Cheng-Fu Kao,2,
Nevan J. Krogan,3
Zu-Wen Sun,4
Jack F. Greenblatt,3
Mary Ann Osley,2 and
Brian D. Strahl1*
Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina,1 Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center, Albuquerque, New Mexico,2 Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada,3 Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee4
Received 20 September 2004/ Accepted 14 October 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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While much progress has been made on the mechanisms of transcriptional activation and repression, much less is known regarding how RNA polymerase II (Pol II) accesses DNA in chromatin and transcribes through it (2, 19, 29, 45, 46). Recently, a role for lysine-specific histone methylation in the elongation cycle of transcription has been uncovered. In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the histone methyltransferases (HMTs) Set1 and Set2, which catalyze methylation of H3 lysines 4 (K4) and 36 (K36), respectively, have been found to be associated with the hyperphosphorylated (elongating) form of Pol II (17, 18). Those studies show that the recruitment of Set1 to Pol II is mediated by the Paf1 elongation complex and is dependent on Kin28, the TFIIH-associated kinase that phosphorylates serine 5 (Ser5) in the C-terminal heptapeptide repeat sequence (C-terminal domain; CTD) of Pol II (31, 42). In contrast, Set2 is recruited directly to the phosphorylated CTD through the actions of the Ctk1 kinase that mediates serine 2 (Ser2) CTD phosphorylation (35, 62). Given that Set1 is localized preferentially to the 5' end of genes while Set2 is localized preferentially to the 3' end of genes, distinct roles for these HMTs at different stages of the transcription elongation cycle have been proposed (18).
Recent studies have defined a trans-histone regulatory pathway involving the ubiquitylation of H2B as a prerequisite for the outcome of K4 and lysine 79 (K79) dimethylation, but not K36 dimethylation (9, 14, 43, 52). In yeast, Rad6 is the enzyme responsible for H2B ubiquitylation (ubH2B), and studies have shown that this enzyme is recruited to promoters to participate in the activation of several highly inducible yeast genes, most notably the GAL genes (13, 21, 24). Several of these studies have revealed that Rad6 is rapidly recruited to the upstream activation sequences of the GAL1 gene in a Gal4-dependent manner and that this association requires the E3 ligase Bre1. Importantly, recruitment of Rad6 leads to a concomitant ubiquitylation of H2B at the core promoter of GAL1, which is rapidly removed by the Ubp8 ubiquitin protease subunit of the Gcn5-containing histone acetyltransferase complex, SAGA (21). Given that the addition and subsequent removal of ubH2B are both required for GAL1 activation, the precise control of ubH2B levels at gene promoters is important for establishing proper transcription levels.
How ubH2B mediates its trans-histone effects on histone methylation is poorly understood. A paradox regarding this topic is how a relatively nonabundant, transient, and perhaps promoter-localized modification on H2B would regulate the global outcomes of K4 and K79 methylation, which are much more abundant and distributed throughout the genome. Starting with the notion that Rad6 and ubH2B might not be restricted just to promoter regions (24), coupled with the recent observation that the Paf1 transcription elongation complex regulates the outcome of K4 and K79 methylation (31, 42), we explored the possibility that Rad6 and ubH2B are associated with transcription elongation as well as with promoter activation.
In this report, we show that Rad6 is associated with the hyperphosphorylated form of Pol II and that this association depends on the Rtf1 and Paf1 components of the Paf1 complex and Bre1. Consistent with this observation, we find that the same Paf1 complex components are necessary for the ubiquitylation of H2B, in agreement with other reports (40, 61). However, we also find that while deletion of some Paf1 components nearly abolishes ubH2B and K4 and K79 dimethylation, others reduce ubH2B and K4 and K79 dimethylation levels in a tightly correlated manner that suggests a direct mechanistic link between the two types of histone modifications. Given that Rad6 interacts with the transcriptionally competent form of Pol II, we determined that Rad6 and ubH2B associate with both the promoters and coding regions of active genes. Significantly, using the inducible GAL1 gene as a model system, we found that Rad6 is transiently associated with the GAL1 gene at the onset of Pol II appearance but that the entrance of Rad6 into the body of this gene requires the Paf1 complex. Consistent with Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation functioning in the elongation cycle of transcription, we demonstrate that Rad6-mediated ubH2B is reduced by Pol II CTD mutations and abolished by the inactivation of the Ser5 CTD kinase that promotes the initiation of elongation. In addition, we show that the Rad6 complex genetically interacts with other elongation factors and that yeast mutants bearing defects in the pathway to H2B ubiquitylation display sensitivity to drugs that affect elongation. Collectively, these studies link histone ubiquitylation with transcription elongation and suggest a mechanism for the trans-histone establishment of histone methylation patterns in the coding regions of genes.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Generation of PAF1 and RTF1 expression constructs.
PAF1 and RTF1 open reading frames (ORFs) were PCR amplified from genomic DNA with a forward primer with a BamHI site added in front of the ATG codon and a reverse primer with a FLAG coding sequence inserted in front of the stop codon. Reverse primers for both ORFs have a SalI restriction site added after the stop codon. For PAF1 PCR amplification, the forward and reverse primer sequences used were 5'-GCGCGCGGATCCATGTCCAAAAAACAGGAATATATTGCACC-3'and 5'-GTACGCGTCGACCTACTTGTCATCGTCGTCCTTGTAGTCTTCTTCTTGTAAAGTTTCCTTTTCTTC-3'. For RTF1 PCR amplification, the forward and reverse primer sequences used were 5'-GCGCGGATCCATGTCTGATTTAGATGAGGATTTATTAGCC-3' and 5'-GTACGCGTCGACCTACTTGTCATCGTCGTCCTTGTAGTCAAACTTAAGGTCAAATTTGATATC-3'. PAF1-Flag and RTF1-Flag PCR products were cloned into the PN823 yeast expression vector driven by the ADH1 promoter to produce PN823Paf1 and PN823Rtf1, respectively. Upon DNA sequencing, these fusion gene plasmids were transformed into the paf1
(YTX019) and rtf1
(YTX018) strains and selected for on synthetic complete-Ura plates.
Preparation and immunoblot analysis of yeast whole cell extracts and nuclei.
Yeast whole cell extracts (WCEs) and nuclei were prepared as previously described (62). Typically, 5 µl of WCE (
50 µg of protein) or 3 to 5 µl of isolated nuclei (
100 µg of protein) was loaded on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels (8% gels for Pol II analysis and 15% gels for the analysis of histones or Rad6). Following electrophoresis and transfer to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes, samples were subjected to immunoblot analysis using procedures and detection reagents from Amersham Life Sciences. Rabbit anti-histone modification-specific antibodies were obtained from Upstate Biotechnology, Inc., and used at the following dilutions: 1:3,500 for anti-H3 dimethyllysine 36 (
-H3K36Me2), 1:25,000 for anti-H3 dimethyllysine 4 (
-H3K4Me2), 1:10,000 for anti-H3 dimethyllysine 79 (
-H3K79Me2), 1:10,000 for anti-H3 acetyllysine 14 (
-H3K14Ac), and 1:30,000 for anti-H4 acetylation (penta;
-H4Ac). Mouse monoclonal anti-FLAG antibody (M2; Sigma) was used at 1 µg/ml, and the mouse monoclonal anti-HA antibody (12CA5; Roche) was used at a 1:5,000 dilution. Anti-RNA Pol II CTD antibodies 8WG16 (unmodified CTD), H14 (serine 5 phosphorylation specific), and H5 (serine 2 phosphorylation specific) were purchased from Covance, Inc., and used at dilutions of 1:500, 1:50,000, and 1:750, respectively. The rabbit polyclonal antibodies to protein A (Sigma) and the C terminus of H3 (Abcam) were used at a 1:50,000 dilution and a 1:3,500 dilution, respectively. For detection of ubiquitylated H2B, cell pellets corresponding to approximately 106 cells from exponentially growing cultures at an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 1.0 were boiled directly in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis loading buffer and examined by immunoblot analysis using the anti-Flag antibody.
Immunoprecipitations (IPs).
For IP experiments involving Rad6-3HA, 300 to 400 µl of WCE (containing 1.5 mg of protein) was diluted to a final volume of 750 µl by using extraction buffer and then incubated with 12.5 µl of pre-equilibrated
-HA affinity beads (A-2095; Sigma) for 2 h at 4°C. After three washes in extraction buffer, the bead-bound proteins were analyzed by immunoblot analysis using the antibodies indicated at the dilutions described above. For IPs involving phosphorylated CTD, WCEs at the same concentration and volume described above were incubated with H5 or H14 antibody (at a dilution of 1:400) for 3 h at 4°C. For immunoprecipitation, 12.5 µl of pre-equilibrated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin M (IgM) agarose (ICN Biomedicals, Inc.) was added for another hour at 4°C and the bead-bound proteins were washed and analyzed. For studying the association between Rad6 and Paf1, WCEs (at the same concentration and volume as described above) from strains YTX008 and YZS236 were incubated with IgG-Sepharose (Amersham Biosciences) and the bead-bound proteins were washed and immunoblotted with anti-HA monoclonal antibody.
RT-PCR. For reverse transcription (RT)-PCR analysis of Rad6 pathway genes, yeast strains were grown in 100 ml of yeast extract-peptone-dextrose (YPD) medium to an OD600 of 1.0. Total RNA was isolated by using a Clontech Nucleospin RNA purification kit, and 100 µg of total RNA was subjected to poly(A+) mRNA isolation by using a QIAGEN Oligotex mRNA kit. The resulting mRNA was used to synthesize cDNA by using M-MLV reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) per the manufacturer's directions. The PCR consisted of 1/20 of the cDNA collected from the RT reaction and primer pairs specific to the indicated genes. For RT-PCR analysis of GAL1 RNA, yeast strains were grown to an OD600 of 0.5 in YPD medium, shifted to YP plus 2% raffinose, and induced with 2% galactose. Two micrograms of total RNA was used to synthesize cDNA by using an Omniscript reverse transcription kit (QIAGEN). Real-time PCRs were performed with 1/10 of the cDNA reactions by using a SYBR green master mix in an MJ Opticon PCR machine. Primer information is available upon request. Negative controls with no RT were also included.
Chromatin immunoprecipitation. Strains containing Rad6 tagged with three copies of the HA epitope at its C terminus were fixed and immunoprecipitated with anti-HA antibodies as described by Kao et al. (24). Levels of ubH2B were determined by a chromatin double immunoprecipitation (ChDIP) method in strains containing a Flag-HTB1 or Flag-htb1-K123R gene and a constitutively expressed HA-UBI4 gene as previously described (21, 24). Pol II levels were determined by using the anti-RNA Pol II CTD antibody 8WG16 (Abcam ab817). Cells analyzed by chromatin immunoprecipitation were grown in YP medium containing 2% glucose or were washed and resuspended for 2 h in YP + 2% raffinose, and they were then shifted to YP + 2% galactose to induce the GAL genes as described by Henry et al. (21). Quantitative PCR in real time was carried out with a SYBR Green master mix and a 7000 Prism sequence detection system, both from ABI. Primer sequences are available upon request. The results represent the ratio of immunoprecipitated (IP) DNA to input DNA (Input) normalized to the IP/Input ratio from a telomere-associated region, TEL-V, or an ORF-free intergenic region on chromosome V, INT-V (24).
SGA technology. Synthetic genetic array (SGA) analysis was carried out as previously described (53). An automated analysis of the results was carried out by procedures that will be described elsewhere (H. Ding et al., unpublished data).
| RESULTS |
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We next sought to determine if the association of Rad6 with Pol II was dependent on the Paf1 complex as well as on other regulators of Rad6 function, such as Bre1. Bre1, the E3 ligase that directs Rad6 to ubiquitylate H2B, was recently shown to be a major determinant in the recruitment of Rad6 to gene promoters (24, 60). The RTF1, PAF1, or BRE1 gene was deleted from the Rad6-HA strain used in Fig. 2, and these strains were then employed in co-IP studies to examine the association of Rad6 with Ser5-phosphorylated Pol II. We found that deletion of BRE1 completely abolished the association of Rad6 with Pol II, whereas deletions of PAF1 and RTF1 severely reduced this association (Fig. 2D). The limited association of Pol II with Rad6 in the rtf1
and paf1
mutants is consistent with the observation that these deletions do not completely abolish ubH2B (Fig. 1A). Furthermore, we found that both Rad6-Pol II association and ubH2B levels were more severely compromised in an rtf1
mutant than in a paf1
mutant (see Fig. 1A and 2D). These data suggest that both Bre1 and the Paf1 complex regulate an association of Rad6 with Pol II that is important for ubiquitylation of H2B.
The Paf1 complex regulates a Pol II-dependent association of Rad6 with the transcribed region of genes. The finding that Rad6 associates with the phosphorylated form of Pol II suggests that Rad6 is involved in the process of transcription elongation and, thus, should be present at both the promoters and the transcribed regions of genes. Indeed, our previous studies showed that Rad6 associates across the body of the activated GAL1 gene (24). To determine if coding region association of Rad6 and ubH2B is a general property of active genes, we used the method of chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) to measure the association of Rad6 and ubH2B with the promoters and ORFs of three highly transcribed constitutive genes, PMA1, ADH1, and PYK1 (Fig. 3). The results show that Rad6 is not restricted to promoters, as was previously reported (60, 61), but is present at the coding regions of all three genes (Fig. 3A). This association is independent of the epitope used to tag Rad6, as both Rad6-HA and Rad6-Flag show similar patterns of association at these genes (data not shown). Moreover, ubH2B is also found at both the promoters and ORFs of the same genes (Fig. 3B), supporting the view that the presence of this histone modification across the genes is a direct consequence of the extended association of Rad6 with the genes. In contrast, we find that H3 K4 trimethylation is more generally restricted to the 5' region of the same genes, arguing that ubH2B performs other roles in addition to regulating K4 methylation (Fig. 3C).
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strains during growth in repressed (glucose), noninducing (raffinose) conditions and at 10 to 30 min intervals after induction with galactose (Fig. 4A). These measurements gave us a snapshot of the recruitment events that accompany gene activation. As previously reported (24), in the WT strain, Rad6 transiently associated with the GAL1 UAS after galactose induction, with peak association occurring 30 min after the shift, followed by a successive loss of Rad6 at the promoter over the next 60 min (data not shown). A similar temporal pattern of Rad6 association was observed at the GAL1 core promoter and also at two regions that define the beginning and end of the GAL1 ORF (Fig. 4A, left panels). Significantly, the appearance of Rad6 across the activated GAL1 gene coincided almost precisely with the appearance of Pol II across the gene, indicating that these two events are linked (Fig. 4A, left panels). However, while Rad6 association was transient, Pol II association was not transient, and the polymerase continued to accumulate over the GAL1 gene. These data suggest that the activity of Rad6 is associated with events linked to the earliest round(s) of activated transcription.
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mutation, which significantly reduced the association of Rad6 with all regions analyzed, an rtf1
mutation resulted in a stable accumulation of Rad6 at both the UAS and TATA regions of the GAL1 promoter, with little to no turnover into the transcribed region (Fig. 4A, right panels, and data not shown). In addition, two constitutive genes, PMA1 and ADH1, also showed reduced levels of Rad6 in their coding regions in the absence of Rtf1 (data not shown), supporting the view that the Paf1 complex plays a role in releasing Rad6 from the promoter region into the body of a gene. Pol II also accumulated more slowly at the GAL1 gene in the rtf1
mutant (Fig. 4A, right panels), consistent with a role for the Paf1 complex in transcription elongation. While it is a formal possibility that the slow release of Pol II into the GAL1 coding region could account for the retention of Rad6 at the core promoter, our Rad6-Pol II interaction studies (Fig. 2), coupled with the finding that increased Pol II levels can be found across the GAL1 gene in the rtf1
mutant after activation (Fig. 4A), argue that the Paf1 complex plays a more direct role in the distribution of Rad6 by linking this enzyme to elongating Pol II. Collectively, the data suggest that Rad6 is associated with genes through two mechanisms: it is recruited to promoters through an activator- and Bre1-dependent mechanism and to coding regions through a Paf1- and Pol II-dependent mechanism (60) (see Fig. 7).
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mutant prompted us to ask if ubH2B also accumulated at the regulatory region in this strain. In striking contrast to Rad6, ubH2B was absent at the GAL1 promoter in the rtf1
mutant and, as expected, it was also absent at the 5'ORF because of the failure to accumulate Rad6 at that region (Fig. 4C). Since a bre1
mutation also abolishes H2B ubiquitylation globally and throughout the GAL1 gene (Fig. 4C) (24), this finding indicates that both factors are required for the activity of Rad6 towards H2B. In the absence of this activity, there is a reduced accumulation of GAL1 transcripts upon galactose induction (Fig. 4D). Coupled with the interaction data, these results suggest that the association of Rad6, via Bre1 and Paf1, to the phosphorylated form of Pol II is necessary for the activity of Rad6 in mediating H2B ubiquitylation on genes and the subsequent high levels of transcription. Recent results with the constitutively active PMA1 gene confirm this notion (60).
H2B ubiquitylation is regulated by the CTD and likely plays a role in transcription elongation.
The finding that the Paf1 complex mediates an association of Rad6 to the elongating form of Pol II as well as to the transcribed region of the GAL1 gene suggests a role for Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation in the elongation cycle of transcription. Consistent with this view and as mentioned above, Pol II levels were reduced across the GAL1 gene in both rtf1
and bre1
mutants (Fig. 4A and B, right panels), and GAL1 transcripts accumulated with slower kinetics (Fig. 4D). Given that most elongation activities are coupled to CTD phosphorylation, we asked whether Rad6-mediated H2B ubiquitylation would also be dependent on this Pol II modification. Using the H2B-Flag tagged strain (see Fig. 1), we created a derivative in which the genomic KIN28 allele was deleted in the context of a URA3 plasmid expressing WT Kin28 protein. We then replaced the WT KIN28 gene with a temperature-sensitive KIN28 allele (kin28-ts16-HA) that is inactive at 37°C (11, 27). As expected, Ser5 phosphorylation was eliminated in the kin28-ts16-HA strain upon heat inactivation for 2 h, as shown by immunoblot analysis with the anti-Ser5 phosphorylation-specific antibody (Fig. 5A). Strikingly, thermal inactivation of Kin28 also resulted in a complete abolishment of H2B ubiquitylation (Fig. 5A). It is significant that thermal inactivation of this KIN28-ts allele does not affect the promoter occupancy of transcriptional initiation factors, including TBP, TFIIB, and Pol II (36), and does not result in a loss of Kin28, Pol II, or unmodified H2B protein levels (Fig. 5A) (42). In addition, reversible histone modifications, such as H3 and H4 acetylation and Ser2 CTD phosphorylation, are still present in this strain (Fig. 5A), indicating that the inactivation of this KIN28-ts allele (at least at the time point examined) has not yet fully abolished transcription. This idea is further supported by RT-PCR analysis, which shows that the mRNAs which code for proteins responsible for H2B ubiquitylation are abundant and present at similar levels to those found in the WT and nonshifted kin28-ts16-HA strains (Fig. 5B). Thus, the Kin28-dependent loss of ubH2B is correlated with the loss of Ser5 CTD phosphorylation rather than with the abolishment of transcription or the specific downregulation of genes important for H2B ubiquitylation. These data strongly suggest that H2B ubiquitylation is coupled to CTD phosphorylation, a result that is supported by the observation that a variety of CTD truncations and mutations also significantly reduce the levels of this modification (Fig. 5D).
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In an effort to further implicate the Rad6 complex in the process of transcriptional elongation, NatR strains harboring individual gene deletions of the components of the Rad6 complex (RAD6, BRE1, LGE1) were generated and crossed to a set of viable deletion strains selected for their involvement in gene expression, and the resulting double mutant strains were analyzed (data not shown). Similar sets of genetic interactions were obtained with all three gene deletions (Fig. 6A), and an enrichment of genetic interactions was obtained with a number of genes implicated in transcriptional elongation. For example, rad6
, bre1
, and lge1
deletions all resulted in growth defects when combined with deletions in genes encoding for several well-characterized transcriptional factors with direct roles in elongation, including DST1 (or TFIIS), SPT4, CTK1, and SET2 (1, 2, 19, 25, 34, 35, 37, 62). Interestingly, genetic interactions were also detected between the H2B ubiquitylation machinery and Rpb9, a nonessential subunit of Pol II whose activity is required for efficient elongation in vivo (3), as well as with components of Elongator, a histone acetyltransferase complex that copurifies with the elongating form of Pol II (32, 47, 59) (Fig. 6A and B). Growth defects were also apparent among rad6
, bre1
, lge1
mutants and nonessential components of the 19S (RPN4, RPN10, UBP6, SEM1) and 20S (PRE9) proteasome (57). The proteasome has not only been linked to transcriptional elongation (57), but directly to histone methylation and ubiquitylation as well (15). Finally, we find genetic interactions between RAD6/BRE1/LGE1 and the Swr1 chromatin-remodeling complex, which contains the histone H2A variant Htz1 (Fig. 6A). The Swr1 complex is required for the exchange of the canonical histone H2A with its variant counterpart, Htz1 (30, 33, 38), and was uncovered in several genetic screens by using nonessential transcriptional elongation factors (33). Since the components of the Rad6 complex genetically interact with so many factors impinging on elongation by Pol II, this finding provides strong evidence that the complex and its activity play a major role in transcriptional elongation.
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, leo1
, and set2
). Under control (synthetic defined medium without uracil [SD-uracil]) conditions, we found that rad6
and leo1
mutants showed a subtle slow-growth phenotype, whereas the htb1-K123R mutant and strains with an rtf1
or set2
deletion did not (Fig. 6C). Strains with deletions of other Paf1 complex members (paf1
, cdc73
, and ctr9
) were extremely slow growing and therefore could not be analyzed with confidence in this assay (data not shown). Interestingly, we observed a significant sensitivity to 6-AU in strains with a rad6
, bre1
, or htb1-K123R mutation (Fig. 6C and data not shown). In comparison, and consistent with previous studies (6, 12, 34, 50), this sensitivity was also witnessed with deletion mutants of the Paf1 complex (Fig. 6C). In contrast, deletion of SET2 resulted in modest resistance to 6-AU, a result that has been previously seen (B. D. Strahl and A. Greenleaf, submitted for publication; D. Stillman, personal communication). As Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation at K123 are required for H3 K4 and K79 methylation, it was possible that the 6-AU phenotypes observed with the rad6
, bre1
, and htb1-K123R mutants were a direct result of the loss of elongation-related histone methylation events. However, we note that mutations of K4 and K79, singly or in combination to arginine, do not result in 6-AU phenotypes, whereas mutations at K36 do (Strahl and Greenleaf, submitted). Collectively, these data support the notion that H2B ubiquitylation has a direct role in the elongation process, which appears to be distinguishable from its effects on methylation of H3 at K4 and K79. | DISCUSSION |
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A novel role for Rad6 in transcription elongation. Recent efforts have revealed an increasingly prominent role for histone-modifying activities in transcript elongation. While a number of studies suggest a role for histone acetylation in this process, more recent evidence links the actions of ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling activities and histone methyltransferases directly to this event. Specifically, the Isw1 ATPase has been found to associate with H3 K4 methylation and to act as a checkpoint regulator of transcription initiation (39, 48). Likewise, the recently identified ATPase Swr1 was shown to remodel nucleosomes to incorporate the histone variant Htz1, which has been connected to elongation events as well (30, 33, 38). Independently, studies have shown that the Set1 and Set2 HMTs both associate with Pol II during transcription elongation (17, 18). While Set1 association is dependent on the Ser5 CTD kinase activity of Kin28, Set2 association is dependent on the Ser2 CTD kinase activity of Ctk1.
Our results show that similar to Set1 and Set2, Rad6 is associated with the elongating form of Pol II (see Fig. 2). However, unlike the two Set proteins, which have been shown to selectively associate with distinct gene regions, we find that Rad6, as well as its associated H2B modification, is present broadly over the promoter and coding regions of transcriptionally active genes. This result is likely explained by the fact that Rad6 has an initial role in the activation of gene transcription (perhaps in the initiation event of elongation) but then participates in the later stages of elongation as well. This explanation would be consistent with the observation that a wide variety of elongation factors, including members of the Paf1 complex, are present at both the promoter and transcribed region of genes and that some of these elongation factors, such as Isw1, have been demonstrated to have distinct roles at different stages of the transcription elongation cycle (39, 49).
Similar to Set1, Rad6 is also associated with Pol II via the Paf1 complex (see Fig. 2). Strikingly, both enzymes appear to require the action of Kin28, suggesting a general requirement of Ser5 phosphorylation on the CTD for the recruitment of the Paf1 complex and its associated factors. In contrast, however, the major fraction of Set1 is thought to exit the polymerase after the loss of Ser5 phosphorylation, which is generally restricted to the promoter and 5' regions of genes (17, 18). We take these data to suggest that the Paf1 complex is initially recruited, along with a variety of associated factors, such as Set1, Rad6 and possibly Dot1, in a Ser5 CTD phosphorylation-dependent manner, but that the long-term association of the Paf1 complex and some of the Paf1-associated factors are not CTD phosphorylation-dependent (see Fig. 7). This idea is consistent with results showing that the Paf1 complex is stably associated throughout the promoters and transcribed regions of genes (26, 49). In addition, the deletion of Ctk1, which presumably results in a significant loss of CTD phosphorylation in the body of genes, does not affect H2B ubiquitylation levels (Fig. 5C), which suggests that Paf1 and Rad6 association across genes is not disrupted.
As mentioned above, our results show that in addition to Rad6 being present at promoters, it is also recruited to the coding region of genes. This finding is in contrast to recent studies showing that Rad6 is exclusively recruited to promoter regions (60, 61). While we are unable to explain previous results regarding Rad6 localization, the differences in the findings may lie in the choice of the tagging method used (TAP versus HA or Flag tag) and in the fact that Rad6 levels on genes are generally quite low and, thus, may be more readily detected by using a real-time PCR assay.
Intriguingly, we find by using the GAL1 gene that Rad6 is still recruited to the promoter region of this gene in an rtf1
mutant but shows almost no association with this region in a bre1
mutant. Moreover, in the absence of Rtf1, Rad6 stably accumulates at the GAL1 promoter and fails to significantly accumulate in the GAL1 ORF (Fig. 4). This result suggests that Rad6's association with promoters and coding regions occurs in two steps, via distinct but interrelated mechanisms (see Fig. 7). First, Rad6 is recruited to a promoter by a mechanism that is Paf1 complex independent, e.g., through its association with a gene-specific activator and Bre1. Next, Rad6 that has accumulated at the promoter is handed off to Pol II phosphorylated on Ser5 of the CTD through its association with the Paf1 complex. This handoff to elongating Pol II serves two functions: it activates the ubiquitin conjugating activity of Rad6 towards H2B, and it provides a mechanism for Rad6 to enter the coding region. The E3 ligase Bre1 appears to function at both steps and thus may bridge the interaction of Rad6 with both activators and the Paf1 complex and promote H2B ubiquitylation. By this model, the turnover of Rad6 that has been observed at the GAL1 promoter would be due primarily to the activity of the Paf1 complex in handing off Rad6 from the Gal4 activator to Pol II.
A mechanism for the establishment of K4 and K79 methylation. Because previous studies suggested that Rad6 is selectively recruited to the promoter regions of genes, a paradox arose as to how H2B ubiquitylation at a promoter is capable of establishing long-range K4 and K79 methylation marks throughout the rest of the gene and beyond. Models to explain this phenomenon include a wedge model, in which transient promoter H2B ubiquitylation results in a long-range disruption of higher-order condensed chromatin structure around an entire locus that makes the histones accessible to the appropriate HMTs (20). While one function of ubH2B may be to disrupt higher-order chromatin structure, we find that Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation both track throughout the promoter and body of genes and that ubH2B levels are intimately coupled to K4 and K79 methylation levels (see Fig. 1 and 3). Given these results and the observation that Rad6 and ubH2B occur transiently over the activated GAL1 gene at the onset of Pol II appearance (Fig. 4), we suggest a model whereby Pol II- and Paf1-associated Rad6 ubiquitylates H2B while moving with the elongating polymerase (Fig. 7). In this model, ubH2B is closely associated with the nucleosomes being disrupted for Pol II elongation. We suggest that transient Pol II-associated H2B ubiquitylation results in the placement of a bulky moiety on chromatin that leads to a momentary disruption of nucleosomes, making H3 briefly accessible to Set1 and Dot1, which are thought to also track with Pol II through their association with the Paf1 complex. This disruption may also include the actions of the 19S proteasome, which has been shown to link H2B ubiquitylation and H3 methylation (15). While this idea may explain the regulation of histone methylation on H3, we suggest that the transient disruption of nucleosomes by ubH2B may have a more direct role in elongation, based on the fact that the H2B-K123R tail mutation results in a 6-AU phenotype whereas H3-K4R and H3-K79R mutations do not (Fig. 6C and data not shown). We speculate that the elongation and Pol II-coupled disruption of nucleosomes by ubH2B may be linked with the process of H2A/H2B dimer removal by FACT and that the disruption of chromatin may be caused by other elongation-associated ATP-dependent remodeling activities, such as Isw1 and Swr1. Future work will be required to uncover whether an association exists between H2B ubiquitylation and other mechanisms of chromatin disruption that occur during elongation.
A pioneering role for Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation? From our ChIP results (shown in Fig. 4), we find that Rad6 associates across the activated GAL1 gene in a timing that matches Pol II; however, unlike Pol II, which continues to accumulate over the gene, Rad6 rapidly turns over (Fig. 4A). This transient association of Rad6 at the early stages of newly activated transcription suggests a role for Rad6 and its modification in the early round(s) of transcript elongation by RNA polymerase II. Recently, it has been suggested that there is a pioneer round of transcription for newly transcribed genes in which Pol II is coupled to specialized chromatin modification and disruption (45). This round is postulated to result in a disrupted chromatin template that is permissive for the first and future rounds of gene transcription within a given cell cycle. Thus, it is intriguing to speculate that the early and transient association of Rad6 with the GAL1 gene may indicate that Rad6-mediated H2B ubiquitylation is part of such a pioneer polymerase. Given this possibility, we wonder whether the K4 and K79 methylation events instigated by Rad6/H2B ubiquitylation, which have recently been proposed to serve as a "memory of recent transcription" (42), would act as a memory system by maintaining the disrupted state of chromatin created during the pioneering round of gene transcription.
In summary, our results reveal a physical and functional interaction between Rad6, the Paf1 complex, and Pol II that points to a novel and unexpected role for histone ubiquitylation in the transcription elongation process. The requirement of Kin28 and the CTD for H2B ubiquitylation, along with the SGA and 6-AU analysis of the Rad6 complex, provide strong evidence that Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation are functionally linked to this event. However, future investigation will be required to determine the specific functions of Rad6 and ubH2B in the elongation process and why these events happen transiently and in conjunction with the earliest appearances of Pol II in activated transcription. Given the conserved nature of these enzymes and their modifications in eukaryotes, we propose that the function of H2B ubiquitylation in transcription elongation and its regulation of histone methylation will be highly conserved. Finally, we note that H3 K4 and K79 dimethylation levels are also thought to be global in yeast and not necessarily restricted to the Pol II-transcribed regions of the genome (8, 10, 41, 56). Given the requirement for the Paf1 complex and the CTD to mediate H2B ubiquitylation and these histone methylation marks, it is intriguing to speculate that the Pol II CTD and the Paf1 complex play a much broader role in chromatin regulation than previously realized.
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank E. Schiebel for providing the C-terminal tagging constructs, M. Solomon for providing the Kin28 expression plasmids, and J. Corden and R. Young for providing the CTD mutation strains. We also thank B.D.S. and M.A.O. lab members for their technical advice, strain construction, and comments on the manuscript. We are grateful to J. Lieb and Y. Zhang for very helpful comments on the manuscript.
| FOOTNOTES |
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T.X. and C.-F.K. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
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