Institut Pasteur, Unité de Stabilité des Génomes, Département Structure et Dynamique des Génomes, 25 rue du Dr. Roux, 75724 Paris cedex 15, France
Received 9 February 2005/ Returned for modification 15 March 2005/ Accepted 1 May 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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The locus carrying the rRNA genes has been studied extensively as a model to address this issue. From yeast to humans, rRNA genes are broadly considered to be organized into hundreds of tandemly repeated units that each includes a gene followed by a nontranscribed spacer. In yeast, although a potential origin resides in every rRNA gene unit, clusters of synchronously firing origins are separated by large gaps spanning a few units whose origins are silent (32). In human rRNA genes, a consensus for the initiation site exists, specifically in the nontranscribed spacer, with a preferential zone upstream of the transcription unit (15, 24, 41, 47). However, the distribution of functional human rRNA gene origins and their timing of activation in relation to each other are not known. In other words, do human origins fire in clusters in adherence with the yeast model?
With respect to replication fork kinetics at rRNA genes, most work has focused on a fork barrier that maps to the 3' end of the transcription unit (reviewed in reference 37). In yeast, not only is the fork barrier polar, preventing forks from entering the transcription unit against RNA polymerase I movement, but it is also nearly 100% efficient (4, 23). Multiple pause sites due to the local chromatin structure in yeast mutants deficient for the Rrm3p helicase suggest that fork obstruction might be multimodal in rRNA genes (20, 43). In human rRNA genes, the programmed fork barrier and its position are conserved (24). In contrast to the case in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, forks traveling in both directions are blocked and a significant proportion of forks traverse the boundary unaffected. Although the stability of the locus is influenced by fork-related events (36), quantification of the fork barrier efficiency and other potential blocks/pause sites in human rRNA genes have not been reported to date.
Recently, a more complex organization of human rRNA genes was described, revealing a fundamental divergence from the standard model of clusters of highly repetitive, nearly identical rRNA gene units (6). A significant proportion of the genes are organized into palindromes interspersed among the tandem repeats, yielding a mosaic of noncanonical and canonical rRNA genes. Palindromes are acknowledged sources of genomic instability, which has been proposed to result from problematic DNA replication, at least in yeast (18, 25, 44). While most rRNA gene replication studies have been carried out in yeast, rRNA gene palindromes do not exist in this organism. Tetrahymena thermophila does contain rRNA gene palindromes that undergo amplification through multiple initiation events on the same fragment of DNA and activation of a fork barrier at the center of the palindrome (48). Therefore, an account of where origins fire from and how forks travel in the context of human rRNA gene palindromes would provide clues as to how the stability of the locus is maintained in this species.
Molecular combing (3, 27) produces sufficiently large DNA molecules on which multiple active origins and progressing forks can be monitored at the level of a single molecule (2, 19, 31, 32). Since the original order of genes and flanking nontranscribed spacers is preserved during the combing process, replication can be attributed to either canonical or noncanonical rRNA genes, a prerequisite if differences between the programs of these two classes of human rRNA genes are to be delineated.
Using combed DNA from HeLa cells, this study establishes and compares key parameters of the human rRNA gene replication programs of canonical versus noncanonical rRNA genes. No significant initiation differences, both in origin spacing and in timing, were observed in relation to the underlying rRNA gene physical structure. rRNA gene palindromes, however, were associated with a greater degree of fork stalling and/or arrest than forks elongating through canonical tandem repeats. These results suggest that while initiation mechanisms in humans are amenable to rRNA gene rearrangement, replication forks are sensitive to rRNA gene palindromes, and that these inverted repeats represent obstacles to fork progression.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Hybridization and fluorescence revelation. The two EcoRI fragments covering the 5' and 3' ends of the human rRNA gene transcription unit were labeled with biotin and digoxigenin, respectively, by random priming. Seven hundred nanograms of each probe, 5 µg of human cot-1 DNA (Gibco BRL), and 10 µg of herring sperm DNA were precipitated and then resuspended in hybridization buffer consisting of 50% formamide, 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate), 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 0.5% sarcosyl, 10 mM NaCl, and 33.3% blocking solution (Boehringer blocking reagent; 1% [wt/vol] in PBS, 0.05% Tween 20). Combed DNA was denatured in 1 M NaOH for 30 min, and denatured probes were then added. Hybridization took place overnight in a humid HybChamber (Genemachines) at 42°C. The following day, slides were washed with 2x SSC-50% formamide for 5 min three times and then with 2x SSC for 5 min twice. The antibodies used for fluorescence detection of probe and replication signals were as follows: (i) sheep anti-digoxigenin-fluorescein isothiocyanate (Roche) and streptavidin-Alexa Fluor 750 (Molecular Probes); (ii) donkey anti-sheep 488 (Molecular Probes) and biotin-conjugated rabbit anti-streptavidin (Rockland); (iii) streptavidin-Alexa Fluor 750, mouse anti-bromodeoxyuridine (anti-BrdU; Becton Dickinson), and rat anti-BrdU (Harlan Seralab); and (iv) goat anti-mouse-Alexa Fluor 350 (Molecular Probes) and donkey anti-rat-Texas Red (Jackson Immunochemicals). All incubations were carried out in a humid chamber at 37°C for 30 min, except for step iii, which took place for 1 h. After each step, excess antibodies were washed with 1x PBS for 5 min three times, and then slides were mounted in Slowfade light antifade reagent (Molecular Probes).
Image acquisition and analysis. Fluorescent signals were captured with a Zeiss Axioplan 2 microscope equipped with a Photometrics HQ charge-coupled device camera using SmartCapture software (Digital Scientific). Probe and replication signals were measured with Cartographix (Institut Pasteur). Analyses were performed on DNAs from two separate labeling experiments. Since there were no significant differences between the results from the two experiments, the data were merged and are presented together here. Photos were arranged using Adobe Photoshop. Background fluorescent spots surrounding the fiber of interest were removed to highlight the signal.
| RESULTS |
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Thirty-one initiation events localized to noncanonical rRNA genes. Fifteen (48.4%) initiation sites mapped to the rRNA genes, and 16 (51.6%) mapped to the intergenic spacers (examples are provided in Fig. 2Bii). An analysis of the noncanonical rRNA gene content was performed to determine which sequence the active origins favored. rRNA coding and noncoding sequences made 49.1% (3,254 kb) and 50.9% (3,337 kb) contributions, respectively, to the 6,631 kb of noncanonical rRNA genes analyzed. These percentages do not differ greatly from the ratio of origins mapped to the rRNA genes and the intergenic spacers (P > 0.05 by the chi-square test). Therefore, in a similar fashion to canonical rRNA genes, an initiation preference for coding versus noncoding sequences of noncanonical rRNA genes was not observed.
Neighboring origins fire asynchronously at regular intervals. The appearance of multiple initiations on individual fibers allowed for a spatiotemporal analysis of how nearby rRNA gene origins are activated. An immediate neighbor was found for 52.6% of origins in canonical rRNA genes (61/116) and for 45.2% of origins in noncanonical rRNA genes (14/31). The fibers shown in Fig. 3A are typical examples of molecules with two or more initiation events. Since merging between oncoming forks from two origins can yield complicated replication signals, a scheme has been provided to aid in their interpretation (Fig. 3B).
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With regard to origin spacing, origins fired every one to five rRNA gene units, with a mode of 2. No two functional origins occurred closer than 23.1 kb apart in canonical rRNA genes and 33.9 kb apart in noncanonical rRNA genes. Upper limits of 205.8 kb and 129.6 kb for interorigin distances were observed for canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes, respectively. No statistical difference was found between the mean interorigin distance for canonical rRNA genes (82.4 ± 42.9 kb) and that for noncanonical rRNA genes (70.6 ± 32.5 kb).
Among all observed rRNA gene initiation events, 78.9% occurred in canonical rRNA genes (116/147) and 21.1% occurred in noncanonical rRNA genes (31/147). These proportions do not differ significantly from the percentages of contribution of the different structural categories to the total length of the HeLa rRNA genes (72.5% canonical rRNA genes and 27.5% noncanonical rRNA genes; P > 0.05 by the chi-square test) (Fig. 1D). This result lends support to the interorigin data showing that the spatial distribution of active origins is not affected by the rRNA gene physical structure.
Noncanonical rRNA genes are associated with stalled forks. An analysis of DNA replication on combed DNA is also amenable to a study of fork kinetics. Fork speeds were calculated by dividing the length of each replication signal, blue or red, by the time of labeling for one of the nucleotides (30 min). Fork pausing would result in a decrease in the amount of DNA synthesized during the IdU/CldU labeling periods and would have a negative effect on the fork speed. To test whether forks encountered obstacles when replicating rRNA gene palindromes, the fork speeds of canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes were compared. On average, forks moved at indistinguishable speeds through canonical rRNA genes (927 ± 440.3 bp/min; n = 207) and noncanonical rRNA genes (909.4 ± 480.4 bp/min; n = 73) (see Fig. 4A for frequency distributions).
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The DNA substrate over which forks decreased their speed was analyzed with the aim of delineating their relationship. Thresholds allowing a 30% difference in the blue and red replication signals were established to help identify molecules with considerable fork speed changes. Only 10.3% (6/58) of the data points were excluded by the thresholds for canonical rRNA genes, in contrast to 64% (16/25) for noncanonical rRNA genes (P < 0.001 by two-sided Fisher's exact test) (Fig. 4B). No common rRNA gene element correlated with a decreased fork speed in canonical rRNA genes (for example, see molecules 5 and 6 in Fig. 4Ci). In noncanonical rRNA genes, palindromes were not always associated with a reduced fork speed: forks could slow several kb ahead of an rRNA gene palindrome (Fig. 4Cii, molecules 5 and 6) or could even speed up while synthesizing a palindrome (molecules 3 and 6). However, for the majority of the molecules excluded by the thresholds (11/16), palindromes colocalized with the shorter replication tracts (Fig. 4Cii, molecules 3 and 4). Altogether, these observations implicate noncanonical rRNA genes in transiently perturbing fork progression, and this disruption colocalizes with the palindromic physical structures in at least half of the cases.
Unidirectional forks occur more frequently in noncanonical rRNA genes. Mirror replication signals on either side of a midpoint consisting of bisymmetric IdU and CldU labels provide direct evidence of bidirectional origins in human rRNA genes (reviewed in reference 13) (Fig. 2A). Sometimes, however, the replication tract from one of the two forks was completely absent (see Fig. 5A for examples). The presence of incoming replication signals from a second nearby origin excludes the possibility that nonvisualization of the outgoing fork was due to DNA breakage. These signals, henceforth termed unidirectional forks, may be due to unidirectional initiation. Three other plausible explanations for this type of signal invoke bidirectional initiation with a subsequent blocked fork (illustrated in Fig. 5B). These models cannot be delineated by the methods used in this study. Whether forks collapse or are maintained after fork blockage also cannot be determined with the replication signals of combed DNA.
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The fork barrier at the transcription termination site is 10% efficient in canonical rRNA genes. In the previous section, fork arrest was inferred by the presence of unidirectional forks. Another way to account for a fork barrier is to directly visualize premature termination of an elongating fork. According to the known position of the fork barrier in rRNA genes, shorter replication tracts in conjunction with the 3' end of the transcription unit were expected. A comparison of the lengths of the IdU and CldU signals to analyze fork stalling, however, did not indicate a fork barrier at this site (Fig. 4). Therefore, in order to quantify the efficiency of this fork barrier, other analyses using different replication tract substrates were required.
When speed information was available for both forks moving away from a site of initiation, it was observed that the two forks moved at similar rates (Fig. 6A). Plotting both speeds of the two bidirectional forks against each other confirmed this observation by revealing a significant positive correlation (R = 0.783; P < 0.001; n = 45) (Fig. 6B). This correlation was independent of the fork speed. For example, in Fig. 6A, molecule 3 shows two highly correlated fast forks and molecule 4 shows two highly correlated slow forks. Also, the distance from the origin where labels were observed did not affect the correlation. Molecules 1 to 4 in Fig. 6A illustrate this point.
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| DISCUSSION |
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Organization of initiation in the human rRNA gene locus. Altogether, the data on origin firing reveal that the initiation profiles do not differ greatly between canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes (Fig. 2 and 3). Our data suggest that initiation can take place in the nontranscribed spacers and the transcription units in both structural categories of rRNA genes. Previous in vivo studies indicated that the genetic determinants of human rRNA gene origin activity are differentially defined depending on the technique used (reviewed in reference 12). Two-dimensional gels revealed scattered initiation sites restricted to the nontranscribed spacer (24). Methods using nascent strands uncovered regions of preferential initiation, specifically a primary zone upstream of the gene (15, 41, 47). A lesser-used zone downstream of the gene was also identified (15). Another study using nascent strand analysis found a significant proportion of multiple initiation sites dispersed throughout the rRNA gene repeats, including the transcription units (47). Initiation within the rRNA coding sequences was further corroborated by a later study showing extension of the primary zone to the midpoint of the gene (41). In summary, these studies suggest that there are preferential initiation zones upstream and downstream of the rRNA genes, with occasional origins located within the genes. Our data provide additional information showing that whatever origins are present in human rRNA genes, they are not likely to be influenced by rRNA gene palindromes.
Our data suggest no initiation site preference between coding and noncoding sequences in canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes (Fig. 2). Using the combed DNA approach, the positioning of replication origins at the midpoint of the nucleotide analogue signals is based on the assumption that replication forks progress uniformly and bidirectionally. However, in subsequent sections of Results, data were presented to the contrary: (i) approximately 10% of forks in canonical rRNA genes and 60% of forks in noncanonical rRNA genes changed speed during the course of pulse labeling (Fig. 4) and (ii) nearly 10% and 30% of origins in canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes, respectively, yielded unidirectional replication signals (Fig. 5). As a consequence, origin preferences between and within the nontranscribed spacer and the transcription unit, as previously reported (15, 24, 41, 47), could have been obscured. Furthermore, the variability of the nontranscribed spacer (Fig. 1) introduces additional uncertainty about the nucleotide sequence from which origins fired. Techniques that provide base pair resolution, such as two-dimensional gels and nascent strand analysis, will help determine the precise origin locations in canonical versus noncanonical rRNA genes.
Human rRNA gene replication origins are considered to be mostly restricted to transcriptionally silent DNA (reviewed in reference 12). Can this constraint be satisfied by the initiation data presented here? In human rRNA genes, 50% of the units are transcribed since about one-half of the cluster is nucleosome-free (8). Approximately 70% and 50% of origins map to the nontranscribed spacer in canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes, respectively (Fig. 2C). Therefore, a sufficient number of origins can be appropriately positioned to avoid initiation from transcriptionally active rRNA genes.
To date, the spatiotemporal distribution of multiple rRNA gene origins has been quantified for only one other organism, S. cerevisiae (32). In yeast, clusters of synchronously firing origins spanning 20 to 30 kb are separated by large 60-kb gaps. Although most adjacent human rRNA gene origins fire within 60 min of each other, the timing of initiation is staggered (Fig. 3A). Furthermore, the distance between two origins could vary from tens of kilobases to a couple hundred kilobases, with a peak of 80 kb on average. Therefore, there is little evidence that the yeast rRNA gene initiation program is conserved in humans. Rather, the regulation of human rRNA gene initiation timing and spacing is more relaxed, albeit with upper and lower limits of when and how far apart origins fire. Yet despite this relaxed definition of the spatiotemporal distribution of origins, our data suggest that initiation mechanisms are robust: human rRNA gene microrearrangement in the form of palindromes influenced neither the spacing nor the timing of neighboring origins (Fig. 3).
Interorigin distances were measured between origins inferred from combed replication signals (Fig. 2A). Based on these signals, a single initiation event had been assumed to occur at the midpoint of any two bidirectional replication tracts. However, it is possible that two or more origins lie at the center of diverging replication forks, the probability of which increases with the size of the gap between the pair of observed signals (for example, the first origin in both molecule 2 in Fig. 3Ai and molecule 3 in Fig. 3Aii). Consequently, the replicon size, the fragment of DNA replicated from a single origin, and hence the interorigin distances may have been overestimated. The probabilities of this overestimation are equal for canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes since origins were defined using the same criteria for each. Therefore, the lack of a difference in average interorigin distances between these two categories of human rRNA genes is unlikely to change should origins be found closer together by another method.
An inefficient fork barrier in canonical rRNA genes accommodates origin spacing. In all organisms studied to date, the fork barrier at the 3' end of the transcription unit is polar, arresting forks moving in the direction opposite to transcription (reviewed in reference 37). The only two exceptions are fission yeast and human rRNA genes, where the site is conserved but forks in both directions are blocked (24, 39). One implication of a bidirectional fork barrier is that if fork blocking is close to 100% efficient, forks essentially cannot leave the rRNA gene unit from which replication initiated. In such a scenario, each rRNA gene unit would be required to contain a functional origin to fully replicate the locus. However, adjacent origins were observed to span several rRNA gene repeats (Fig. 3A). The passive replication of the intervening units crucially depends upon a somewhat less efficient fork barrier.
In support of this hypothesis, not only was the fork barrier found to be inefficient, in agreement with a previous study (24), but it was also quantified as blocking approximately 10% of incoming forks. The low efficiency of the fork barrier means that the majority of forks can leave the rRNA gene unit from which they originated and passively replicate the next unit. In this way, canonical rRNA genes can be entirely duplicated from widely spaced origins, thereby ensuring that the initiation program is tolerated by the cell.
Roles of fork obstruction in human rRNA genes may include acting as a backup to prevent collision with transcription polymerases and/or providing substrates for recombination. The function of the fork barrier at the 3' end of the transcription unit is a matter of debate (36). In yeast, due to the position and polarity of the fork barrier and the simultaneous activities of transcription and replication on the same molecule (38), its suggested role was to prevent deleterious head-on collisions between transcription and replication polymerases (5). The spatiotemporal separation of rRNA gene transcription and replication domains in HeLa nuclei (33), however, suggests that human cells do not need to regulate polymerase traffic the same way that yeast does. The low-frequency fork barrier observed here might represent a safety mechanism to prevent polymerase collisions when the segregation of transcription and replication domains falters.
The finding that recombinogenic double-strand ends can form at the site of a fork barrier (28, 29) has inspired another functional role: fork arrest is involved in the homogenization, contraction, expansion, and/or extrachromosomal circle formation of the rRNA gene array (36). In human rRNA genes, the average fork speed calculated here of approximately 1 kb/min for both canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes (Fig. 4) is lower than the 1.7 kb/min reported for HeLa cells (21). This result suggests that the formation of recombinogenic substrates is equally probable from canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes. However, a detailed analysis at the single-molecule level revealed that fork pausing and/or blocking is predominant in noncanonical rRNA genes (Fig. 4 and 5). Insofar as recombinogenic substrates arise from these fork impediments (46), the genetic material in noncanonical rRNA genes initiates recombination in the majority of cases. The percentage of noncanonical rRNA genes in HeLa cells remained stable for two different cell cultures over 15 population doublings (results not shown). Therefore, the fork obstruction observed here relates to the homogenization of rRNA gene sequences either through equal gains and losses or through normal restoration of the generated double-strand ends (36).
Implications of blocked forks in rRNA gene palindromes regarding Robertsonian translocations. Reciprocal crossovers involving inverted repeats would yield one dicentric chromosome and one acentric fragment, creating a significant threat to genomic integrity (42). Our findings that fork blockage and potential double-strand ends localize to noncanonical rRNA genes raise the possibility that inverted human rRNA gene repeats may participate in this recombination pathway. In support of this hypothesis, rRNA gene sequences mapped to the breakpoint in Robertsonian translocations involving nonhomologous acrocentric chromosomes (for example, see reference 7). However, the extreme rarity of this class of Robertsonian translocation (reviewed in reference 42), together with a profound bias towards noncrossover gene conversion during double-strand-break repair in mammalian cells (22, 35), suggests that reciprocal crossovers involving inverted rRNA gene repeats are suppressed during homologous recombination.
Mechanisms of fork obstruction in noncanonical rRNA genes. Palindromes are proposed to adopt hairpin structures during lagging-strand synthesis, which can challenge polymerase movement and, in turn, arrest the entire replisome (14, 18, 45). These studies were carried out in bacteria or yeast with palindromes of only a few hundred base pairs or less. While direct evidence is lacking for kb-sized palindromes forming hairpins, these secondary structures were invoked to explain the rearranged products from a large 15.3-kb palindrome inserted into mice (1). It is therefore possible that the perturbed forks in human rRNA gene palindromes, whose sizes are on the same order of magnitude as the 15.3-kb mouse palindrome, may also be related to hairpin formation. Work carried out with Escherichia coli suggested that the resolution of the palindrome-associated hairpin occurs separately behind the replication fork (10). In this case, other mechanisms to explain fork obstruction in noncanonical rRNA genes are needed.
Ahead of the replication fork, DNA undergoes negative supercoiling by the action of topoisomerases to allow for the opening of the DNA double helix by the approaching replisome (reviewed in references 34 and 40). This condition favors a cruciform formation of palindrome sequences (30). Another possibility, therefore, is that an rRNA gene cruciform generated by the topoisomerase-related negative supercoiling stalls/stops the fork.
Chromatin and its remodeling complexes can influence the accessibility of factors important for replication efficiency (reviewed in references 11 and 16). Studies of the chromatin state associated with canonical and noncanonical rRNA genes and the relationship between forks and chromatin remodeling will help determine the role that chromatin plays in human rRNA gene fork progression.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Ronald Lebofsky is supported the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada.
| FOOTNOTES |
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