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Mol. Cell. Biol., 12 1997, 7077-7087, Vol 17, No. 12
X Bi and JR Broach
Transcriptionally silent regions of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome,
the silent mating type loci and telomeres, represent the yeast equivalent
of metazoan heterochromatin. To gain insight into the nature of silenced
chromatin structure, we have examined the topology of DNA spanning the HML
silent mating type locus by determining the superhelical density of
mini-circles excised from HML (HML circles) by site-specific recombination.
We observed that HML circles excised in a wild-type (SIR+) strain were more
negatively supercoiled upon deproteinization than were the same circles
excised in a sir- strain, in which silencing was abolished, even when HML
alleles in which neither circle was transcriptionally competent were used.
cis-acting sites flanking HML, called silencers, are required in the
chromosome for establishment and inheritance of silencing. HML circles
excised without silencers from cells arrested at any point in the cell
cycle retained SIR-dependent differences in superhelical density. However,
progression through the cell cycle converted SIR+ HML circles to a form
resembling that of circles from sir- cells. This decay was not observed
with circles carrying a silencer. These results establish that (i) DNA in
transcriptionally silenced chromatin assumes a distinct topology reflecting
a distinct organization of silenced versus active chromatin; (ii) the
altered chromatin structure in silenced regions likely results from changes
in packaging of individual nucleosomes, rather than changes in nucleosome
density; and (iii) cell cycle progression disrupts the silenced chromatin
structure, a process that is counteracted by silencers.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
DNA in transcriptionally silent chromatin assumes a distinct topology that is sensitive to cell cycle progression
Department of Molecular Biology, Princeton University, New Jersey 08544, USA.
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