Title: Bio 445 Chromatin structure and Gene expression
1Biol/Chem 473
Schulze lecture 6 Introduction to chromatin
structure
2Control regions upstream of pair-rule genes are
complex
General principle regulatory regions of
eukaryotic genes are complex the promoter of any
given gene has to integrate a large amount of
combinatorial inputs that will define its
activity depending on the context of the cell in
which the gene resides. (Are bicoid levels high
or low? What about Kruppel? Etc. )
3Eukaryotic gene expression through the occluding
effects of chromatin
4What is chromatin?
- It is a solution to a eukaryotes packaging
problem.
5Eukaryotes have a BIG packaging problem
- How do you fit approximately 2 meters (human
diploid nucleus) into a space that averages maybe
5 millionths of a meter wide? - How do you replicate, repair and transcribe
tightly packaged DNA?
6Solution Chromatin!
- Chromatin is DNA packaged with specialised
proteins (and even some RNA!) that serve to
control the degree to which DNA sequences are
accessible for synthesis and transcription - These proteins include specialized structural
proteins and enzymes
7Chromatin packaging heirarchy
Level 1 nucleosome formation
Level 2 30 nm fiber
Level 3 Nuclear scaffolding
Level 4 Mitotic (metaphase) chromosome
8Level One Building blocks of chromatin
nucleosomes
- string on a bead for obvious reasons
- Linker can vary (8-114bp or more)
- Compaction ratio is approx 7 fold
9Nucleosomes are composed of histones
- 2/3 of chromatin mass is protein
- 95 of chromatin protein are histones
- H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4
10Nucleosome structure
Nucleosome core particle octamer of histones
plus 146 bp DNA
Chromatosome octamer of histones plus 146 bp
DNA AND linker histone H1 (this term rarely used
now)
11Nucleosome core particle
12Level Two the 30nm fiber
- Requires Histone H1
- Compaction ratio approx 100 fold
Lehninger
13Level three nuclear scaffolding
- Not well understood
- Organization is not random involved sequence
elements (red dots), more non-histone chromatin
proteins and tethering to the nuclear envelope
and matrix
14Genome contortions during the cell cycle
Time for replication, transcription
Time for cell division no gene expression
15Metaphase chromatin level 4 packaging fully
condensed
16Interphase chromatin levels 1-3 relatively
decondensed chromosomes
- Heterochromatin dark-staining, condensed (mostly
simple-sequence DNA) - Euchromatin light-staining, less condensed
(complex sequence DNA e.g. genes)
17Summary chromatin
- DNA plus protein
- Enables extraordinary condensation and packaging
of eukaryotic genomes - Fundamental unit is the nucleosome
- Nucleosome consists of an octamer of histone
proteins 2XH2A, 2X H2B, 2XH3 and 2XH4 - Between nucleosomes, a fifth histone, H1, acts as
a linker (among other mysterious things) - Gene expression in eukaryotes takes place in the
context of highly packaged chromatin - Regulation of gene expression by chromatin
structure is epigenetic regulation
18Heterochromatin
- WHY?? WHY?? WHY??
- It is a pain to work with (lots of repetitive
DNA) - It KILLS gene expression (transcriptionally
repressive) - Its boring.
19Turning genes OFF may be more important that
turning genes ON
- Inverse dose response
- Delete a chunk of chromosome and background gene
expression tends to go UP (suggesting most of the
deleted genes are repressors) - Differential gene expression in development
- Coming attraction!
- Genome surveillance
- Keep parasitic (middle repetitive) DNA from
wreaking havoc in the genome
20Gene silencing
X
Genes
21Genome architecture chromatin domains
22Heterochromatin vs Euchromatin
- Stains darkly (highly condensed)
- Repetitive sequences
- Replicates later in the cell cycle
- Little or no recombination
- Transcriptionally repressive silences gene
expression
- Stains lightly (decondensed)
- Single copy sequences (genes)
- Replicates early in the cell cycle
- Recombines
- Transcriptionally active permissive for gene
expression
23How do eukaryotes replicate their linear DNA?
Primase makes primers for okazaki fragments as
well as first primer
DNA synthesis is continuous on the leading
strand, but discontinuous on the lagging strand
24Solution telomerase!
25Solution telomerase!
26Solution telomerase!
27Heterochromatin summary
- Localized to telomeres and regions flanking
centromeres. - Consists of repetitive sequences (mostly).
- Transcriptionally repressive.
- Study of heterochromatin revealed how chromatin
affects gene expression. - Many of the silencing mechanisms operating
constitutively in heterochromatin are used by
euchromatin as well to locally regulate gene
expression.
28Why is there heterochromatin?
- Structural role?
- Homolog pairing at meiosis?
- graveyard for potentially parasitic elements?
- No reason just too much trouble to get rid of?
29It all started with flies.
30Drosophila gene nomenclature
- Early days of Drosophila research a gene was
named after the phenotype that resulted when that
gene was mutant. (Example the white gene results
in loss of red pigmentation in the eye, so the
eye is white)
- Now it a lot more complicated (and less
consistent). Genes tend to be named after the
products they encode. (Example DEAD box protein
80 Dbp80)
31Position Effect Variegation (PEV) in Drosophila
- A euchromatic gene relocated next to or within
heterochromatin will variegate (show variable
silencing) - The sequence of the gene has not changed, only
its position - Therefore this is an epigenetic (beyond
genetic) effect
32The wild type white gene variegates because of
its position (PEV)
33Genetic screen for modifiers of PEV
Wallrath LL, Cur. Opin. Genet. Dev. 1998, 8147
34Chromatin associated proteins
- Su(var) 2-5 encodes Heterochromatin Protein 1
- a chromatin structural protein which recognizes
methylated histone H3 and can also recognize
and bind to itself - Su(var) 3-9 encodes a histone methyl-transferase
- an enzyme which transfers a methyl group onto a
specific lysine residue on Histone H3 - Su(var) 326 encodes a histone deacetylase
- an enzyme which removes acetyl groups from
histones deacetylated histones are correlated
with repressed chromatin - these proteins (and others) are reading a HISTONE
CODE
35The histone code hypothesis
would it make a good movie? Is Tom Hanks
available???
36So whats this histone code all about?
- Histones are subjected to a variety of post
translational modifications (most often on the
N-terminal tails) - These modifications are generated by specific
enzymes - These modifications are recognized by proteins
that can influence gene expression and other
chromatin functions
37Histone modifications cont
From Khorasanizadeh, 2004.
38Protein domains in chromatin associated proteins
SMART (simple modular architectural research
tool) http//smart.embl-heidelberg.de/
39There are new histone modifications being
discovered