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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 2002, p. 7907-7918, Vol. 22, No. 22
0270-7306/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MCB.22.22.7907-7918.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Vladimir P. Bermudez,
and William R. Folk*
Department of Biochemistry, University of MissouriColumbia, Columbia, Missouri 65211
Received 15 May 2002/ Returned for modification 16 July 2002/ Accepted 15 August 2002
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The Py enhancer PEA1 and PEA3 sites are particularly important for stimulating Py DNA replication (18, 20, 39, 48, 69, 71, 75, 83, 90, 91, 105). Jun, a member of the AP1 (PEA1) complex, recruits Py large T antigen (PyLT) to the origin to stimulate DNA unwinding, particularly at early times after infection when PyLT is limiting (39, 48, 69, 71, 75, 91). The AP1 complex and ets family proteins (that bind the PEA3 site) as well as Gal4VP16, NF-
B, E1a, Sp1, and p53, which also can stimulate Py DNA replication (8, 10, 11, 37, 46, 53, 74, 77, 111; reviewed in references 26 and 74), interact with p300/CBP (2, 4-7, 31, 36, 50, 57, 61, 65, 68, 82, 101, 116), PCAF, and GCN5 (15, 67, 107, 110) and other coactivators that acetylate histones and nonhistone proteins involved in transcription, including HMG17, HMGI(Y), E2Fs, p53, c-Jun (109), MyoD, YY1, Tat, TFIIE, TFIIF, and TFI68 (17, 92, 96). Acetylation regulates these proteins' functions and interactions with other proteins (17, 55, 92, 96, 97).
Proteins directly involved in DNA replication also interact with acetyltransferases, including PyLT, which interacts with p300/CBP (23, 76), MCM2 and ORC1 (which interact with acetyltransferase HBO1 [14, 44]), and MCM3, whose acetylation affects DNA replication (103). Also, acetyltransferases are recruited to double-stranded DNA breaks to facilitate DNA repair (13, 45, 70; for a review see reference 17). However, neither the specific roles for histone acetylation in these processes nor the proteins that catalyze them have been established.
Here we demonstrate that the PCAF and GCN5 acetyltransferases, when tethered near the Py origin via Gal4 DNA binding, stimulate DNA replication in vivo. Our initial hypothesis was that these acetyltransferases modify chromatin structures near the origin, but this was not supported by our experimental evidence. Instead, we observed that PCAF and GCN5 bound PyLT in vivo and that PCAF acetylated PyLT. We propose that PCAF and GCN5 activate replication at the Py origin by helping to recruit and to modify PyLT function by acetylation.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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E (Fig. 1A) contains Py sequences between nucleotides (nt) 4999 (AccI) and 372 (DraI) at the XhoI site of pBluescript (Stratagene), encompassing the Py origin with the viral enhancer (nt 5047 to 5291) replaced by an XhoI site. pBSPyGal (Fig. 1A) is a derivative of pBSPy
E with five Gal4-binding sites from pG5-E4T (16) cloned at the XhoI site of pPyXhoI, which contains the polyomavirus A3 genome cloned at the EcoRI site of pBR322 with a viral enhancer (nt 5047 to 5291) replaced by an XhoI site. pBM129 was described by Hermansen et al. (42). pMKSO11 contains the entire Py genome (with a defective ori) cloned in pMK16 (104).
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574-608 for a HAT-truncated mutant of Gal4PCAF (GPCAF
574-608) (56); and pCXflag-GalPCAF
65-112 for an N-terminal-truncated mutant of Gal4PCAF (GPCAF
65-112) (56). PcDNA3GalDB, pcDNA3GalhGCN5SF, pcDNA3GalhGCN5FTE, and pcDNA3GalDEY were constructed by transferring Gal4 chimeras from pM2 vectors (15) into pcDNA3 (Invitrogen) by using PCR. pcDNA3GGmGCN5FL-flag containing duplicate GalDBs was constructed by inserting EcoRI-digested PCR products of the GalDB from pCXflag-GalPCAF by inserting primers 5'-CCGGAATTCATGAAGCTACTGTCTTCTATC-3' and 5'-CTGTATCGCCGGAAGAATTCGCCAC-3' into the EcoRI site of pCMVSPORT2mGCN5fl (114). Expression vectors for Gal4PCAF and its deletion mutants were described by Krumm et al. (56). Cell cultures. NIH 3T3 (mouse fibroblast cell line), FOP (polyomavirus transformed mouse mammary carcinoma cell line), and Cos7 (simian virus 40 [SV40]-transformed Africa green monkey kidney cell line) were cultured in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM; low glucose) (Invitrogen) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (FBS) and 4 mM L-glutamine.
Replication assays.
NIH 3T3 cells were seeded in 12-well plates (1.5 x 105 cells/well) and were incubated overnight at 37°C. Cells were transiently transfected by using LipofectAMINE PLUS (Invitrogen) with expression plasmids for Gal4 fusion proteins (0.2 µg) and a test plasmid (0.2 µg) pBSPyGal4 containing the Py ori core flanked by 5 Gal4-binding sites or pBSPy
E containing only the Py ori core (Fig. 1A). PyLT, which was required for replication, was provided by cotransfection of pMKSO11 (0.01 µg), and the total amount of DNA (0.41 µg) was kept constant by adding vector DNA. After incubating cells with a DNA:LipofectAMINE PLUS mixture for 4 to 5 h in 400 µl of serum-free DMEM, the transfection solution was replaced with 1 ml of DMEM containing 10% FBS.
Similarly, FOP cells (1.5 x 106 cells per well), a cell line that constitutively expresses PyLT (11), were transfected with expression plasmids (0.8 µg) and test plasmid pBSPyGal or pBSPy
E (0.4 µg) by using LipofectAMINE. After incubating cells with DNA:LipofectAMINE mixture for 6 h in 350 µl of serum-free DMEM, 800 µl of DMEM containing 10% FBS was added. For both types of cells, the medium was changed at 12 h and was incubated for another 24 h. DNAs were isolated by the Hirt procedure (43), digested with RNase A (0.2 µg/µl) and with EcoRI and HindIII to linearize plasmids, and were digested with DpnI in the presence of 200 mM NaCl to distinguish input (methylated) DNA from DNA replicated in animal cells (80, 93). The replicated DpnI-resistant DNA was resolved from DpnI-digested DNA by electrophoresis in agarose gels (0.8%), transferred to a nylon membrane, detected by Southern Blotting with probes generated from the test plasmid, labeled, and visualized with the North2South detection kit (Pierce). Transfection efficiencies were normalized by using input DNA digested by DpnI. For analysis of protein expression, an identical set of transfections was performed, except test plasmids were not included. Cells were lysed with 1% Triton X-100 lysis buffer 36 h after transfection. Proteins in lysates were resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), and expression of Gal4 fusion proteins was detected by Western blotting by using the anti-GalDB monoclonal antibody sc-510 (Santa Cruz, Inc.).
Transcription assays. NIH 3T3 and FOP cells were transiently transfected as described above with expression plasmids for Gal4 fusion proteins, reporter plasmid pFR-Luc (Stratagene; Fig. 2A), and expression plasmid pRL-CMV (Promega; Fig. 2A) with Renilla luciferase as an internal control. At 36 to 48 h after transfection, extracts were prepared by passive lysis and luciferase activities were assayed according to the protocol of the Dual-Luciferase Reporter Assay System (Promega). Luciferase activities were normalized with Renilla luciferase activities. All transfections were repeated at least three times. The relative luciferase activities are represented as the means relative to the basal activity of a transfected GalDB (pcDNA3Gal4DB). For analysis of protein expression, a sample of whole-cell extracts was resolved by SDS-PAGE, and expression of Gal4 fusion proteins was detected by Western blotting by using the anti-GalDB monoclonal antibody sc-510 (Santa Cruz, Inc.).
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In vitro acetylation assays. Acetylation reactions were performed with a mixture of 2.8 µg of baculovirus-expressed histidine-tagged PyLT purified by nickel chelate chromatography (62) (or bovine serum albumin [BSA] as a negative control), 0.8 µg of PCAF (Upstate), and 5.0 nmol of [3H]acetyl-coenzyme A (200 mCi/mmol; DuPont-NEN) in 30 µl of HAT assay buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 0.1 mM EDTA, 10 mM sodium butyrate, 1.0 mM dithiothreitol, 10% glycerol) at 30°C for 1 h. Reaction mixtures were stopped by addition of 1x SDS sampling buffer, and a 25-µl volume was resolved by SDS-PAGE. The gel was stained with Coomassie blue to estimate the protein quantities, soaked in EN3HANCE solution (DuPont) for 30 min and vacuum dried, and subsequently subjected to autoradiography for 3 weeks. The acetylation reaction was also carried out in 25 µl of HAT assay buffer with unlabeled acetyl-coenzyme A (0.2 mM; Sigma) and PyLT (2.5 µg) as substrates and active PCAF (0.7 µg) or p300 acetyltransferase (0.9 µg or 7 U; Upstate) as a catalyst, and acetylation in half a reaction was detected by Western blotting by using rabbit anti-acetyl lysine polyclonal antibody (Upstate). For filter-binding assays, acetylation reactions were performed with a mixture of 2.5 µg of PyLT (or chicken histones as a positive control), 0.25 µg of active PCAF (Upstate), and 1.25 nmol of [3H]acetyl-coenzyme A (200 mCi/mmol; DuPont-NEN) in 25 µl of HAT assay buffer at 30°C for 1 h. Five microliters of each reaction sample was transferred onto P81 paper (Whatman), washed five times for 5 min per wash with 50 ml of 50 mM Na2HPO4 (pH 9.0) and once with 50 ml of acetone, and dried. Each paper was then equilibrated overnight in a scintillation vial containing scintillation fluid and was counted.
Analysis of PyLT acetylation in vivo. NIH 3T3 cells (approximately 5.0 x 106) were transfected with expression vectors for Gal4 fusion proteins (6.0 µg) and pMKSO11 (4.0 µg) by using LipofectAMINE PLUS. After 36 h, acetylation of PyLT was assessed by immunoprecipitation of total cell extracts with rabbit anti-acetyl lysine polyclonal antibody (Upstate) followed by Western blot analysis with mouse KF4 antibody. For estimation of Gal4 fusion protein and PyLT expression, 10 µl of the whole-cell extract was resolved by SDS-PAGE and detected by Western blot analysis by using rabbit anti-GalDB polyclonal antibodies sc-577 and KF4, respectively.
Preparation and analysis of SV40 virus with Py origin. A PCR product with the Py ori core flanked by 5x Gal4 binding sites was prepared by using pBSPyGal4 as a template with the reverse M13 primer and Ori94 primer (5'-GTGCAAGGCGCCAGTCCTG). The PCR product was digested with EcoRV and inserted into the PmlI site of pBM129 (42) to create construct TSPy5 (see Fig. 6A). The C-to-T point mutation at nt 2151 (i.e., P to S substitution in the viral capsid protein VP1) present in the SV40 tsC219 mutant (24, 25) was introduced into TSPy5 by site-directed mutagenesis. The orientation of the insert was determined by double digestion with MluI and SalI, and the insert sequence was confirmed by DNA sequencing. To prepare TSPy5 virus, the pBR322 sequences were excised by EcoRI digestion and the linearized SV40-TSPy5 DNA was transfected into Cos7 cells by using LipofectAMINE, and the supernatant was harvested after transfected cells were incubated at 37°C for 7 days. Viruses were amplified by further infection of Cos7 cells, and the virus titers were estimated by determining the quantity of purified viral DNA in samples of the infected cells (34). Nuclear extracts containing TSPy5 chromatin were prepared from Cos7 cells infected with the TSPy5 virus, and characterization of TSPy5 chromatin by microccocal nuclease (MNase) was performed as described by Kingston (54). To ascertain whether nucleosomes occupied the Py ori core, TSPy5 minichromosomes were prepared in hypotonic buffers as previously described (34) and were digested with excess restriction endonucleases as described by Hermansen et al. (42) and were analyzed by Southern blotting.
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| RESULTS |
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574-608, GGCN5FTE, and GGCN5DEY) did not stimulate replication in FOP cells (Fig. 1C and D) and stimulated replication at reduced levels in NIH 3T3 cells (Fig. 1E and F), indicating a requirement for their intrinsic acetyltransferase activities. GPCAF
65-112, a mutant containing a deletion within the p300/CBP-interacting domain, activated replication even better than its parent, and GGCN5SF, which does not associate with p300/CBP due to the lack of an N-terminal sequence (114, 115), also activated replication as well as full-length GmGCN5 (Fig. 1C to F), suggesting that the p300 and CBP accessory acetyltransferases are not required to act in concert with PCAF and GCN5 to stimulate replication. This was further supported by the observation that p300 and CBP tethered to the Py origin did not stimulate replication (Fig. 1C to F). A parallel assay with plasmid pBSPy
E, which lacks Gal4-binding sites, revealed that replication stimulation required tethering the PCAF and GCN5 fusion proteins to the test plasmid (Fig. 1C and E). Differential stimulation of transcription by PCAF, GCN5, p300, and CBP acetyltransferases. Stimulation of DNA replication by PCAF and GCN5 did not correlate with their capacity to stimulate transcription. For example, Gal4 fusion GCN5 (GmGCN5 and GGCN5SF) and PCAF (GPCAF) proteins did not enhance expression of the luciferase gene placed downstream of Gal4 sites (Fig. 2A and B), but Gal4 fusion p300 and CBP proteins significantly stimulated gene expression (Fig. 2B), the latter agreeing with results previously reported by others (102). Western analyses of extracts from transiently transfected NIH 3T3 cells demonstrated that the Gal4 PCAF and GCN5 fusion proteins were expressed equivalently (Fig. 2C). Expression of these proteins was not detected in FOP cells, possibly due to inefficient transfection. These data suggest that activation of transcription and replication by these acetyltransferases differs mechanistically, perhaps as a result of their being present in different multiprotein complexes.
Interaction of acetyltransferases with PyLT. Work by others has indicated that p300 and CBP interact with PyLT (23, 76). Were PCAF and GCN5 also to interact with PyLT, they might facilitate recruitment of PyLT to the origin (as does Jun when bound to the Py enhancer [39, 48, 69, 75]). To examine this possibility, NIH 3T3 cells were cotransfected with expression plasmids for PyLT and Gal4 fusion proteins and cell lysates were immunoprecipitated with either anti-GalDB antibody or anti-PyLT antibody, separated by SDS-PAGE, and immunoblotted correspondingly with anti-T antisera and anti-GalDB antibody. Anti-GalDB antibody brought down PyLT from cell extracts containing GPCAF, GmGCN5, or GGCN5SF as well as Gp300 and GCBP, but not GalDB alone (Fig. 3A and B). Also, anti-PyLT antibody, but not normal serum immunoglobulin G, coprecipitated GPCAF, GmGCN5, or GGCN5SF but not GalDB (Fig. 3C and D). These results show PyLT stably bound PCAF and GCN5, with the bound fraction of PyLT estimated to be roughly 1 to 4% by comparing band densities of PyLT in internal and coimmunoprecipitate lanes.
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574-608) or GCN5 (GGCN5FTE and GGCN5DEY) lacking acetyltransferase activities whose expression levels were comparable to those of their parents (Fig. 3A and B). The mutant of PCAF with a deletion in the p300/CBP-interacting domain (GPCAF
65-112) also complexed with a similar amount of PyLT. Similarly, GGCN5SF lacking the p300/CBP-interacting domain was associated with PyLT to the same extent as full-length GCN5 (GmGCN5) (Fig. 3B). When anti-PyLT antisera were used for immunoprecipitation, mutants of PCAF with expression levels comparable to those of the parent (GPCAF) were coprecipitated with PyLT at nearly the same level, and expression of PyLT was comparable for these assays (Fig. 3). These results suggest that the mutations in PCAF and GCN5 affect neither their association with PyLT nor, likely, its recruitment to the origin. As mutations abrogating their intrinsic acetyltransferase activities reduce the ability of PCAF or GCN5 to stimulate Py DNA replication, these data indicate that both recruitment of PyLT as well as acetylation are required to stimulate DNA replication. Acetylation of PyLT by PCAF. Incubation of PCAF with purified PyLT and acetyl-coenzyme A revealed PyLT was a substrate for acetylation (Fig. 4A and B). Based on the data from filter binding assays, acetylation of PyLT was approximately 12% that of purified histones without considering the difference in mass. Approximately 2% of PyLT was acetylated if one [3H]acetyl group was introduced per PyLT molecule (data not shown). Since GCN5 is highly related to PCAF in structure and function (114), it is likely that GCN5 also acetylates PyLT. PyLT appeared to be acetylated very weakly, if at all, by p300 (Fig. 4B).
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65-112 (Fig. 5), both of which stimulate DNA replication. By contrast, no PyLT was detected in the immunoprecipitates of cells expressing GPCAF
574-608, the mutant of GPCAF lacking HAT activity. This result suggests that PyLT is acetylated in vivo and that the acetyltransferase activity of PCAF is required.
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To validate ChIP assays as a means to study TSPy5 chromatin acetylation, we analyzed whether TSA treatment of Cos7 cells infected with TSPy5 viruses changed the acetylation status of TSPy5 chromatin. HDAC inhibitors, such as TSA, cause hyperacetylation of core histones (especially H4) in cellular chromatin (98, 118) and SV40 minichromosomes (1). ChIP assays with probes for Py ori core and SV40 ori demonstrated that the acetylation of H4 was increased by 2.6-fold, and acetylation of H3 slightly increased in TSPy5 minichromosomes extracted from TSA-treated cells compared to that of minichromosomes from untreated cells (Fig. 6B and C).
By contrast, introduction of Gal4 fusion PCAF or GCN5 (and also GGCN5SF and GmGCN5) into the Cos7 cells infected by TSPy5 virus caused no detectable changes of acetylation relative to GalDB protein alone, as detected by a probe for Py ori core sequences (Fig. 6D and E). Neither PCAF nor GCN5 had any effect on the chromatin structure near the SV40 origin (data not shown). Expression of Gal4 fusion proteins in Cos7 cells was detected by Western analysis (data not shown). Thus, it appears that stimulation of DNA replication by PCAF and GCN5 is not accompanied by detectable changes in histone acetylation around the Py ori core.
| DISCUSSION |
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B, Stat1, Stat2, Ets-1, HIF1, GATA1, MyoD, Smad proteins, E2F-1, and members of RNA polymerase II holoenzyme (33, 92, 96), some of which stimulate Py origin-dependent DNA replication when tethered in cis. Evidence presented here indicates the PCAF and GCN5 acetyltransferases bind to and acetylate PyLT. Inactivation of their intrinsic acetylation activities greatly reduces the stimulation of DNA replication. By contrast, p300 and CBP acetyltransferases bind PyLT but acetylate it to a much lower extent, if at all, and do not detectably stimulate DNA replication. These data implicate acetylation of PyLT as being important for replication in vivo. As tethering of PCAF and GCN5 to the origin by using Gal4-binding sites is required to stimulate replication, structural features of PyLT associated with prereplication complex at the origin are likely to be important. There may be parallels between these events and those occurring at origins in cellular chromosomes: the recent finding that MCM2 and ORC1 interact with the HAT HBO1 (14, 44) and that acetylation of MCM3 by a novel acetyltransferase affects DNA replication (103) suggest that acetyltransferases also have direct roles in DNA replication of higher eukaryotes.
Mammalian PCAF and GCN5 are elements of several distinct multiprotein HAT complexes (17, 92, 96), including those recruited to double-stranded DNA breaks that facilitate DNA repair (13, 45, 70). PCAF and GCN5, in the NIH 3T3 and FOP cells used here, did not activate expression of Luc genes when tethered upstream; equivocal transcriptional activation by PCAF and GCN5 also has been reported in other studies (56, 58, 86, 95). Perhaps, as with transcription activation, distinct complexes are involved in replication stimulation.
For the Py natural enhancer, AP-1 complex and ets family protein interactions with p300/CBP (4, 6, 7, 50, 116) might recruit PCAF and GCN5 to the origin region (Fig. 7). Although p300/CBP is required for certain CREB-dependent transcriptional responses (33, 79, 89, 94) and thereby assists in the activation of viral transcription by the enhancer, others have noted that CREB did not stimulate DNA replication when bound near the Py ori core (75). Our data indicating p300/CBP is not directly involved in replication stimulation can be explained by the lack of acetylation of PyLT by p300/CBP, or alternatively by their being inhibited by PyLT, as has been suggested for activation of transcription (23). Viruses with mutationally altered PyLT incapable of binding p300/CBP are restricted in forming tumors in newborn mice, leading to the suggestion these interactions are essential for virus replication and spread (23). Dissecting the roles of these complexes should provide new information about the control of eukaryotic replication and transcription.
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As PyLT helicase activity is required for movement of the replisome, acetyltransferases associated with PyLT might also mediate chromatin remodeling to facilitate elongation. Hyperacetylation of histones, or removal of histone tails, the primary targets for acetylation, facilitate elongation of SV40 DNA replication (1, 87). Acetylation of PyLT also could affect its association with cellular proteins, such as pRB or p53, that are important for inducing G1-to-S cell cycle progression and DNA replication (29, 30, 59, 84). These and other possibilities can be better understood once the extent to which PCAF (and GCN5) acetylate PyLT in vivo and the sites that are acetylated are known.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, nucleosome positioning mediated by ORC (origin recognition complex) affects replication initiation (66) and SV40 large T antigen promotes the formation of an origin free of nucleosomes and competent for replication (35, 47). Normal SV40 minichromosomes are more highly acetylated than cellular chromatin, with H4 occurring in mono-, di-, and triacetylated forms and H3 occurring in a diacetylated form (1). The sites for these particular hyperacetylations remain undetermined, although acetylation sites of core histones in vertebrate chromatin include K5 and K9 of H2A, K5, K12, K15, and K20 of H2B, K9, K14, K18, and K23 of H3, and K5, K8, K12, and K16 of H4 (92). Our not being able to detect changes in the acetylation of histones near the Py origin sequences in SV40 minichromosomes might be due to high levels of normal acetylation. It is still possible that specific sites in these histones are targeted by PCAF and GCN5 and thus could be detected by ChIP assays more refined than were conducted here.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health grant R01 CA38538, U.S. Army grant DAMD17-98-1-8321, and by the University of MissouriColumbia.
| FOOTNOTES |
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Present address: Harvard Institute of Medicine, Beth Israel Dea-coness Medical Center, Boston, MA 02215. ![]()
Present address: Program in Molecular Biology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021. ![]()
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