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result(s) for
"Ma, Kit-Wan"
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PCGF6-PRC1 suppresses premature differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells by regulating germ cell-related genes
2017
The ring finger protein PCGF6 (polycomb group ring finger 6) interacts with RING1A/B and E2F6 associated factors to form a non-canonical PRC1 (polycomb repressive complex 1) known as PCGF6-PRC1. Here, we demonstrate that PCGF6-PRC1 plays a role in repressing a subset of PRC1 target genes by recruiting RING1B and mediating downstream mono-ubiquitination of histone H2A. PCGF6-PRC1 bound loci are highly enriched for promoters of germ cell-related genes in mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs). Conditional ablation of Pcgf6 in ESCs leads to robust de-repression of such germ cell-related genes, in turn affecting cell growth and viability. We also find a role for PCGF6 in pre- and peri-implantation mouse embryonic development. We further show that a heterodimer of the transcription factors MAX and MGA recruits PCGF6 to target loci. PCGF6 thus links sequence specific target recognition by the MAX/MGA complex to PRC1-dependent transcriptional silencing of germ cell-specific genes in pluripotent stem cells.
Journal Article
Histone Crosstalk Directed by H2B Ubiquitination Is Required for Chromatin Boundary Integrity
2011
Genomic maps of chromatin modifications have provided evidence for the partitioning of genomes into domains of distinct chromatin states, which assist coordinated gene regulation. The maintenance of chromatin domain integrity can require the setting of boundaries. The HS4 insulator element marks the 3' boundary of a heterochromatin region located upstream of the chicken β-globin gene cluster. Here we show that HS4 recruits the E3 ligase RNF20/BRE1A to mediate H2B mono-ubiquitination (H2Bub1) at this insulator. Knockdown experiments show that RNF20 is required for H2Bub1 and processive H3K4 methylation. Depletion of RNF20 results in a collapse of the active histone modification signature at the HS4 chromatin boundary, where H2Bub1, H3K4 methylation, and hyperacetylation of H3, H4, and H2A.Z are rapidly lost. A remarkably similar set of events occurs at the HSA/HSB regulatory elements of the FOLR1 gene, which mark the 5' boundary of the same heterochromatin region. We find that persistent H2Bub1 at the HSA/HSB and HS4 elements is required for chromatin boundary integrity. The loss of boundary function leads to the sequential spreading of H3K9me2, H3K9me3, and H4K20me3 over the entire 50 kb FOLR1 and β-globin region and silencing of FOLR1 expression. These findings show that the HSA/HSB and HS4 boundary elements direct a cascade of active histone modifications that defend the FOLR1 and β-globin gene loci from the pervasive encroachment of an adjacent heterochromatin domain. We propose that many gene loci employ H2Bub1-dependent boundaries to prevent heterochromatin spreading.
Journal Article
USF Binding Sequences from the HS4 Insulator Element Impose Early Replication Timing on a Vertebrate Replicator
by
Chilaka, Sabarinadh
,
Boggetto, Nicole
,
Hassan-Zadeh, Vahideh
in
Acetylation
,
Alleles
,
Animals
2012
The nuclear genomes of vertebrates show a highly organized program of DNA replication where GC-rich isochores are replicated early in S-phase, while AT-rich isochores are late replicating. GC-rich regions are gene dense and are enriched for active transcription, suggesting a connection between gene regulation and replication timing. Insulator elements can organize independent domains of gene transcription and are suitable candidates for being key regulators of replication timing. We have tested the impact of inserting a strong replication origin flanked by the β-globin HS4 insulator on the replication timing of naturally late replicating regions in two different avian cell types, DT40 (lymphoid) and 6C2 (erythroid). We find that the HS4 insulator has the capacity to impose a shift to earlier replication. This shift requires the presence of HS4 on both sides of the replication origin and results in an advance of replication timing of the target locus from the second half of S-phase to the first half when a transcribed gene is positioned nearby. Moreover, we find that the USF transcription factor binding site is the key cis-element inside the HS4 insulator that controls replication timing. Taken together, our data identify a combination of cis-elements that might constitute the basic unit of multi-replicon megabase-sized early domains of DNA replication.
Journal Article
Histone Crosstalk Directed by H2B Ubiquitination Is Required for Chromatin Boundary Integrity
2011
Genomic maps of chromatin modifications have provided evidence for the partitioning of genomes into domains of distinct chromatin states, which assist coordinated gene regulation. The maintenance of chromatin domain integrity can require the setting of boundaries. The HS4 insulator element marks the 3' boundary of a heterochromatin region located upstream of the chicken β-globin gene cluster. Here we show that HS4 recruits the E3 ligase RNF20/BRE1A to mediate H2B mono-ubiquitination (H2Bub1) at this insulator. Knockdown experiments show that RNF20 is required for H2Bub1 and processive H3K4 methylation. Depletion of RNF20 results in a collapse of the active histone modification signature at the HS4 chromatin boundary, where H2Bub1, H3K4 methylation, and hyperacetylation of H3, H4, and H2A.Z are rapidly lost. A remarkably similar set of events occurs at the HSA/HSB regulatory elements of the FOLR1 gene, which mark the 5' boundary of the same heterochromatin region. We find that persistent H2Bub1 at the HSA/HSB and HS4 elements is required for chromatin boundary integrity. The loss of boundary function leads to the sequential spreading of H3K9me2, H3K9me3, and H4K20me3 over the entire 50 kb FOLR1 and β-globin region and silencing of FOLR1 expression. These findings show that the HSA/HSB and HS4 boundary elements direct a cascade of active histone modifications that defend the FOLR1 and β-globin gene loci from the pervasive encroachment of an adjacent heterochromatin domain. We propose that many gene loci employ H2Bub1-dependent boundaries to prevent heterochromatin spreading.
Journal Article
Characterisation of histone modifications at insulator elements
by
Ma, Meiji Kit-Wan
in
Oncology
2011
The genomes of higher eukaryotes are marked by distinct chromatin domains, which allow for the control of different gene expression states. It is thought that the boundaries of chromatin domains could be formed by DNA sequence elements called insulators. The paradigm HS4 insulator element is located at a boundary between the β-globin gene cluster and an adjacent condensed chromatin domain. Proteins that bind to the HS4 sequence recruit enzymes that mediate a number of histone modifications generally associated with chromatin accessibility. Inspired by yeast genetic studies, we hypothesised that H2B ubiquitination might be a key regulator of these ‘active’ marks. It was found that HS4 and another chromatin boundary at the neighbouring FOLR1 gene locus, HSA/HSB, are sites of H2B ubiquitination. The ubiquitination E3 ligase RNF20 was found to be necessary for global H2B ubiquitination and for methylation of H3K4, in a trans-histone modification pathway that is conserved from yeast to man. RNAi-mediated knockdown of RNF20 not only resulting in the depletion of H2B ubiquitination normally found at chromatin boundaries, but also disrupted their H3K4 methylation and acetylation at multiple histones. H2B ubiquitination is a master controller of the active chromatin state at the HS4 and HSA/HSB chromatin boundaries. Long term depletion of RNF20 expression leads to a compromise of the boundaries, allowing the spreading of heterochromatin into the FOLR1 and β-globin gene loci, resulting in gene silencing. This study also looked at the recruitment of factors that mediate the incorporation of the histone variant H2A.Z at chromatin boundary elements in vertebrates. It was found that insulator binding proteins control H2A.Z incorporation and acetylation.
Dissertation