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A Fission Yeast Repression Element Cooperates With Centromere-like Sequences and Defines a mat Silent Domain Boundary
Nabieh Ayoub1,a, Idit Goldshmidt1,a, Roman Lyakhovetskya, and Amikam Cohenaa Department of Molecular Biology, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel 91010
Corresponding author: Amikam Cohen, Department of Molecular Biology, The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem 91010, Israel., amikamc{at}cc.huji.ac.il (E-mail)
Communicating editor: G. R. SMITH
| ABSTRACT |
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REII is a Schizosaccharomyces pombe repression element located at the centromere-proximal end of the mat silent domain. Here we show that inversion of REII enhances silencing on its centromere-proximal side while suppressing silencing on its centromere-distal side. Transplacement of REII to a position 2.5 kb from its native locus extends the region of stringent repression to the new REII site. These results suggest that REII defines a mat silent domain boundary by acting preferentially toward its centromere-distal side. To investigate cooperation between REII and a K-region sequence that shares homology with the centromeric dg dh repeats (cen2 homology), we targeted combinations of these elements to an ectopic site and monitored expression of an adjacent reporter gene. Centromeric dh-like sequences conferred low-level silencing on the adjacent reporter gene, and REII, which did not display silencing activity on its own, enhanced cen2 homology-mediated silencing. Cooperation was also apparent at the mat locus, where deletion of REII impaired repression stability. We propose that REII and the cen2 homology play different yet complementary roles in silencing establishment and inheritance at the mat locus.
CHROMOSOMES of eukaryotic cells are organized into discrete functional domains that delineate independent units of gene activity. The expression state within each unit is controlled autonomously by cis-acting elements that recruit transcription factors or chromatin remodeling proteins and by boundary elements that protect internal genes from the long-range effect of external enhancers or silencers (reviewed in ![]()
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The fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe switches its mating type by transposing a copy of unexpressed genes from the respective mat2-P or mat3-M donor cassettes to the transcriptionally active mat1 (![]()
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Repression is gradually alleviated with increasing the distance from mat2-P, leading to variegated expression of reporter genes along a stretch of
3 kb in the L region (![]()
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Repression at the chromosomal mat2-K-mat3 region is controlled by at least two additional cis-acting elements. One element, located near mat3-M, controls the repressed state of mat3 and of markers at the centromere-distal part of the silent domain (![]()
mutants switching competence covariegates with silencing (![]()
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To investigate the role of REII in promoting silencing at the mat silent domain, we examined the effect of its deletion, transplacement, or inversion on the expression state of reporter genes within the silent domain and at its periphery. We also attempted to create a synthetic silent domain at an ectopic site by inserting a reporter gene with various combinations of the centromeric outer repeat homology and REII and by monitoring reporter gene expression. The results indicate that dh sequences within the cen2 homology were sufficient to establish repression at an ectopic site. REII has no detectable silencing activity on its own. Yet it acts with a preferred directionality and cooperates with the cen2 homology to enhance silencing stability and define the boundary of the silent domain at the mat locus.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Strain construction:
All strains used in this study and their genotypes are listed in Table 1. Molecular manipulations of cloned HindIII or HindIII-BglII fragments, carrying mat2 and parts of the flanking L and K regions (![]()
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Targeted integration into the mat region was accomplished by transformation with purified restriction fragments of the appropriate plasmids. To overcome the recombination block at the mat2-mat3 interval (![]()
Molecular manipulations of a cloned 1.8-kb HindIII fragment carrying the ura4+ gene (![]()
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Northern analysis:
Total cellular RNA was isolated from 10-ml aliquots of growing cultures (
107 cells/ml) in YEA medium, using the TRIZol reagent (GIBCO-BRL, Gaithersburg, MD), according to the manufacturer's protocol. All strains used for Northern analysis had an ade6-DN/N mutation (![]()
Culture conditions:
Strains were grown on rich medium (YEA), adenine-limiting rich medium (YE), or sporulation medium (PM-N) (![]()
Iodine staining:
Haploid meiosis phenotype in heterothallic strains was examined by staining colonies on PM-N sporulation medium (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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To explore the possibility that REII acts as a repression element with a preferred directionality, we determined the effect of its deletion, transplacement, or inversion on the expression state within the silent domain and its periphery. This was achieved by targeting an ade6+ reporter gene to sites within mat2-P or the L region and monitoring ade6 expression by examining colony color on low adenine medium (YE). On this medium, red and white colonies imply Ade- and Ade+ phenotypes, respectively (![]()
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REII enhances silencing stability:
An ade6+ reporter gene, located within the mat2-P cassette (BamHI), is stringently repressed in >97% of the cell lines (![]()
20% of the colonies of the L(SacI)::ade6+ strain (AP165) exhibit partial ade6 repression (![]()
10%.
Deletion of a 7.5-kb K-region fragment alleviates repression at the mat silent domain, but the alternative expression states are stably maintained (![]()
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REII mutant (AP363) was lower than that in the strain with REII intact, but higher than in the K
mutant (AP421). Consistent with earlier studies (![]()
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1%. Unlike the K
mutation, the
REII mutation impaired the stability of the repressed state. About 6% of the cells from Ade- colonies yielded white (Ade+) colonies and the frequency of sectored colonies exceeded 40% (Table 2). About half of the sectored colonies had multiple white (Ade+) sectors. To estimate the rate of change per cell division, we determined the frequency of half-sectored colonies (![]()
REII strain and <0.1% for the isogenic strains with REII intact or with a K
mutation. These results indicate a role for REII in assuring silencing stability.
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Transplacement of REII toward mat1 extends the silent domain:
The decline in repression stringency on the centromere-proximal side of REII (![]()
20% in the wild-type strain (Fig 2, AP165) or 10% in the
REII mutant (AP347) to >99% in the transplacement mutant (AP394). Furthermore, unlike in the
REII strain or in the strain with REII intact, where intermediate levels of repression were observed, repression at the SacI site of the transplacement mutant was stringent (Fig 2). Silencing at the extended region of repression was alleviated by any of the swi6 and clr1-clr4 mutations (data not shown), thus indicating a role for chromatin remodeling proteins in REII-mediated repression at the L region. Further translocation of REII to a distance of 6.0 kb from its native locus (HpaI) did not extend the silent domain. The Ade+ phenotype of a strain with an ade6+ insertion at the HpaI site was not affected by transplacement of REII to the centromere-proximal side of the reporter gene (Fig 2, AP407). These results suggest that REII has no repression activity on its own. However, if located close enough to the silent domain it cooperates with an internal cis-acting element(s) to enhance repression on its centromere-distal side. Attempts to confirm this hypothesis and identify elements that cooperate with REII are described below.
Orientation dependence of REII activity:
If REII acts as a repression element with a preferred directionality, its inversion should enhance silencing on its centromere-proximal side. To test this prediction, we constructed a strain with an inverted REII at its native locus and an ade6+ insertion at the SacI site in the L region (Fig 1). We then compared the expression states of ade6+ in this strain to that in an isogenic strain with REII in the original orientation. The differences in the stability of the alternative ade6 expression states between the strains with REII in the original and inverted orientation (Table 3) indicate that inversion of REII enhances repression on its centromere-proximal side.
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To rule out alternative interpretations of the colony color assay, we conducted Northern hybridization experiments with an internal ade6+ sequence as a probe (Fig 3). All strains used in this experiment had an ade6-DN/N deletion (![]()
0.1 for cultures originated from Ade- or Ade+ colonies.
If a transplaced REII at the SacI site acts with a preferred directionality, its inversion should alleviate ade6 repression on its centromere-distal side. We tested this prediction by determining the effect of REII orientation on the expression state of an adjacent ade6+ gene in REII transplacement mutants. REII enhanced ade6+ repression at the SacI site in the L region if placed on its centromere-proximal side in the same orientation as in its native location (Fig 2, AP394). However, when placed in an inverted orientation (AP396), its silencing enhancement activity was markedly reduced.
We next asked whether inversion of REII at its native locus would affect the expression state of mat2-P. Deletion of REII has only a subtle effect on mat2-P repression in wild-type strains, but a combination of a
REII mutation with any one of the swi6 or clr1-clr4 mutations has a synergistic derepression effect (![]()
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Taken together, these observations are consistent with the hypothesis that REII is a repression element that defines the boundary of the silent domain by acting with a preferred directionality toward its centromere-distal side.
Creation of a silent domain at an ectopic site:
The results of the preceding experiments suggest that REII has no silencing activity on its own. Yet it seems to cooperate with an internal cis-acting element to enhance silencing at the centromere-proximal end of the silent domain. To explore this possibility, we attempted to assemble a synthetic silent domain at an ectopic site by combining the activities of REII and K-region DNA fragments. Molecular constructs consisting of an ade6+ reporter gene and various combinations of REII and a 6.3-kb K-region DNA fragment (BseRI-BseRI; Fig 1) were targeted to the ura4 locus on chromosome 3. The expression state of ade6+ in the respective strains was monitored by the colony color assay. Consistent with the data in Fig 2 (AP407), expression of ade6+ from the ura4 locus was not affected by an adjacent REII cassette (Fig 5, AP379). On the other hand, the K-region fragment conferred low repression frequency at the ectopic site (AP179). A small proportion of the ura4::ade6+-K colonies (
0.1%) displayed a partial Ade- phenotype (pink colonies on YE medium) and
15% of the cells in these colonies maintained this phenotype upon replating. Replating of cells from white (Ade+) colonies yielded a very low proportion of red or sectored colonies.
To test for cooperation between REII and the K-region fragment, we targeted a molecular construct containing an ade6 reporter gene flanked by the two elements to the ura4 locus (AP383). The expression state of ade6 in the ura4::REII-ade6+-K strain was compared to that in the isogenic strains with K-ade6+ or ade6+-REII insertions. REII markedly enhanced K-region-mediated repression. About 15% of the ura4::REII-ade6+-K cells from Ade+ colonies yielded red or sectored colonies, and the majority of the cells from Ade- colonies retained a repressed or partially repressed state upon replating. As in its native location, REII activity had a preferred directionality at the ectopic site. Inversion of the REII cassette with respect to the reporter gene (AP389) lowered its silencing-enhancing capacity.
To confirm that ade6 repression at the ura4 locus occurred by a chromatin remodeling mechanism, we examined silencing dependence on swi6 and clr1-clr4 genes. ade6 repression in the ura4::REII-ade6+-K strain was totally alleviated by mutations in any of the tested silencing genes (AP384 is an example). These results indicate that cooperation of the K-region fragment with REII establishes and stably maintains a repressed chromatin state at an ectopic site.
Silencing activity of dh-like sequences within the cen2 homology:
The cen2 homology within the K region has been postulated to promote heterochromatin assembly at the mat locus (![]()
50% of the cells from red colonies maintained a partially repressed phenotype upon replating. As expected, cen2-mediated silencing depended on the activity of swi6 and clr1-clr4 silencing genes (data not shown). These observations imply that sequences within the cen2 homology are sufficient to establish a heterochromatin structure at an ectopic site.
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We tested for cooperation between the 3.6-kb cen2 homology and REII. A molecular construct consisting of an ade6+ reporter gene flanked by REII and the cen2 homology was targeted to the ura4 locus, and the expression state of ade6 was determined by the colony color assay. REII enhanced cen2 homology-mediated repression. More than 95% of the cells from Ade- colonies retained a fully or partially repressed state upon replating, and
6% of the cells from Ade+ colonies regained it (Fig 6, AP270). These results demonstrate that cen2 homology-mediated silencing is enhanced by cooperation with REII.
In all the molecular constructs of Fig 5 and in the first two constructs of Fig 6 (AP804 and AP270) ade6+ was inserted with its promoter distal to the cen2 homology. Inversion of ade6+ (AP259) had a minor effect on the stability of the alternative expression states. This inversion enhanced the stability of the repressed state and lowered the stability of the derepressed state.
To determine whether the cen2 homology acts with a preferred directionality, we inverted the 3.6-kb fragment in the molecular construct at the ectopic site and determined the stability of the alternative expression states. Inversion of the cen2 homology with respect to the reporter gene (AP263) did not abolish its activity. Yet silencing activity in one orientation was higher than in the other.
Studies of centromere activities indicate functional redundancy among sequences of the centromeric outer repeats (![]()
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We asked whether the configuration of cooperating elements with respect to the reporter gene affects cooperation efficiency. Specifically, is a reporter gene flanked by the two elements more stringently repressed than a reporter gene with both elements on its same side? To address this question, we placed REII and the cen2 homology on the same side of ade6+ and targeted the molecular construct to the ura4 locus. REII silencing-enhancing activity at the ectopic site was abolished when placed together with the cen2 homology on the same side of the ade6+ gene. Less than 0.1% of the cells from Ade+ colonies acquired the Ade- phenotype and only 37% of the cells from Ade- colonies maintained partial ade6 repression upon replating (Fig 6, AP419). This suggests that cooperation between the two elements outside their native chromosomal context affects only the region between the elements. However, the possibility that the orientation of the ade6+ reporter gene with respect to the cen2 homology or to that surrounding DNA sequences affects silencing cannot be ruled out.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Silencing along the chromosomal mat2-K-mat3 domain is mediated by several trans-acting proteins and by at least three cis-acting elements: the cen2 homology, REII, and the mat3 silencer (![]()
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By acting with a preferred directionality, REII defines the boundary of stringent repression:
A cis-acting element may define the boundary of a silent domain by acting as an insulator that blocks the propagation of enhancer or silencer activities (![]()
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The reason that silencing enhancement capacity of a translocated REII is diminished as its distance from mat2-P increases from 2.5 (SacI) to 6.0 kb (HpaI; Fig 2) is not yet understood. One possibility is that REII activity depends on cooperation with an internal repression element, like the cen2 homology, and this cooperation can take place only within a limited chromosomal distance. Another possibility is that as the distance between the two elements increases, the length of the silent domain becomes limited by the availability of heterochromatin components. A third possibility is that a cis-acting element, located between the HpaI and SacI sites, interferes with the cooperation between REII and the cen2 homology. Further analysis of the L region should help distinguish between these possibilities.
Cis-acting repression elements at the mat locus:
Deletion of any one of the three cis-acting elements that promote silencing at the mat locus alleviates repression of reporter genes within the silent domain and leads to a variegated phenotype. However, different deletion mutants display different modes of variegation. Whereas K
mutants adopt one of two stable states of reporter gene expression (![]()
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mutants implies that an element within the K region is involved in repression establishment, but repression inheritance is independent of this element activity (![]()
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REII activity is limited to the centromere-proximal end of the silent domain and a functionally similar element, the mat3 silencer, enhances repression at the centromere-distal end of the domain (![]()
Altogether, these observations are consistent with the notion that the cen2 homology plays a key role in the assembly of a repressive chromatin structure at the mat locus. Furthermore, cooperation of this element with REII on its centromere-proximal side, and with the mat3 silencer on its centromere-distal side, enhances repression along the entire length of the mat2-K-mat3 silent domain. The phenotypes of the various deletion mutants and of strains with different combinations of the three repression elements at the ectopic site suggest that the cen2 homology mediates the establishment of the repressed state, while REII and the mat3 silencer contribute to silencing stability.
Silencing activity of centromeric DNA:
The intriguing discovery that one-third of the K region shares 96% homology with the centromeric dgII dhII repeats suggests that shared cis-acting elements may play similar roles in heterochromatin assembly at the mat and cen loci. The cen2 homology in the K region may also promote silencing at the mat locus through homologous DNA-DNA interactions with its centromeric counterparts (![]()
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Cooperation at a distance between cis-acting elements:
REII has no detectable repression activity on its own. Yet it cooperates with the cen2 homology to enhance silencing at the ectopic site. Cooperation between cis-acting elements may involve either one or a combination of the following mechanisms: transient or stable interaction between proteins, associated with the cooperating elements to create a loop structure that defines a silent domain (![]()
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The speculative model in Fig 7 is based on results of this studythe observations that REII activity is limited to the centromere-proximal end of the silent domain (![]()
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Possible roles for REII in epigenetically modulated silencing inheritance:
Stable chromosomal inheritance of the repressed state in K
mutants is regulated by an epigenetic mechanism (![]()
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| FOOTNOTES |
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1 These authors contributed equally to this work. ![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Genevieve Thon for critical review of the manuscript and Shiv Grewal, Amar Klar, Ronit Weisman, and Robin Allshire for plasmids and strains. This work was supported by the U.S.-Israel Binational Science Foundation and by the Peter Hilston Foundation. N.A. was supported by a fellowship to minority students from the Israeli Ministry of Science.
Manuscript received April 20, 2000; Accepted for publication July 17, 2000.
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