closely related gene family; (2) they encode multidomain proteins, and (3) null mutations have little or no obvious phenotypic effect while point mutants have profound, often dominant effects. One recent example of this class of genes in lower eukaryotes is the FUS3/KSS1 gene pair of S. cerevisiae. Normally, these closely related proteins function in separate pathways. Single deletion strains of either gene are still proficient for mating because when Fus3p is deleted, and only when it is deleted, Kss1p acts as an impostor and replaces Fus3p. However, deletion of both proteins renders the strain sterile (![]()
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Recently a model has been proposed to account for the maintenance of closely related gene families during evolution (![]()
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This model may accommodate our observations of the various Drosophila HDAC1 mutations. In eukaryotes, the HDACs are a closely related family of proteins that form complexes with other proteins including other HDACs. For example, in yeast, two different HDACs, RPD3 and HDA1, have been isolated and characterized, and sequence analysis of the yeast genome suggests there may be at least three additional HDACs. Two large multiprotein complexes, HDA and HDB, containing histone deacetylase activity have been isolated and analysis of HDA has shown that it contains at least two HDACs (![]()
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The foregoing provides the framework for a model that may explain the apparently contradictory results observed with different kinds of mutations in this histone deacetylase and their effects on PEV and TPEV. In the rpd3 null mutant in yeast, TPEV is enhanced, i.e., the expression of the reporter gene is repressed. We postulate that in the absence of RPD3, other HDACs, with differing specificities, substitute for RPD3 in the multiprotein complex, resulting in an incorrect histone deacetylation pattern. The phenotypic consequence of the incorrect deacetylation pattern is enhancement of TPEV, possibly due to excess deacetylation at the site of the reporter gene by the impostor deacetylase. Substitution by other HDACs has also been suggested by other authors to account for the residual repression observed in RPD3 deletion strains (![]()
This model relies on the supposition that an aberrant form of HDAC1 is being produced in the Su(var) HDAC1 strains. We believe such a protein is made for the following reasons. First, conceptual translation of the protein produces a full-length product with only a single amino acid change. Second, when we crossed the members of the Su(var) HDAC1s to P-1.8, the strain bearing the P-element insertion 1.8 kb 5' to the HDAC1 gene, flies bearing both mutations were viable and fertile and showed a weak-to-moderate suppression of PEV. Because the P insert line is effectively a null in the eye disk, we interpret the suppression observed in the heterozygotes as evidence that the Su(var) HDAC1s are producing a product. Third, in the complementation and recombination studies, heterozygotes bearing both the P-UTR chromosome and the Su(var) HDAC1s survived at an appreciable frequency. In these flies, PEV in the In(1)wm4 strain was very strongly suppressed and the eyes were virtually indistinguishable from wild-type strains. Because P-UTR is lethal as a homozygote and this lethality is only associated with lesion in HDAC1, the observation that such flies survive suggests that the Su(var) HDAC1s are producing a product that retains sufficient activity in the essential function of HDAC1 to rescue the lethality associated with the P-UTR chromosome. Finally, the observation that the Su(var) HDAC1s displayed a dominant maternal effect reduction in the viability of males, regardless of their phenotype, a reduction that was not observed in crosses with the deficiency strains, implies that the Su(var) HDACs are producing a protein product because this observed maternal effect is not seen in the absence of any product.
The model may also serve to explain other apparently anomalous observations in yeast strains bearing null mutations in RPD3. The gene was first identified as a transcriptional repressor in S. cerevisiae because mutations in the gene resulted in derepression of the majority of genes it regulated. Surprisingly, further analysis of the mutant strains has shown that target genes are also defective in the degree to which they respond to activators and repressors. Regulated genes cannot be activated as fully, nor repressed as completely, as in the wild-type strain (![]()
Finally, we emphasize that the mutations described here were recovered in a genetic screen for dominant suppressors of PEV. Therefore, the single amino acid changes that we recovered may identify domains in the Drosophila HDAC1 that are important for silencing in heterochromatin rather than abolishing all deacetylase activity. In any case, because the domains are conserved in yeast, site-directed mutagenesis should provide a direct test of the proposed model.
One of the traditional genetic approaches to determining protein function has been to generate null mutations and then examine the organism for phenotypic defects that can be correlated with the null phenotype. In fact, this is the basis for creating the knockout mutations in mice as potential models for human syndromes. It is now apparent that most, if not all biological functions in eukaryotic cells occur as a result of the action of protein complexes and not individual proteins. If the foregoing model is of general applicability then this traditional approach must be applied with caution. If the protein under scrutiny is a member of a gene family then in the absence of that protein, another family member may "fill in" and provide partial, or even complete, rescue (under laboratory conditions) of the functions compromised by the null mutation. In that case, this type of analysis will be compromised and the role of the protein being investigated underappreciated. A more fruitful strategy may be to create dominant mutations, in the best case caused by very small alterations in the protein, such as a single amino acid substitution, which will act in a dominant negative fashion and direct our attention to the many possible roles a protein may have because of its membership in one or more multiprotein machines.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Present address: Prostate Center, Jack Bell Research Center, Vancouver General Hospital, 2660 Oak St., Vancouver, British Columbia V6H 3Z6, Canada. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by the National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada grant 3005-99 to T.A.G.
Manuscript received June 26, 1999; Accepted for publication October 5, 1999.
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