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Molecular and Cellular Biology, May 1999, p. 3714-3726, Vol. 19, No. 5
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center1 and University of Washington
School of Medicine,2 Seattle, Washington;
Microbiology Department, Dartmouth Medical Center, Lebanon, New
Hampshire3; Albert Einstein College
of Medicine, Bronx, New York4; and
Department of Biochemistry, University of Sydney, Sydney,
New South Wales, Australia5
Received 22 September 1998/Returned for modification 11 November
1998/Accepted 16 February 1999
A constitutive DNase I-hypersensitive site 5' of the chicken
It has been hypothesized that the
genomes of higher eukaryotes are organized in domains similar in
chromatin structure and that "boundary" or "insulator" elements
may form borders that separate active and inactive chromatin (9,
10, 12, 20, 22). These elements would ensure that
transcriptionally active genes or loci are sequestered from those that
are inactive or that the influence of regulatory structures in a locus
is restricted from spreading to neighboring regions. Such boundaries
may be formed by attachment to the nuclear matrix or the formation of higher-order chromatin structures; no clear evidence for either mechanism is available, although recent observations suggest that insulator proteins may localize to the nuclear periphery
(21). Thus, while it is believed that insulators are
important for the functional organization of complex genomes in higher
eukaryotes, their structure and mechanism of action are not well understood.
While the ability to block the effect of an enhancer at ectopic sites
of chromosomal integration in gene transfer experiments is an effect
attributed to insulators, the relationship of this effect to the
function of these elements in their native contexts remains uncertain.
For example, the insulators scs and scs' located downstream of hsp70 genes in the Drosophila
87A7 heat shock locus block repressive and activating
chromosomal position effects from random sites of integration in
Drosophila DNA (25, 26). On the basis of their
ability to establish domains of independent gene activity, these
elements were identified as insulators. Establishment of domains of
independent activity and blockage of activation by enhancers are
effects consistent with a simple model of chromatin insulation.
However, there is no direct evidence that these effects are
characteristics shared by all insulators, related to their normal
function, or apparent in every chromosomal context. In fact, it is not
clear if most gene domains have discrete boundaries or if these
boundaries create discrete regions of transition in chromatin structure
in vivo.
A region of constitutive DNase I hypersensitivity located near the
upstream boundary of the chicken In earlier studies, we showed that in transgenic mice and cells lines,
5'HS2 and other enhancers have little effect on the level of gene
expression in cells that actively express a gene but act to increase
the proportion of cells that express a gene and to maintain expression
over time (39-41). These results are consistent with all
evidence on enhancer action, since most assays are not able to
distinguish effects on transcription rate from effects on the
recruitment of templates to an active state. They suggest that
enhancers function primarily to ensure that a gene is established and
maintained in an active state in the appropriate lineage and have
little or no direct effect on the rate of transcription.
Here we describe studies on the cHS4 insulator that were designed to
test its ability to block enhancer activity under conditions that
control for position effects. Using a modification of the recombinase
mediated cassette exchange (RMCE) system (2), we studied the
effect of cHS4 on 5'HS2 enhancer activity at three genomic sites in
K562 cells. cHS4 blocks this effect of the enhancer, but surprisingly,
at some sites, it also reduced the enhancer effect when placed on the
distal flank of the enhancer. The function of the cHS4 element in the
Plasmid construction. (i) L1L2 plasmids.
Plasmid pL1HYGL2
(2, 44) was digested with BamHI, and a synthetic
polylinker was inserted in place of the HYG sequences to create pL1L2.
Parent vector pL1CMV-HyTKL2 was constructed by digesting a plasmid
containing the cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter driving expression of the
fusion protein HyTK with XhoI (kindly provided by P. Greenberg, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center) and ligating the
ends to a BamHI linker. A 3.1-kb CMV-HyTk BamHI fragment was subsequently inserted into the BamHI site of
the pL1L2 polylinker (schematically shown in Fig.
1). Plasmid pL1
0270-7306/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Chicken
-Globin 5'HS4 Boundary Element
Blocks Enhancer-Mediated Suppression of Silencing
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-globin locus, termed 5'HS4 or cHS4, has been shown to insulate a
promoter from the effect of an upstream enhancer and to reduce position
effects on mini-white expression in Drosophila
cells; on the basis of these findings, it has been designated a
chromatin insulator. We have examined the effect of the cHS4 insulator
in a system that assays both the level of gene expression and the rate
of transcriptional silencing. Because transgenes flanked by insulator
elements are shielded from position effects in Drosophila cells, we tested the ability of cHS4 to protect transgenes from position effects in mammalian cells. Flanking of an expression vector
with the cHS4 insulator in a colony assay did not increase the number
of G418-resistant colonies. Using lox/cre-based recombinase-mediated cassette exchange to control integration position, we studied the
effect of cHS4 on the silencing of an integrated
-geo reporter at
three genomic sites in K562 erythroleukemia cells. In this assay,
enhancers act to suppress silencing but do not increase expression
levels. While cHS4 blocked enhancement at each integration site, the
strength of the effect varied from site to site. Furthermore, at some
sites, cHS4 inhibited the enhancer effect either when placed between
the enhancer and the promoter or when placed upstream of the enhancer.
These results suggest that the activity of cHS4 is not dominant in all
contexts and is unlikely to prevent silencing at all genomic
integration sites.
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INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-globin locus exhibits characteristics and effects similar to those of other chromatin insulators (7, 8, 12). Chromatin upstream of this site is
condensed. Downstream, the chromatin is open, histone H4 is more
abundant in the acetylated state, and genes are transcriptionally active (34). In human K562 erythroleukemia cells, chicken
5'HS4 (cHS4) had enhancer-blocking activity: in a colony assay, it
effectively inhibited the stimulatory effect of an enhancer (5'HS2 of
the mouse
-globin locus control region [LCR]) when placed between the enhancer and a promoter. In addition, when cHS4 flanked the white minigene in transgenic Drosophila DNA, it
protected white expression from position effects
(7). Much of the insulator activity was mapped to a 250-bp
G-C-rich core that contains CpG sites that are hypomethylated in
erythroid and nonerythroid tissues (8). These CpG
"islands" are not associated with significant promoter activity.
The core contains canonical binding motifs for the transcriptional
activator SP-1 and for the yeast
-2 repressor, but it is not known
if these proteins (or related ones) are important for the function of
cHS4. By itself, cHS4 has shown little stimulatory or repressive effect
on gene expression, and its function in its native context has not been
established. One possible function of the cHS4 element is to restrict
upstream propagation of the active
-globin domain, but it has also
been speculated that cHS4 may protect the
-globin locus from the
repressive effect of neighboring heterochromatin and so maintain
expression of downstream
-globin genes (8). If cHS4 has
an autonomous ability to counteract silencing of gene expression by
flanking repressive chromatin at sites of ectopic chromosomal
integration, it could be an extremely useful tool in the design of
replacement gene therapy vectors (35).
-globin locus remains uncertain, but we believe these results
suggest that its function as an insulator in the locus may be more
complex than suggested by a domain model of genomic regulation.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-geoL2 was made by
digesting plasmid
-geo (described in reference 41) with Asp718, ligating it to a
BglII linker, and purifying a 4.3-kb BglII
-geo fragment. The
-geo BglII fragment was inserted into the BamHI site of the pL1L2 polylinker.
pL1HS2
-geoL2 was constructed by combining a 1.0-kb
BglII/SmaI fragment from 5'HS2 of the human
-globin LCR, a 4.3-kb
-geo fragment containing a blunt 5' end
(digested initially with Asp718 and ends subsequently filled
in with Klenow fragment) and a SalI 3' end, and a
BamHI/SalI pL1L2 DNA fragment in a three-way
ligation reaction (pL1-
geoL2 plasmids are shown in Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
-geo reporter constructs containing the cHS4 boundary
element. All contain the
-geo reporter driven by the human
-globin promoter (pr) and are flanked by lox elements L1
and L2 for site-specific integration with the RMCE system. HS2 is a
strong erythroid enhancer derived from the human
-globin LCR and was
used in the original characterization of cHS4. Two copies of a 1.2-kb
fragment containing cHS4 were placed in various orientations with
respect to the promoter and enhancer, as indicated in the diagrams. In
addition, a 2.5-kb DNA fragment from bacteriophage
was used as a
control for enhancer-promoter spacing.
DNA were created by
inserting a 2.5-kb HindIII/SmaI
DNA
fragment upstream from HS2 and between the HS2 enhancer and the
promoter in pL1HS2
-geoL2. The latter was accomplished by
converting the
DNA HindIII end to an
Asp718 end after KpnI linker ligation and
combining it in a four-way ligation reaction with a 1.0-kb
BglII/SmaI HS2 fragment, a 4.3-kb
Asp718/SalI
-geo fragment, and a
BamHI/SalI pL1L2 fragment. pL1
2.5HS2
-geo was constructed in two steps. First, the modified 2.5-kb
SmaI/Asp718
DNA fragment described above was
inserted upstream from
-geo to form an intermediate plasmid,
pL1
2.5
-geoL2. Second, the intermediate pL1
2.5
-geoL2 was digested with Asp718, the ends were filled in with
Klenow fragment, and a 1.0-kb HS2 BglII/SmaI
fragment modified to have blunt ends was inserted between the
DNA
and the
-globin promoter to create pL1
2.5HS2
-geoL2.
(ii) cHS4 plasmids.
Plasmids containing the boundary element
from cHS4 were derived from pJC13-1, kindly provided by Jay Chung.
pJC13-1 was altered by removal of the neo gene (digested
with BamHI and self-ligated after neo gene
removal) and the LCR sequences (digested with EcoRI and
self-ligated). Two copies of the original 1.2-kb
SacI/SspI cHS4 fragment were placed upstream of
-geo by performing a three-way ligation. This ligation included
a 2.4-kb Asp718/SalI fragment which had two
copies of cHS4 from pJC13-1, a 4.3-kb
Asp718/BglII
-geo fragment, and a
SalI/BamHI pL1L2 fragment and generated pL144
-geoL2. Two copies of cHS4 were placed downstream of
-geo by
ligating a SalI linker to the BamHI end of a
2.4-kb BamHI/SalI two-copy cHS4 fragment and
inserting this fragment into a SalI site located downstream
from
-geo to make pL1
-geo44L2. A construct with the
-geo cassette flanked by cHS4 was created by replacing a 1.3-kb
ClaI fragment from pL1
-geo44L2 containing
promoter and upstream
-geo sequences with a 3.8-kb ClaI
fragment from pL144
-geoL2. Insertion of the 3.8-kb
ClaI replacement fragment added two copies of cHS4 to this
construct, positioned upstream from the
-geo and
promoter
sequences to produce pL144
-geo44L2.
-geoL2 and between the HS2 enhancer and the
-globin
promoter to make 44HS2
-geo and HS244
-geo, respectively. First, the cHS4 DNA fragment was made by digesting the modified pJC-1
plasmid with SalI, filling the ends with Klenow fragment, and digesting it with Asp718 to produce a two-copy cHS4
fragment with Asp718 and blunt ends. This cHS4 fragment was
combined with a 1.0-kb 5'HS2 fragment with
SmaI/BglII ends, a fragment containing the
promoter and
-geo with Asp718 and SalI ends,
and the pL1L2 vector with BamHI and SalI ends in
a four-way ligation to produce pL1HS244
-geo. pL144HS2
-geoL2 was made by ligating the 1.0-kb HS2 enhancer element with
blunt ends to an Asp718 site located upstream of the
-globin promoter in pL144
-geo L2. The Asp718 site
was first modified by the Klenow fragment to create blunt ends for the
ligation. Proper content and orientation of the promoter, enhancer, and
insulator elements in these RMCE constructs were confirmed by
restriction digests and by DNA sequencing.
Site-specific recombination plasmids for the single
loxP expression trap method.
Plasmids were constructed
to perform a second cre recombinase-based method for generating
site-specific recombinants (see Fig. 7A). The parent plasmid
(loxPHS2
-loxP
geo) was constructed in two steps. In the first, a
three-way ligation was performed with a 1.0-kb HS2 enhancer element
(BglII and SmaI ends), the A
promoter fragment (blunted Asp718 end and
HindIII end), and the pBS246loxP plasmid (kindly
provided by Brian Sauer) (HindIII and BamHI
ends). In the second step, the loxP-HS2
-loxP intermediate fragment
with NotI ends was ligated to the
geo backbone (described in reference 41) after the
-
eo plasmid was
first digested with Asp718 and HindIII, the
ends were blunted with Klenow fragment, and the fragment was ligated to
a NotI linker. Target replacement plasmids were also
constructed. These included
-loxP, HS2
-loxP, HS2 44
-loxP, and
HS2-spacer-
-loxP.
-loxP was made by performing a three-way
ligation with loxP (HindIII and
EcoRI ends), the A
promoter
(HindIII and Asp718 ends), and Bluescript
(pKS+; Stratagene) (EcoRI and Asp718 ends)
fragments. HS2
-loxP was made by ligating HS2 (SmaI and
BglII ends) and the A
promoter
(HindIII and blunted Asp718 ends) to a
Bluescript plasmid containing a single loxP site with
HindIII and BamHI ends. HS244-
-loxP was
generated in two steps. In the first, a three-way ligation involving
the Bluescript-loxP vector (HindIII and
BamHI ends), the A
promoter (with
HindIII and blunted Asp718 ends), and two
copies of cHS4 (with EcoRV and BamHI ends) was
performed. In the second step, this intermediate vector with
BamHI and blunted NotI ends was ligated to a
1.0-kb 5'HS2 fragment with BglII and SmaI ends. Finally, a construct with a plasmid spacer between the 5'HS2 enhancer and
promoter was created by ligating the A
-loxP
plasmid with BamHI and SmaI ends to the 1.0-kb
HS2 enhancer element (BglII and SmaI ends) to
make HS2-spacer-
-loxP.
Cell culture and transfection. Conditions for growth and electroporation of K562 cells were as previously described (41). To select for RMCE events in clones containing a single copy of pL1CMVHyTKL2, 5 × 106 cells were electroporated with 10 µg of cre expression plasmid pBS185 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, Md.) and 100 µg of the target vector. At 48 h after electroporation, cells were plated by limiting dilution on 96-well microtiter plates in the presence of G418 (1 mg/ml) and ganciclovir (4 µg/ml).
To select for recombination events using the expression trap method, cells containing the single-copy promoterless
-geo target were
electroporated with the cre expression plasmid and the replacement vector as described above and plated by limiting dilution on 96-well microtiter plates in the presence of G418 (1 mg/ml).
Confirmation of RMCE.
After 2 weeks in culture, subclones
resistant to G418 and ganciclovir were expanded, genomic DNA was
prepared, and Southern blotting was performed to confirm site-specific
integration. This was done by documenting the presence of junction
fragments whose sizes were predicted from junction fragment sizes in
the HyTK parental clones (see Fig. 4). The expected junction fragment
sizes after RMCE for each of the three integration sites are listed in
Table 1. Digestion of genomic DNA with
PstI generated downstream junction fragments in all
constructs. PstI digestion generated upstream junction
fragments in all constructs except those which contained the cHS4
element, due to the presence of a PstI restriction site in
cHS4. To confirm site-specific recombination in the constructs containing cHS4, genomic DNA was digested with HindIII
and the presence of a 5' junction fragment of the correct size was
verified by hybridization to a cHS4 probe (for construct 44HS2
) or
an HS2 probe (for construct HS244
) (see Fig. 4C, right blots). In this manner, subclones containing single intact copies of each construct depicted in Fig. 1 were generated by RMCE at each of the
three integration sites. Three or more subclones were isolated for each
construct (with the sole exception of 44HS2
at site 15, where a
single subclone was isolated) and were used in subsequent analyses of
gene expression.
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Confirmation of site-specific recombination with the expression
trap.
After generation of single-copy integrants containing the
loxP-HS2
-loxP
-geo parent vector, a promoterless
-geo
intermediate was made by electroporation of the parental cells with the
cre expression vector. Following electroporation, single cells were cloned by limiting dilution, split into equivalent aliquots, and expanded in the presence and absence of G418. Clones sensitive to G418
were analyzed by Southern blotting to confirm excision of the
enhancer-promoter element. After confirmation of excision, the
promoterless
-geo target clone was electroporated with the cre
expression vector and the replacement plasmid. Clones resistant to G418
were expanded, genomic DNA was prepared, and Southern blotting was
performed. Site-specific recombination was confirmed by digestion of
genomic DNA with EcoRI and hybridization to a 5'HS2 enhancer
probe (see Fig. 7).
Determination of
-gal activity.
The
methylumbelliferyl-
-glucuronide (MUG) assay was performed on
lysates from cells containing the RMCE constructs. The cellular lysates
were placed in 96-well plates and assayed on a Dynatech fluorimeter as
described previously (40). Cells were passaged in the
presence of G418 to ensure that all of them expressed
-geo. Fluorescence of cells from each subclone was measured in triplicate, and mean
-galactosidase (
-gal) activity was determined after correction for the protein content of the lysates. MUG assays were
repeated two times, and mean activity relative to that of a reference
sample and the standard error of the mean (SEM) were calculated.
FACS-gal assays.
Fluorescence-activated cell sorter
(FACS)-Gal analysis was performed as described previously (40,
41). Cells passaged in the absence of G418 selection were assayed
at 2- to 4-week intervals for
-gal activity. Cells were incubated on
ice for 4 h in the presence of fluorescein
di-
-D-galactopyranoside before analysis to ensure that
cells with any
-gal activity were scored as positive. Each subclone
found to have a correctly integrated RMCE construct was divided into
two aliquots that were separately subjected to FACS-Gal analysis to
determine the rate of transcriptional silencing. This rate was
determined for each construct by calculating the average fraction of
-gal-expressing cells at 2- to 4-week intervals up to 40 weeks after
removal of G418 selection. In order to maintain a uniform rate of cell
division, all subclones were expanded to a density of 5 × 105 to 8 × 105 cells/ml and split 1:40 in
medium containing calf serum from a single lot. Average values were
calculated from at least three different subclones for each construct,
and the SEM was determined for each time interval.
Colony assay.
Mid-log-phase K562 cells (5 × 106) were transfected by electroporation as described
previously. Linearized DNA (10 µg) was mixed with supercoiled human
growth hormone expression plasmid DNA (2.5 µg) as a control for
transfection efficiency and electroporated into K562 cells. To generate
G418-resistant colonies, the transfected cells were diluted 1:2 (for
44
-geo, 44
44
-geo,
-geo44, and
-geo
constructs) or 1:10 (for HS2
-geo and 44HS2
-geo constructs) in medium containing 1-mg/ml G418 and plated on 96-well culture plates 2 days after transfection. The G418-resistant colonies were counted 2 to 3 weeks after selection and corrected for
transfection efficiency. The experiment was performed three times in
duplicate to generate average values and the SEM.
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RESULTS |
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Colony assays suggest that cHS4 does not protect against position effects. It has been proposed that cHS4 may counteract the repressive effect of chromatin and thereby promote stability of expression at randomly selected sites of integration. We elected to first test this hypothesis in a conventional colony assay. The colony assay measures the ability of a transfected plasmid to integrate into chromatin and express a drug resistance marker with sufficient stability to produce a colony of drug-resistant cells; it was used to characterize cHS4 by Chung et al. (7, 8). In the colony assay, enhancers appear to act by increasing the number of sites at which transcriptional activity can occur after integration. Constructs may be more efficient at initiating and maintaining expression within a region of inactive chromatin when they contain an enhancer. However, there is considerable evidence that they do not affect the rate of transcription in active integrated constructs (28, 39, 40).
If it is assumed that most random integration sites are repressive for expression and cHS4 acts to counteract repressive chromatin and permit expression of insulated genes, then a construct flanked by cHS4 should produce increased numbers of G418-resistant colonies by blocking the repressive influence of flanking chromatin. To test this, we transfected K562 cells with linearized
-geo plasmid DNA, plated
transfected cells into medium with G418, and determined the number of
G418-resistant colonies after correcting for transfection efficiency.
The
-geo reporter is a fusion protein with
-gal and neomycin
phosphotransferase activities (41) and thus can be utilized
in a colony assay. In each construct,
-geo expression was driven by
the human A
-globin promoter.
The
-geo constructs used in the colony assay are depicted in Fig. 1,
and the results of the colony assay are presented in Fig.
2. First, we observed a significant
increase in colonies by addition of the 5'HS2 erythroid enhancer to the
-geo plasmid, similar to what we and others have observed in the
past (7, 28, 40). We then tested the effect of the cHS4
insulator in the colony assay. We found that placing cHS4 upstream of
the HS2 enhancer (which, in multicopy head-to-tail arrays, would cause the enhancer-promoter sequences to be flanked by cHS4) had little effect on the number of G418-resistant colonies, as observed previously by Chung et al. (7) (Fig. 2). To avoid an enhancer-blocking effect that may antagonize the ability of the 5'HS2 enhancer to establish expression in the colony assay, we also tested the effect of
cHS4 in the absence of an enhancer. Two copies of cHS4 were placed
upstream or downstream of
-geo, and the construct was also flanked
by cHS4 at both ends (Fig. 2B). Placing the cHS4 boundary element
upstream or downstream of the
-globin promoter did not increase the
number of colonies relative to that obtained with the promoter alone,
and flanking this plasmid with cHS4 elements actually decreased the
number of colonies by more than 50% (Fig. 2B). The reduction in colony
number after flanking of a plasmid construct has been observed
previously (8).
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-geo reporter (Fig. 2B). Thus, it is
possible that in the colony assay, the enhancer-blocking activity of
cHS4 shields expression from the stimulatory effect of neighboring
genomic elements: if most random integration sites in the colony assay
are actually permissive for expression, then flanking cHS4 elements may
actually reduce the number of colonies by blocking activating effects
of an endogenous enhancer near the integration site. Unfortunately, the
colony assay is not capable of distinguishing these possibilities, as it does not control for the effect of integration position. We therefore developed a novel system to study cHS4 in a manner that overcomes this limitation of the colony assay.
A system to control integration position in cultured cells.
To
further investigate the effect of cHS4 on gene expression, we have used
a system that permits detailed analysis of stable gene expression. As a
reporter, we use
-geo, a fusion protein with
-gal and neomycin
phosphotransferase activities. In addition to acting as a selectable
marker (conferring resistance to G418),
-geo expression can be
measured with a variety of assays for
-gal. We used conversion of
MUG to assess the quantity of
-geo expression, and this level is a
reflection of the transcription rate. The FACS-Gal assay
(29) is a flow cytometric assay that gives a direct and
extremely sensitive measurement of the proportion of cells within
a population that express
-gal; cells containing only a few
-gal
molecules are scored positive (15), but under these
conditions, the assay does not conveniently quantitate
-gal expression. With these two assays, we can assess the amount of transcription from an expressing gene and also measure the proportion of cells in a population that are actively expressing the reporter (40, 41).
-geo, which gives G418
resistance.
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-geo expression is driven by the human
A
-globin promoter, with the erythroid enhancer 5'HS2
(from the human
-globin LCR) placed upstream of the promoter. The
-globin promoter, 5'HS2 enhancer, and K562 cell line were used in
the original description of the HS4 insulator. Two copies of the 1.2-kb 5'HS4 boundary element, as tested in studies performed by Chung et al.
(7, 8), were placed either between the 5'HS2 enhancer and
the
-globin promoter or upstream of 5'HS2. To simulate the effect of
distance on enhancer activity caused by insertion of cHS4 sequences
between the promoter and enhancer, a 2.5-kb DNA control fragment
containing bacteriophage
DNA was placed between the enhancer and
promoter. Subclones that had completed RMCE were selected on the basis
of G418 and ganciclovir resistance, and site-specific recombination was
confirmed by Southern blotting (Fig.
4). The junction
fragment sizes expected after RMCE for each of the three integration
sites are listed in Table 1.
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Neither the 5'HS2 enhancer nor cHS4 affects expression level.
The level of
-geo expression and the rate at which expression was
silenced were measured in separate assays. The
-gal expression level
was measured by MUG conversion in cells maintained in G418, thereby
eliminating the possibility that cells not expressing
-geo might be
included in the analysis. To address the possibility that G418
selection excludes cells that have low expression levels and thus die
in the presence of G418, we have measured expression levels by MUG
conversion in cells passaged in the absence of positive selection
(40). We accounted for the fraction of cells not expressing
-gal by performing the FACS-gal assay, corrected for the percentage of expressing cells, and determined
-gal activity per expressing cell. There was no difference in measurements of expression obtained by
the two methods (data not shown). Consistent with our previous studies
of 5'HS2 (40, 41), the addition of 5'HS2 to the
-globin promoter resulted in only a slight or no increase in the level of
-gal expression (Fig. 5). 5'HS2 is a
well-characterized enhancer, but this result is consistent with earlier
studies by us and others (13, 28, 39-41). We have shown
that enhancers have little effect on expression level but act to ensure
the establishment and maintenance of a domain permissive for stable
gene expression (39-41). The absence of a significant
stimulatory effect on expression level by the upstream 5'HS2 enhancer
does not mean that it has no effect, as the measurement of reporter
gene silencing shows (see below). The boundary element from cHS4 had
little or no effect on expression level when positioned either upstream
or downstream of the enhancer, and neither did the bacteriophage
spacer DNA. Thus, the enhancer-blocking activity of cHS4 does not
appear to be mediated by effects on transcription rate.
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The 5'HS2 enhancer suppresses silencing of the reporter.
Silencing of expression was measured with the FACS-Gal assay. When
cells expressing
-geo are removed from G418 selection, expression is
no longer necessary for survival, but the FACS-Gal assay can be used to
monitor the proportion of cells that continue to express
-geo. We
have previously shown that each integration site silences reporter gene
expression over time at a characteristic rate and that enhancers
counteract this silencing. To ensure that all cells were initially
expressing
-geo, subclones were expanded in G418; after removal of
G418 selection, cells were subjected to the FACS-Gal assay at intervals
to determine the percentage of cells that continued to actively express
-geo. To assess the effect of clonal variation on the silencing
rate, six single-cell subclones were derived from one clone (
-
geo
at site 30) by limiting dilution and passaged in the absence of G418.
There was no significant variation in the rate of silencing among the
single-cell subclones (data not shown). Subclones carrying each of the
constructs shown in Fig. 1 were passaged separately in duplicate, and
FACS-Gal assays were performed at standardized time points. The rate of silencing varied widely among the three integration sites, suggesting that repressive effects caused by the position of integration also
varied from site to site (Fig.
6A to C). For example,
the elapsed time necessary to observe a 70% decline in the percentage of cells expressing
-gal for the
-geo plasmid driven by the
-globin promoter was 22 weeks at site 15, more than 30 weeks at site
19, and 16 weeks at site 30. This variation in rates of silencing from
the RMCE sites was comparable to that observed with similar constructs
integrated into K562 cells we have described previously
(40). Thus, the RMCE sites appear to be subject to a
variegating effect on gene expression that has been observed after
stable integration in cell lines and in transgenic mice (14, 36,
39, 40). At each of the sites, the addition of the 5'HS2 enhancer
had a profound effect on silencing, significantly slowing the rate of
silencing compared to that of a similar construct lacking the enhancer
(Fig. 6A, compare open triangles to closed circles in the three
graphs). This observation is completely consistent with our earlier
studies of enhancer action (40, 41) and with the hypothesis
that enhancer elements stimulate expression by maintaining a domain
that is permissive for transcription rather than affecting the rate of
transcription.
|
The cHS4 boundary element blocks 5'HS2 enhancer activity.
Based on previous studies by Chung et al. (7, 8), we
anticipated that the cHS4 boundary element, when positioned between the
promoter and enhancer, would increase silencing of
-gal expression by blocking the ability of the enhancer to maintain expression. Complete abrogation of the enhancer effect by cHS4 should cause the
rate of silencing to be indistinguishable from that obtained with the
promoter alone. As expected, cHS4 did block the effect of the HS2
enhancer in the silencing assay, but the magnitude of its activity
varied among the integration sites. At integration site 30 (Fig. 6A,
right graph), cHS4 completely abolished the enhancer effect. At sites
15 and 19 (Fig. 6A, center and left graphs), the interposition of cHS4
between the enhancer and promoter attenuated rather than blocked the
effect of the HS2 enhancer. While these results confirm that cHS4 has
enhancer-blocking activity, they also suggest that sequences
neighboring the three integration sites exerted some influence on
expression. It is possible that the variation in insulator activity we
observed might be due in part to the influence of noninsulated
downstream sequences. However, these results may also indicate that the
cHS4 insulator does not exert absolute dominance at all genomic
integration sites.
cHS4 enhancer blocking activity is bidirectional. It has generally been supposed that an insulator blocks transmission of an enhancer effect when placed between an enhancer and a promoter but that an insulator placed upstream of the enhancer would have no effect. To determine if cHS4 had a bidirectional repressive effect on the maintenance of expression, we placed it upstream of the HS2 enhancer at the three integration sites. Surprisingly, in this configuration, cHS4 exhibited significant silencing activity at two of the three sites. At sites 15 and 30 (Fig. 6A, left and right graphs), cHS4 was nearly as effective at blocking enhancer activity when upstream of the enhancer as it was when placed between the enhancer and the promoter. However, at integration site 19, cHS4 had little effect when placed upstream of the enhancer (Fig. 6A, center graph). Again, this suggests that the activity of the cHS4 element is influenced by the site of integration.
If cHS4 insulates a promoter from the influence of repressive flanking chromatin, it might be expected to counteract silencing when placed on the flank of a construct, but in fact, its effect appears to be the opposite, increasing silencing of the reporter. To further test the possibility that cHS4 has bidirectional silencing activity, we attempted to integrate cassettes in which
-geo, driven only by the
-globin promoter, was flanked on one or both sides by cHS4. In order
to identify reintegration events,
-geo must be expressed so that a
subclone is selected. We recovered subclones in which the cassette
contained either no cHS4 or cHS4 at the 3' end. However, we did not
recover any clones when the cassette contained cHS4 at each end or
(significantly) cHS4 at the 5' end adjoining the promoter (data not
shown). While it is not possible to say with certainty why no such
subclones were obtained, the result is consistent with the
interpretation that the cassettes were integrated but not expressed.
While it is not certain if the repressive effects described above and
the results of a colony assay indicate that flanking cHS4 elements
repress expression, these results do indicate that cHS4 elements do not promote stable expression in every context.
Effect of increased distance on the enhancer effect.
We
attempted to control for the effect of altering the spacing between the
promoter and enhancer in the constructs containing cHS4 by testing
constructs in which a 2.5-kb DNA fragment of bacteriophage
was
placed either between the promoter and the enhancer or upstream of the
enhancer. While the
DNA had no effect on expression level in these
configurations (Fig. 5), it did increase silencing at integration site
30, where cHS4 also had significant silencing activity (Fig. 6B, right
graph). No significant silencing activity was associated with
DNA
at integration site 15, and
DNA had a modest repressive effect at
site 19 (Fig. 6B, left and center graphs). These findings call into
question the notion of functionally inert DNA; the context-dependent
silencing activity of the spacer may be due to its prokaryotic origin.
While the silencing activity of the spacer, to some extent, impaired
our ability to judge the effect of distance from the promoter on
enhancer activity, we observed that 5'HS2 significantly reduced the
rate of silencing when placed downstream of
-geo, even though the
promoter and enhancer were separated by a distance of 4.0 kb (Fig. 6C,
compare
[circles] and
HS2 [triangles]). When cHS4 was
placed between downstream 5'HS2 and the reporter gene (
44 HS2), it
blocked the enhancer effect (Fig. 6C, squares).
could be a
general phenomenon of DNA elements utilized in this system, we tested
the effect of Bluescript (Stratagene, Inc.) plasmid DNA at a fourth
integration site. At this site, recombinase-mediated site-specific
recombination was accomplished through an expression trap method shown
schematically in Fig. 7A. We made a
parental construct containing the 5'HS2 enhancer upstream of the
-globin promoter driving
-geo; the enhancer and promoter
sequences were flanked by loxP targets. Following cre
expression, a promoterless intermediate was created. A second plasmid
containing the new transcriptional control elements was then introduced
with a cre expression plasmid; site-specific recombination was screened
on the basis of restored
-geo expression and confirmed by Southern blotting. As at the three RMCE sites, the effect of the 5'HS2 enhancer
at this site was to significantly slow the rate at which expression of
the reporter was silenced (Fig. 7B). At this site, the enhancer effect
was effectively blocked by cHS4. When the 3.0-kb plasmid spacer was
located between the enhancer and the promoter, it had no effect on
silencing. This observation argues against the possibility that the
repressive effects of cHS4 we observed were due to nonspecific effects
of random DNA after insertion at the genomic sites.
|
| |
DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
By using the RMCE system to control for the effect of integration
position and
-geo to assay effects on silencing of gene expression,
we confirmed that the cHS4 insulator has significant enhancer-blocking
activity. We also showed that it blocks the enhancer effect by
disrupting the ability of an enhancer to maintain expression rather
than by an effect on transcription rate. However, we also found that
cHS4 causes more rapid silencing of a linked
-geo reporter, whether
it is placed between the enhancer and the promoter or distal to the
enhancer. Furthermore, the intensity of its effect varies from site to
site, suggesting that it is itself susceptible to position effects.
When positioned at the borders of transcription units that either had
or lacked an enhancer, cHS4 did not increase the number of
G418-resistant colonies in a colony assay. In our experiments, the
three integration sites were randomly selected, and there is no reason
to suppose that they are unusual. Our results strongly suggest that
cHS4 will not shelter randomly integrated genes in mammalian cells from repressive chromatin in all contexts, although it may do so under some
circumstances (42).
These observations are not in conflict with those made in previous
investigations of cHS4, but they do reveal more complex effects. RMCE
allows direct comparison of the effects of cHS4 when it is placed in
different configurations with respect to an enhancer or other
regulatory elements at the same genomic site. The colony assay assesses
the ability of cis-regulatory elements to counteract
repressive chromosomal position effects that silence drug resistance
reporter genes, i.e., to establish expression and maintain it long
enough to score a colony for drug resistance. Colonies derived from
such an experiment can be analyzed with the
-geo assay, which
permits observation of reporter silencing and separate measurement of
the expression level. We previously showed that enhancers are potent
antagonists of variegating position effect in the colony assay and so
act to increase the number of colonies without acting directly to
increase the transcription rate (40, 41). Chung and
colleagues demonstrated that cHS4 blocked the stimulatory effect of the
5'HS2 enhancer in a colony assay (7). We have extended these
observations and found that, unlike transcriptional enhancers, cHS4
does not suppress position effects in a colony assay. Recently, Chung
and his colleagues showed a similar reduction in the number of
G418-resistant colonies by flanking a neomycin resistance reporter,
driven by the
-globin promoter and 5'HS2 enhancer, with a single
copy of cHS4 (8). We also noted that cHS4 does not
suppress a variegating position effect (36) on a
globin-lacZ transgene in mice (16a). Taken together, the results of these studies suggest that cHS4 does not
universally block the effects of repressive chromatin that borders
integration sites in a colony assay. It is possible that cHS4 blocks
repressive chromatin in some sites; however, our data argue that the
insulator does not exert absolute dominance at all sites of integration.
It is possible that apparent repression by cHS4 is created by
insulation of the expression cassette from endogenous genomic enhancers. In the colony assay, this would reduce the number of colonies by insulating the cassette from stimulatory effects of flanking chromatin required for expression and, at the RMCE sites, insulate the cassette from an endogenous enhancer upstream of each of
the three integration sites. This would account for both the apparent
bidirectional silencing activity of cHS4 and the difficulty in
generating subclones carrying the
-geo cassette flanked by cHS4.
Nevertheless, this seems unlikely. First, it would require that each of
the three integration sites have such a strong enhancer nearby but that
this endogenous enhancer not be sufficient to maintain reporter
expression. Second, it would require that 5'HS2 have a much stronger
effect than the endogenous enhancer (since it maintains expression much
more effectively) but that when the endogenous enhancer was blocked by
placing cHS4 on the flank of a construct, 5'HS2 would be unable to
maintain expression. A possibly simpler explanation for our results is that cHS4 has a local effect that suppresses the activity of enhancer and promoter elements on either side of it. However, we cannot exclude
the possibility that an endogenous activator and the 5'HS2 enhancer
interact in an additive manner to stabilize expression and that this
interaction is effectively blocked by the cHS4 insulator, accounting
for its partial effect on expression stability. Taken together, our
results suggest either that cHS4 itself has a repressive effect or that
it can block the activating effect of flanking chromatin and so enhance
silencing of the flanked construct. Either action could cause the
silencing of expression associated with cHS4 we observed.
Our observations are not inconsistent with the idea that cHS4 functions
as an insulator; the bidirectional silencing effect may or may not bear
any relation to its function in the native context of the chicken
-globin domain. If, as Chung et al. have speculated (7,
8), cHS4 functions to separate chromatin domains near the chicken
-globin locus, it is possible that this activity causes a silencing
effect in our assay. While insulators have been identified and defined
by an effect of unidirectional silencing of gene expression dependent
upon enhancer activation, these assays may produce only a partial
understanding of their function. The characteristics of some other
known insulators suggest more complex functions.
Perhaps the best-studied insulator is that found in the Drosophila gypsy retrotransposon, where binding sites for suppressor of hairy wing [su(Hw)] have silencing and enhancer-blocking activities (3, 4, 19). The silencing activity is modified by trans-acting factors to confer directionality on its enhancer-blocking effects. The unidirectional silencing is mediated by protein-protein interactions involving the su(Hw) protein and its partners (17-19). Mutations in the modifier protein encoded by mod(mdg4) cause these sites to lose their polarity and act as bidirectional silencers of transcription and also become enhancers of position effect variegation. The gypsy insulator may not recapitulate these effects at every site of integration, and there is evidence from mod(mdg4) mutants that selected promoters are spared from its repressive effect (4, 21). Thus, similar to our observations of cHS4, the activity of the su(Hw) insulator is influenced by its position of integration. Moreover, under certain conditions, it too has bidirectional silencing activity.
The Drosophila bithorax complex contains several chromatin insulators that may facilitate the expression of homeotic selector proteins in a developmentally regulated pattern. The best studied is the Fab-7 insulator, positioned between cis-regulatory regions iab-6 and iab-7 of the Abdominal-B gene in the bithorax complex (23, 46). These elements control expression in posterior parasegments 11 and 12 in the developing embryo. Fab-7 was shown to silence linked reporters in transgenic fly strains and has enhancer-blocking activity associated with binding by polycomb (Pc) group proteins. Recently, mapping studies have demonstrated separate Pc response element and boundary element sequences located near the Fab-7 boundary. Thus, the Fab-7 boundary has overlapping affinities for repressive Pc proteins and activating trithorax group proteins (24, 27), which may account for the observation that the Fab-7 boundary functions to block ectopic activation and ectopic silencing when tested in the context of the bithorax complex. These complexes of stimulatory and repressive proteins may form structures that maintain chromatin in a stable state that is initiated by events early during embryogenesis (5, 30). Whether conditioned to be active or inactive, Fab-7 maintains the state in a manner that is stable and heritable.
Thus, the silencing activity associated with insulators may well be linked to their function. This activity is subject to modification by trans-acting factors that may confer directionality or specificity of silencing, or by the transcriptional state of a locus initiated by prior events, to maintain a state of repression (or activation) that is stable through cell divisions and even meiosis (5, 6, 32). It is also influenced by its context. These interactions may account for the variation in silencing and enhancer-blocking activity we observed for cHS4 among the three integration sites studied.
Chromatin insulators such as Fab-7, and an enhancer-blocking
element located between the human T-cell receptor
and
genes, may function to form boundaries between transcriptionally active and
inactive domains in the locus (45). However, the function of
5'HS4 in the chicken
-globin locus is not immediately apparent. In
erythroid cells, it is located in chromatin that changes from condensed
to open, although it is not known if it is required for formation or
maintenance of this transition (34). Its position at that
locus suggests that it may isolate neighboring loci and associated
chromatin domains from the influence of
-globin genes; our results
suggest that its function is more likely to block nonspecific
activation by globin enhancers than to block the spread of repressive
heterochromatin from upstream sites. In the murine and human
-globin
loci, 5'HS5 has been thought to act as a boundary element by virtue of
its analogous location and properties. However, deletion of mouse 5'HS5
by homologous recombination did not significantly alter the expression
of downstream globin genes, nor did its deletion alter the open
chromatin structure of the locus, suggesting that other structures in
the locus are sufficient for initiation and maintenance of a
transcriptionally active state (1, 33).
In erythroid tissues, globin genes are clearly not targets for
repression by cHS4. cHS4 may (like the Fab-7 insulator in
the bithorax complex) act to propagate either an active or an inactive transcriptional state established during earlier stages of development, or its primary action may be to prevent activation of upstream genes by
the
-globin domain. It is clear that cHS4 creates a chromatin
structure that affects neighboring elements; the nature and function of
this structure remain to be understood.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Mark Groudine and Gary Felsenfeld for helpful discussions.
This work was supported by grants from the NIH to D.I.K.M. and M.C.W. D.I.K.M. is a Scholar of the Leukemia Society of America.
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Present address: The Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute, 384 Victoria St., Darlinghurst, Sydney, NSW 2010, Australia. Phone: 61-2-9295-8500. Fax: 61-2-9295-8501. E-mail: dmartin{at}fhcrc.org.
| |
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