Title: Chromatin Structure and Its Effects on Transcription
1Chromatin Structureand Its Effects
onTranscription
2The Content of Chapter 13
- Histones
- Nucleosomes
- Chromatin Structure and Gene Activity
313.1 Histones
- Kinds H1, H2A, H2B, H3 and H4
- Extremely abundant the mass of histones in
eukaryotic nuclei is equal to the mass of DNA - Basic at least 20 of their amino acids are
arginine or lysine , have a pronounced positive
charge at neutral pH and can be extracted from
cells with strong acids. - Homogeneous as show in Table 13.1
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5The reason for this variety
- gene reiteration repreated times ( 10-20 times
in the mouse, and about 100 times in Drosophila ) - posttranslational modification acetylation on
- N-terminal amino groups and on lysinee-amino
- groups, lysinee-amino methylation and
- phosphorylation, serine and threonine O-
- phosphorylation, lysine and histidine N-
- phosphorylation.
613.2 Nucleosomes
- Definition structures which are the first order
of folding in eukaryotic chromatin. - Core histones a tetramer ( H3-H4 )2 and two
dimers H2A-H2B - DNA wrapped outside 146bp
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9The Folding Order of Chromatin
- Nucleosomes
- Nucleosome Filament
- The 30-nm Fiber
- Higher Order Chromatin Folding
- But,it has not been possible to crystallize any
component of chromatin larger than the nucleosome
core.
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1413.3 Chromatin Structure and Gene Activity
- The Effects of Histones on 5SrRNA Gene
Transcription - The Effect of Histones on Transcription of Class
? Genes - Nucleosome Positioning
- Histone Acetylation
- Histone Deacetylation
- Chromatin Remodeling
- Heterochromatin and Silening
- Nucleosomes and Transcription Elongation
1513.3.1The Effects of Histones on 5SrRNA Gene
Transcription
- Xenopus laevis 5S rRNA of frog
- Transcribed by RNA polymerase?, with the help of
TF?A, TF?B, and TF?C - Haploid number 20,000
- Tow families
- oocyte 5S rRNA genes, 98, transcription only
occurs in oocytes - somatic 5S rRNA genes, about 400 genes, are
transcribed in both oocytes and somatic cells
16What causes the oocyte genes to be active in
oocytes but inactive in somatic cells?
- An attractive interpretation
- Somatic cells contain transcription factors that
are able to form stable preinitiation complexes
with the somatic 5S rRNA genes, but are less
successful in forming these comlexes with the
oocyte 5S genes. - So , nucleosomes form on the oocyte genes,
including their promoters, and histone H1
cross-links these nucleosomes in an ordered array
and keeps them repressed.But, the transcription
factors engaged on the somatic genes prevent
nucleosomes from forming, or at least from
forming an ordered, cross-linked structure.
Therefore, these genes remain active.
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1813.3.2 The Effect of Histones on Transcription of
Class ? Genes
- A detailed study to distinguish between the
effects of the core histones and of histone H1 on
transcription by RNA polymerase ? in vitro. - Core histones a mild repression, about 4-fold of
genetic activity. - histone H1 the repression became much more
profound 25- to 100-fold. - Transcription factors had no effect on this
repression. - This repression could be blocked by activators
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20- Two possible explanations
- First, the nucleosomes could slow the
progress of all RNA polymerases by about 75, but
not stop any of them. - Second, 75 of the polymerases could be
blocked entirely by nucleosomes, but 25 of the
promoters might have been left free of
nucleosomes and thus could remain available to
RNA polymerase. - A control experiment showed that the remaining
25 transcription could be eliminated by cutting
the chromatin with a restriction enzyme that
cleaves just downstream of the transcription
start site. The fact that this site was available
indicated that it was nucleosome-free. Thus,
hypothesis 2 is the right one. - Summary The core histones (H2A, H2B, H3, and H4
) assemble nucleosome cores on naked DNA.
Transcription of reconstituted chromatin with an
average of one nucleosome core per 200 bp of DNA
exhibits about 75 repression relative to naked
DNA. The remaining 25 is due to promoter sites
not covered by nucleosome cores.
2113.3.3 Nucleosome Positioning
- Nucleosome-Free Zones
- DNase Hypersensitivity is another sign of a
nucleosome-free DNA region to DNase - Active genes tend to have DNase-hypersensitive
control regions. At least part of this
hypersensitivity is due to the absence of
nucleosomes.
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2413.3.4 Histone Acetylation
- Acetylation occurs on the amino groups on lysine
side chains and correlates with gene activity. - Hypothesis there are enzymes in nuclei acetylate
and deacetylate histones and thereby influence
gene activity. - These enzymes are present in low quantities in
cells. - Finally, in 1996, researchers succeeded in
identifying and purifing a histone
acetyltransferase ( HAT ), an enzyme that
transfers acetyl groups from a donor ( acetyl-CoA
) to core histones.
25Experiment1 Activity gel assay
- Extracts from macronuclei of tetrabymena(ciliated
protozoan) - SDS-gel electrophoresis (containing histones)
- Detect HAT activity by soaking the gel in a
solution of acetyl-CoA labeled in its acetyl
group with 3H - Detect labeled histones first wash away the
unreacted acetyl-CoA,then subjected the gel to
fluorography
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27Summary
- Histone acetylation occurs in both the cytoplasm
and nucleus. - Cytoplasmic acetylation is carried out by a HAT
B and prepares histones for incorporation into
nucleosomes. The acetyl groups are later removed
in the nucleus. - Nuclear acetylation of core histone N-terminal
tails is catalyzed by a HAT A and correlates
with transcription activation. A variety of
coactivators have HAT A activity, which may allow
them to loosen the association of nucleosomes
with a genes control region. Acetylation of core
histone tails also attracts bromodomain proteins
such as TAF?250 ,which are essential for
transcription
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2913.3.6 Chromatin Remodeling
- At least four classes of proteins SWI/SNF
family, ISWI family, NuRD family, and INO80
family. All require ATP for activity. - All four classes of proteins alter the structure
of nucleosome cores to make the DNA more
accessible, not only to transcription factors,
but also to nucleases.
30Remodeling in the Yeast HO Gene
- Researchers studied protein association with the
HO gene of yeast, which plays a key role in
switching the mating type. - The expression of HO depends on a series of
protein factors that appear at different phases
of the cell cycle.
31Experiment2 Chromatin Immunoprecipitation ( ChIP
)
- Fuse DNA fragments encoding short regions of a
protein(Myc) to the ends of genes encoding the
proteins known to associate with the HO gene - Make cell extracts and immunoprecipitate the
DNA-protein complexes with antibodies against the
Myc epitopes - Verify the HO gene by PCR(with HO-specific
primers) - As show in Figure 13.32
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33Summary
- Nucleosome remodeling agents such as SWI/SNF and
ISWI are required for activation ( and repression
) of some genes. These proteins disrupt the core
histones in nucleosomes, and may also move
nucleosomes. Such remodeling, combined with core
histone acetylation and binding of other
proteins, can create nucleosome-free enhancers
that can bind readily to transcription
activators. Remodeling can also help move
nucleosomes into position to repress
transcription.
3413.3.7 Heterochromatin and Silening
- Euchromatin is relatively extended and open and
at least potentially active. - Heterochromatin is very condensed and its DNA is
inaccessible. In higher eukaryotes it even
appears as clumps when viewed microscopically (
as shown in Figure 13.36 ). - Heterochromatin is found at the telomeres and
the centromeres of chromosomes.
35Histone Methylation
- Methylation can have either an activating or a
repressing effect. - Certain proteins involved in forming
heterochromatin have conserved regions called
chromodomains. - One such protein is a histone methyl transferase
( HMTase ) whose human form is known as SUV39H
HMTase. - Another is a histone methyl transferase-associated
protein called HP1. - Targets for methylation lysine 9 and lysine 4 of
histone H3
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3713.3.8 Nucleosomes and Transcription Elongation
- How does RNA polymerase deal with the
nucleosomes that lie within the transcribed
region of a gene? - As shown in Figure 13.42
38- When RNA polymerase moves through a single
nucleosome, it can displace the nucleosome core
to a new location behind the advancing polymerase
on the same DNA. This may be accomplished by a
spooling mechanism in which upstream DNA spools
around core histones as downstream DNA unspools,
with the RNA polymerase transcribing through a
loop between these spooling and unspooling DNAs. - Helpers in this process SWI/SNF HMG14 FACT
and Spt4, 5, and 6.
39Thanks
40histoneH1
- Reconstitute chromatin with DNA containing two
enhancer-promoter constructs - ( 1 ) pG5E4, five GAL4-bingding sites coupled to
the adenovirus E4 minimal promoter - ( 2 ) pSV-Kr, six GC boxes from the SV40 early
promoter coupled to the Drosophila Kruppel
minimal promoter - Not only add the core histones, but histone H1 in
various - quantities, from 0 to 1.5 molecules per core
nucleosome - Then transcribed the reconstituted chromatin in
vitro.
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