Title: Regulation by changes in histones, nucleosomes and chromatin
1Regulation by changes in histones, nucleosomes
and chromatin
- Opening and activation
- Movement from heterochromatin to euchromatin
- Nucleosomes and transcription factors
- Chromatin remodeling activities
- Histone acetyl transferases and deacetylases
- Thanks Dr. Jerry Workman
2Human b-globin gene cluster
Domain opening?
Locus control region Activate linked globin gene
expression in erythroid cells. Overcome position
effects at many integration sites in transgenic
mice. Role in switching expression?
3Domain opening and gene activation are separable
events
Loca- tion, hetero- chrom- atin
General histone hyper- Acn
Human HBB complex
wildtype N-MEL
DNase sensi- tive
H3 hyper Acn
LCR HSs
Txn
d
g
b
e
g
ORGs
away
Del. HS2-HS5
-
-
away
T-MEL, Hisp. del.
-
-
-
-
close
Reik et al. (1988) Mol. Cell. Biol.
185992-6000. Schübeler et al. (2000) Genes
Devel. 14940- 950
4Chromosome localization in interphase
In interphase, chromosomes appear to be localized
to a sub-region of the nucleus.
5Gene activation and location in the nucleus
- Condensed chromatin tends to localize close to
the centromeres - Pericentromeric heterochromatin
- Movement of genes during activation and silencing
- High resolution in situ hybridization
- Active genes found away from pericentromeric
heterochromatin - Silenced genes found associated with
pericentromeric heterochromatin
6Domainopening is associated with movement to
non-hetero-chromatic regions
7Proposed sequence for activation
- 1. Open a chromatin domain
- Relocate away from pericentromeric
heterochromatin - Establish a locus-wide open chromatin
configuration - General histone hyperacetylation
- DNase I sensitivity
- 2. Activate transcription
- Local hyperacetylation of histone H3
- Promoter activation to initiate and elongate
transcription
8A scenario for transitions from silenced to open
to actively transcribed chromatin
9From silenced to open chromatin
10Movement from hetero- to euchromatin
11Nucleosome remodelers and HATs further open
chromatin
12Assembly of preinitiation complex on open
chromatin
13Transcription factor binding to DNA is inhibited
within nucleosomes
- Affinity of transcription factor for its binding
site on DNA is decreased when the DNA is
reconstituted into nucleosomes - Extent of inhibition is dependent on
- Location of the binding site within the
nucleosome. - binding sites at the edge are more accessible
than the center - The type of DNA binding domain.
- Zn fingers bind more easily than bHLH domains.
14Stimulate binding of transcription factors to
nucleosomes
- Cooperative binding of multiple factors.
- The presence of histone chaperone proteins which
can compete H2A/H2B dimers from the octamer. - Acetylation of the N-terminal tails of the core
histones - Nucleosome disruption by ATP-dependent remodeling
complexes.
15Binding of transcription factors can destabilize
nucleosomes
- Destabilize histone/DNA interactions.
- Bound transcription factors can thus participate
in nucleosome displacement and/or rearrangement. - Provides sequence specificity to the formation of
DNAse hypersensitive sites. - DNAse hypersensitive sites may be
- nucleosome free regions or
- factor bound, remodeled nucleosomes which have an
increased accessibility to nucleases.
16Nucleosome remodeling
17Chromatin remodeling ATPases are large complexes
of multiple proteins
- Yeast SWI/SNF
- 10 proteins
- Needed for expression of genes involved in
mating-type switching and sucrose metabolism
(sucrose non-fermenting). - Some suppressors of swi or snf mutants are
mutations in genes encoding histones. - SWI/SNF complex interacts with chromatin to
activate a subset of yeast genes. - Is an ATPase
- Mammalian homologs hSWI/SNF
- ATPase is BRG1, related to Drosophila Brahma
- Other remodeling ATPase have been discovered.
18Chromatin remodeling ATPases catalyze stable
alteration of the nucleosome
II form a stably remodeled dimer, altered DNAse
digestion pattern III transfer a histone octamer
to a different DNA fragment
19Covalent modification of histones in chromatin
20Histones are acetylated and deacetylated
Histone acetyl transferases
Histone deacetylases
21Covalent modification of histone tails
N-ARTKQTARKSTGGKAPRKQLATKAARKSAP...- H3
4
9 10
14
23
27 28
18
N-SGRGKGGKGLGKGGAKRHRKVLRDNIQGIT...- H4
5
8
12
16
20
1
acetylation
phosphorylation
methylation
22Two types of Histone Acetyltransferases (HATs).
- Type A nuclear HATs acetylate histones in
chromatin. - Type B cytoplasmic HATs acetylate free histones
prior to their assembly into chromatin. - Acetylate K5 and K12 in histone H4
23Acetylation by nuclear HATs is associated with
transcriptional activation
- Highly acetylated histones are associated with
actively transcribed chromatin - Increasing histone acetylation can turn on some
genes. - Immunoprecipitation of DNA cross-linked to
chromatin with antibodies against Ac-histones
enriches for actively transcribed genes. - Acetylation of histone N-terminal tails affects
the ability of nucleosomes to associate in
higher-order structures - The acetylated chromatin is more open
- DNase sensitive
- accessible to transcription factors and
polymerases - HATs are implicated as co-activators of genes in
chromatin, and HDACs (histone deacetylases) are
implicated as co-repressors
24Nuclear HAT As are coactivators
- Gcn5p is a transcriptional activator of many
genes in yeast. It is also a HAT. - PCAF (P300/CBP associated factor) is a HAT and is
homologous to yeast Gcn5p. - P300 and CBP are similar proteins that interact
with many transcription factors (e.g. CREB, AP1
and MyoD). - P300/CBP are needed for activation by these
factors, and thus are considered coactivators. - P300/CBP has intrinsic HAT activity as well as
binding to the HAT PCAF.
25HAT complexes often contain several trancription
regulatory proteins.
- Example of the SAGA complex components
- Gcn5 catalytic subunit, histone acetyl
transferase - Ada proteins
- transcription adaptor proteins required for
function of some activators in yeast. - Spt proteins (TBP-group)
- regulate function of the TATA-binding protein.
- TAF proteins
- associate with TBP and also regulate its
function. - Tra1
- homologue of a human protein involved in cellular
transformation. - May be direct target of activator proteins.
26Yeast SAGA interacting with chromatin
27Roles of histone acetylation
- Increase access of transcription factors to DNA
in nucleosomes. - Decondense 30nm chromatin fibers
- Serve as markers for binding of non-histone
proteins (e.g. bromodomain proteins).
28Histone deacetylases are associated with
transcriptional repression
A mammalian histone deacetylase
Histone deacetylases Are recruited by
inhibitors of transcription. Are inhibited by
trichostatin and butyrate.
29Repression by deacetylation of histones
30Methylated DNA can recruit HDACs
31Connections in eukaryotic transcriptional
activation
- Transcriptional activators
- Coactivators
- Nucleosome remodeling
- Histone modification
- Interphase nuclear localization
32The functions of SWI/SNF and the SAGA complex are
genetically linked.
- Some genes require both complexes for activation.
- Other genes require one or the other complex.
- Many genes require neither - presumably utilize
different ATP-dependent complexes and/or HATs
33The yeast HO endonuclease gene requires both
SWI/SNF and SAGA
- The order of recruitment at the promoter
- 1. SWI5 activator sequence recognition
- 2. SWI/SNF complex remodel nucleosomes
- 3. SAGA acetylate histones
- 4. SBF activator (still at specific sequences)
- 5. general transcription factors
- Cosma, Tanaka and Nasmyth (1999) Cell 97299-311.
- The order is likely to differ at different genes