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Molecular and Cellular Biology, October 2007, p. 6832-6841, Vol. 27, No. 19
0270-7306/07/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/MCB.00745-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Molecular Plant Sciences,1 School of Molecular Biosciences, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-4660,2 Department of Biochemistry, Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 379963
Received 27 April 2007/ Returned for modification 19 June 2007/ Accepted 21 July 2007
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In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the euchromatin-specific lysine residues are methylated by three histone lysine methyltransferases: Set1 (H3K4), Set2 (H3K36), and Dot1 (H3K79). These methyltransferases are recruited by the transcription elongation machinery, and their subsequent methylation of histone H3 is associated with actively transcribed genes (reviewed in references 31 and 33). However, while H3K4, H3K36, and H3K79 methylation is intricately coupled with transcription elongation, mutations in these residues or their cognate histone methyltransferases have relatively little effect on cell viability and gene expression. Deletion of SET1 results in decreased mRNA levels for a large number of genes (2, 27), in accordance with its proposed role in transcription elongation and euchromatin formation, but the magnitude of these transcriptional defects is relatively minor. In contrast, Set2-catalyzed methylation appears to primarily repress transcription by recruiting the Rpd3 histone deacetylase complex (3, 9, 11).
These studies suggest that histone H3 methylation plays only a modest role in transcription elongation and euchromatin formation in S. cerevisiae. We have investigated this possibility by systematically mutating the methylated lysine residues in histone H3. Surprisingly, we find that the triple mutation of H3K4, H3K36, and H3K79 to arginine (H3 K4,36,79R) is lethal in S. cerevisiae. Our data indicate that this lethal phenotype is not due to a defect in histone H3 stability or its incorporation in the nucleosome but is instead due to a progressive gene expression defect that initiates in telomeric heterochromatin and then spreads into the chromosome. We show that the H3 K4,36,79R mutation elicits the binding of the heterochromatin-associated silent information regulator (SIR) silencing complex (6) into regions of euchromatin adjacent to yeast telomeres. In addition, mutations in the SIR complex rescue this lethal phenotype. Curiously, mutations in the histone methyltransferase genes (e.g., SET1) also rescue the lethal H3 K4,36,79R mutant. These and other data suggest that the cause of lethality may in part be due to the association of histone methyltransferase enzymes with a histone substrate that cannot be methylated.
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Plasmid construction and site-directed mutagenesis. Details of plasmid construction are available upon request. Each histone H3 mutant was generated from plasmid pJW028 by site-directed mutagenesis (QuikChange kit, Stratagene). The set1-N1016Q and set1-C1068A mutants were generated from plasmid pJW048 (5) by site-directed mutagenesis. All mutants were confirmed by DNA sequencing. The complete list of mutagenic primer sequences is available at http://wyrick.sbs.wsu.edu/HistoneMethylation.
Genome-wide expression profiling. Total RNA was isolated from each yeast culture. Equal amounts of five exogenous poly(A) control RNAs were added to each total RNA sample (8). The total RNA samples were used to prepare cDNA and biotin-cRNA, as previously described (20). The cRNA was then hybridized to a single S98 genome oligonucleotide array and scanned following standard protocols (Affymetrix). Intensities were captured using GeneChip software (Affymetrix), and a single raw expression level for each gene was determined. Complete data sets are available at http://wyrick.sbs.wsu.edu/HistoneMethylation/.
Data analysis. The data from each chip were normalized using a normalization factor calculated from the signal intensities of five exogenous poly(A) controls, as previously described (8). A change in mRNA levels was deemed significant based on the following criteria: (i) the average change up or down was greater than twofold, (ii) the change (up or down) in each replicate experiment was greater than 1.5-fold, and (iii) the absolute intensity change was above background levels. See the report by Martin et al. (20) for more details.
Telomere-proximal gene analysis and statistics.
For the chromosome plots (see Fig. 3), all yeast genes were ordered according to their distance from a telomere and divided into consecutive 50-gene bins. The fraction of genes down-regulated in the mutant strain and the average distance of the genes from the telomere were plotted for each bin. Only those genes within
210 kb of a telomere were plotted. Statistical analysis of enrichment for telomere-proximal genes (0 to 10 kb from a telomere) was calculated using a hypergeometric probability distribution (20).
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FIG. 3. Effects of the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant on genome-wide expression levels. Chromosome plots of the microarray data from the H3 K4,36,79R mutant at different time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3. For each time point, a histogram of the fraction of genes whose mRNA levels are down-regulated in H3 mutants is plotted as a function of their distance from a chromosome end. The microarray data for the H3 K4,79R mutant are also shown for comparison.
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Chromatin immunoprecipitation assay. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays were performed as described previously (17), with slight modifications. Briefly, yeast cells were grown under conditions similar to those for genome-wide expression experiments and cross-linked with 1% formaldehyde. Cells were lysed by glass beads and sonicated to shear the chromatin to fragment sizes of 150 to 400 bp. Cross-linked chromatin fragments were immunoprecipitated with anti-Myc antibody (catalog number AH00052; Biosource) or anti-Sir2 antibody (catalog number sc-6666; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) bound to magnetic beads (Dynal Biotech). After the cross-links were reversed, the DNA fragments were extracted for PCR. Taq DNA polymerase (New England Biolabs) and appropriate primer pairs were used in the PCR amplification reactions. PCR products were resolved on 2% agarose TBE gels stained with ethidium bromide and quantified using a GelDoc EQ imager with Quantity One software (Bio-Rad). The complete list of ChIP primer sequences is available at http://wyrick.sbs.wsu.edu/HistoneMethylation/.
Microarray data accession numbers. The data discussed in this report have been deposited in the NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) and are accessible through GEO Series accession numbers GSE6319, GSE6326, GSE6327, GSE6328, and GSE6331.
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FIG. 1. The histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain is inviable. (A) The growth phenotypes of double and triple mutants in histone H3 methylated lysine residues were examined. Fivefold serial dilutions of each yeast strain (from about 104 cells) were spotted on SC-ADE medium or SC-ADE with 5-FOA as indicated. A wild-type (wt) histone H3 allele was present in each strain on SC-ADE plates but was lost from SC-ADE plates with 5-FOA. (B) Growth rates of histone mutant strains. The cell density of strains containing the H3 K4,36,79R, H3 4-45, H3 , or wild-type alleles of histone H3 was monitored by measuring the optical density at different time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3. (C) The viability for each of the mutant strains shown in panel B was determined by plating equal amounts of cells on galactose plates at different time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3. The colonies formed on plates were scored after 72 h of incubation. Relative viability was calculated as the ratio of the colony number at certain time point to the 0-h time point. Each error bar represents the standard deviation of three independent experiments.
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To further investigate this lethal phenotype, we employed a histone depletion strain (WY151) in which the sole copies of the histone H3 and H4 genes were regulated by the GAL1-10 promoter (19). Plasmids bearing the histone H3 mutant alleles (and wild-type histone H4) under the control of their endogenous promoters were transformed into the histone depletion strain, and the resulting growth defects were examined by shifting the cells to glucose medium. The glucose shutdown represses transcription of the wild-type histone H3 gene, leaving the H3 mutant gene as the sole source of histone H3 in the cell.
The growth curve of the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant is shown in Fig. 1B. The H3 K4,36,79R mutant displays a growth defect at 6 h postshift compared to the wild type, and this growth defect is exacerbated over time, until the cells gradually cease growing by 25 to 30 h postshift. This phenotype is in sharp contrast with the rapid growth arrest observed for the H3
4-45 mutant, which deletes part of the histone H3 core domain (19), and for the histone H3 (and H4) depletion strain (H3
; Fig. 1B). We also measured the loss of viability of the histone H3 mutants by returning the glucose-treated cells to the permissive galactose medium at various time points postshift. Figure 1C shows that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant shows a gradual decrease in viability beginning at 6 to 9 h postshift and is almost completely inviable by 24 h. In contrast, the H3
4-45 and H3 depletion mutants show a rapid loss of cell viability at 3 h postshift and are almost completely inviable by 6 h postshift. Taken together, these results argue that the lethality of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant is not due to the loss or instability of histone H3 protein, as is the case with the H3
4-45 and H3 depletion mutants, as the severity and kinetics of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant growth defect are strikingly different from these other mutants.
The H3 K4,36,79R mutant is stable and competent for nucleosome assembly.
To directly test whether the H3 K4,36,79R mutant destabilizes the histone H3 protein, we measured H3 protein levels at consecutive time points following glucose shutdown of wild-type H3 expression. Western blotting analysis of yeast cell extracts indicated that histone H3 protein levels were relatively constant over the time course in the wild-type and H3 K4,36,79R mutant strains (Fig. 2A). In contrast, the H3
4-45 and H3 depletion mutants showed a rapid loss in histone H3 protein. These data suggest that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant protein is stable in vivo; however, an alternative explanation for these data is that the wild-type H3 protein may continue to be expressed in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain, despite the presence of glucose in the medium.
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FIG. 2. The histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant protein is stable and competent for nucleosome assembly. (A) The protein stability of different histone mutants was measured by Western blotting analysis. Cell extracts from each of the mutants at four time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3 were resolved by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and probed with anti-H3 antibody. As an internal loading control, anti- -tubulin antibody was used. (B) Antibodies against di- and trimethylated histone H3K4 do not detect the histone H3 K4R mutant while antibody against histone H3 detects both wild-type histone H3 and the H3 K4R mutant. Cell extracts from wild-type and histone H3 K4R mutant strains were analyzed with antibodies as indicated. The level of the -tubulin subunit was used as an internal loading control. (C) Loss of histone H3K4 methylation at different time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3. Cell extracts from wild-type histone H3 and the H3 K4,36,79R mutant at different time points following the depletion of wild-type histone H3 were examined by Western blotting analysis with appropriate antibodies, as described in the panel B legend. (D) Genomic chromatin structure of the different histone mutants and wild-type strains was examined by MNase digestion assays. MNase digestion profiles for cells harvested at the 6-h time point following the depletion of wild-type histone H3 are shown as representative patterns. Subsequent lanes had doubling concentration of MNase from 0 to 37.5 units/ml. M, 100-bp DNA molecular size ladder.
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To test whether the H3 K4,36,79R mutant can be assembled into the nucleosome, we used an MNase digestion assay to characterize the nucleosome content in the H3 mutant strain. MNase digestions were performed with the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant at 6 h following the shift to glucose medium, when most of the cellular population of histone H3 is composed of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant protein (Fig. 2C). Comparison of the MNase digestion patterns of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant and the wild-type strains showed no significant alterations in nucleosome content or bulk genomic chromatin structure (Fig. 2D). In contrast, the H3
4-45 mutant strain showed a general loss of nucleosome content (Fig. 2D), presumably due to a defect in nucleosome assembly. In summary, these data strongly suggest that the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant protein is stable and competent for proper nucleosome assembly. However, these results do not rule out the possibility that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant may have more subtle effects on nucleosome positioning and chromatin structure, which would not be detected by the genomic MNase digestion assay.
The H3 K4,36,79R mutant causes gene repression, beginning with genes located in telomeric heterochromatin. Previous studies have shown that the methylation of H3K4, H3K36, and H3K79 plays an important role in transcriptional regulation (33). To characterize the effects of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant on genome-wide transcription, we isolated RNA from parallel cultures of wild-type and H3 K4,36,79R mutant strains at 0, 6, and 9 h following the shift to glucose medium. The resulting genome-wide changes in mRNA levels were profiled using Affymetrix oligonucleotide arrays and are summarized in Table 1. The data for the 0-h time point indicate that the expression of many genes was altered prior to the shift to glucose medium, when both the wild-type and the mutant histone H3 proteins were expressed. This result suggests that even the partial replacement of wild-type histone H3 with the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant protein can affect gene expression. Subsequent time points show that a general trend of progressively greater numbers of genes are down-regulated in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, culminating in 361 genes with decreased expression levels by the 9-h time point.
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TABLE 1. Genome-wide expression changes in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant time course
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These data indicate that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant enhances telomeric gene silencing. Previous studies have shown that H3K4 and H3K79 methylation regulates telomeric silencing in yeast (31, 36), suggesting that the mutation of these residues alone may be responsible for the telomeric silencing effects observed for the H3 K4,36,79R mutant. To test this hypothesis, we used oligonucleotide arrays to profile the gene expression changes in the H3 K4,79R mutant. Analysis of the triplicate samples revealed that the mRNA levels of 61 genes were up-regulated and that the mRNA levels of 26 genes were down-regulated in the H3 K4,79R mutant, compared to that of the wild type. Further analysis shows that a significant fraction of the genes down-regulated in the H3 K4,79R mutant were also down-regulated in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant at the 6- and 9-h time points (data not shown). Nearly half of the genes down-regulated in the H3 K4,79R mutant are adjacent to yeast telomeres, a significant enrichment (P = 7.1 x 10–17). Indeed, the H3 K4,79R and H3 K4,36,79R mutants show strikingly similar effects of telomere-proximal gene expression (Fig. 3). In contrast, the H3 K36R mutant has a modest effect on telomere-proximal gene expression (data not shown). This analysis indicates that the initial increase in telomere silencing observed for the H3 K4,36,79R mutant time course is likely a consequence of the mutation of H3K4 and H3K79 to arginine.
At the 0-h and 6-h time points, relatively few genes outside of the telomere region are down-regulated in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant; however, at the 9-h time point, many genes in euchromatin regions of the genome are down-regulated (Fig. 3). We also profiled the gene expression changes at the 12-h and 18-h time points, and found that many more genes in euchromatin regions of yeast chromosomes were down-regulated at these later time points (data not shown). However, we are hesitant to draw conclusions from these data for two reasons. First, there is a considerable loss in the viability of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant at later time points (Fig. 1C). Hence, the gene expression changes we observed could have beeen an indirect consequence of cell death. Second, there is considerable variability in the microarray data for these later time points between replicate experiments.
In summary, the genome-wide expression data show the following trend: at the initial time points, the H3 K4,36,79R mutant represses the transcription of genes near telomere regions, while at later time points, the H3 K4,36,79R mutant-mediated gene repression begins to spread in the euchromatin regions of the chromosome. In contrast, the H3 K4,79R mutant represses gene transcription predominately at telomere proximal regions and shows little effect on the expression of genes located elsewhere.
The H3 K4,36,79R mutant leads to aberrant cell cycle progression.
Cell cycle display of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant time course expression data revealed that a significant fraction of the genes down-regulated by the H3 K4,36,79R mutant are normally expressed during the G1 phase of the cell cycle (Fig. 4A). This result suggested the possibility that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant may have a cell cycle defect resulting in fewer cells cycling into G1 phase. We tested this hypothesis by performing fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS) analysis with propidium iodide-stained H3 K4,36,79R mutant cells at consecutive time points following the shift to glucose medium. The results indicated that there is a slight (
10%) but reproducible decrease in the number of unbudded (G1-phase) cells in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant compared to that of the wild type (Fig. 4B), in accordance with the expression data. We also observed a broadening in the second (2N) peak for the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, which suggests slow progression through mitosis or cytokinesis in the mutant cells. The H3
4-45 mutant, in contrast, shows an immediate G2/M arrest phenotype (Fig. 4B), which is indicative of nucleosome depletion (12). Similar results were obtained from FACS analysis of Sytox Green-stained cells (data not shown).
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FIG. 4. Cell cycle defects in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain. (A) Cell cycle display (32) of the genes down-regulated during the H3 K4,36,79R mutant time course. The circles represent the cell cycle expression patterns of 800 cell cycle-regulated genes (34). The intensity of red color indicates the number of genes that are normally expressed at that phase of the cell cycle which are down-regulated in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain. The total numbers of cell cycle genes that are down-regulated for each time point are listed in parentheses. (B) FACS analysis was used to measure the cell cycle profile of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain following depletion of wild-type (wt) histone H3.
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The H3 K4,36,79R mutant enhances SIR complex binding to genomic regions adjacent to yeast telomeres. To gain insight into the mechanism underlying the H3 K4,36,79R lethality, we performed a genetic screen to identify extragenic mutations that suppressed the lethal phenotype. We isolated and cloned one of the suppressors, which partially rescued the lethal phenotype, and found that the suppressing mutation resided in the SIR3 gene. The suppressor mutant was a frameshift mutation caused by a single adenosine insertion into a stretch of 9 adenosines (nucleotides 1414 to 1422), resulting in the introduction of a premature stop codon in the Sir3 coding sequence following amino acid 485 (see Fig. S2 in the supplemental material). The addition of a wild-type allele of the SIR3 gene abolished suppression, demonstrating that the isolated sir3 suppressor mutant has a recessive, loss-of-function mutation (data not shown). The Sir3 protein is a component of the SIR complex, which silences gene expression at yeast telomeres and at the silent mating loci. We systematically deleted each subunit of the SIR complex (SIR2, SIR3, and SIR4) in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain and found that each of the deletions partially suppressed the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype (Fig. 5A). In contrast, deletion of RPD3, which encodes a histone deacetylase whose association with chromatin is regulated by H3K36 methylation (3, 9, 11), did not suppress the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. In summary, these results indicate that the SIR complex is required for the lethality of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant.
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FIG. 5. The SIR silencing complex is required for the lethal phenotype of the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant. (A) The growth of histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant strains lacking SIR2, SIR3, SIR4, or RPD3 was tested on SC-ADE plates with or without 5-FOA, as shown in Fig. 1A. (B) A schematic representation of the chromosome V-L telomere (TEL V-L) region. The location of the Y' element, coding sequences, and ChIP primer pairs are depicted. (C and D) Increased binding by the SIR silencing complex near the chromosome V-L telomere region. The abundances of Sir4 at the TEL V-L region in wild-type strains and H3 mutants (and an untagged strain as control) were determined by ChIP analysis. The Sir4 binding ratio is shown as the ratio of each primer pair to the ACT1 primer pair. Each error bar represents the standard deviation of three independent experiments. Similar results were obtained with ChIP analysis of Sir2 (see Fig. S3 in the supplemental material).
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We also compared the levels of binding of the SIR complex in the H3 K4,79R and H3K4,36,79R mutants. As shown in Fig. 5D, the binding of Sir4 to DNA regions was considerably stronger in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant than in the H3 K4,79R mutant strain. This was particularly apparent at the more distant DNA regions (primer pairs 3 to 5). These data indicated that mutating all three methylated lysine residues in histone H3 causes considerably greater binding of the SIR complex to adjacent genomic regions than that observed when only K4 and K79 are mutated.
Deletion of the histone methyltransferase genes suppresses the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype.
Because the arginine mutations are thought to mimic an unmethylated lysine side chain, we hypothesized that the H3 K4,36,79R mutant was lethal because it abolished histone H3 methylation. To test this hypothesis, we systematically deleted all three histone H3 lysine methyltransferases and characterized the phenotypes of the resulting set1
set2
dot1
mutant strain. Surprisingly, unlike the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, the triple methyltransferase mutant was viable (Fig. 6A). Phenotypic analysis of the set1
set2
dot1
mutant strain indicated that it grew normally under most growth conditions, though it showed caffeine sensitivity (see Fig. S4 in the supplemental material). This result calls into question whether the lethality of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant was due to the loss of lysine methylation.
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FIG. 6. Deletion of the histone methyltransferase genes suppresses the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. (A) Growth ability of the set1 set2 dot1 mutant strain. (B and C) Histone H3 mutant strains lacking Set1 methyltransferase were transformed with the wild-type SET1 or different set1 mutant alleles and then tested for viability, as shown in Fig. 1A.
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In addition to the set1 deletion, we tested two different mutations in the Set1 active site (set1-N1016Q and set1-C1068A), which have been previously shown to render Set1 catalytically inactive (26, 28). Surprisingly, we found that both the set1-N1016Q and set1-C1068A mutations were lethal in combination with the H3 K36,79R mutation (Fig. 6B). The lethal phenotype of these set1 point mutants was specific to the H3 K36,79R mutant; the set1 point mutations were not lethal in combination with the H3 K4,79R or H3 K4,36R mutation or with the H3 K4,36,79G mutation (data not shown). We also tested the viability of strains containing the set1-RRM
mutant allele, in which the RNA recognition motif domain of Set1 (amino acids 230 to 335) had been deleted. Unlike the set1-N1016Q and set1-C1068A mutants, which eliminated all methylation of H3K4 (see Fig. S5A in the supplemental material), the set1-RRM
mutation only abolished H3K4 trimethylation and reduced H3K4 dimethylation, leaving H3K4 monomethylation intact (see Fig. S5B in the supplemental material), in accordance with previous studies (5, 29). The H3 K36,79R set1-RRM
mutant strain was also inviable (Fig. 6B). Again, the set1-RRM
mutation was not lethal in combination with the H3 K4,79R or H3 K4,36R mutation or with the H3 K4,36,79G mutation (data not shown).
Perhaps the simplest interpretation of these results is that the histone methyltransferase proteins (e.g., Set1) must be present in the cell for the loss of histone methylation to be lethal. If this hypothesis was correct, then we would expect that deleting the genes encoding the histone methyltransferase enzymes would rescue the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. To test this possibility, we measured the viability of the H3 K4,36,79R yeast strain in which the SET1 gene was deleted. As shown in Fig. 6C, deletion of SET1 rescued the lethal phenotype of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, but this lethality was restored if a wild-type copy of the SET1 gene was added. Intriguingly, addition of any of the set1 mutants that abolished or disabled its methyltransferase activity (i.e., the set1-N1016Q, set1-C1068A, or set1-RRM
mutant) also restored lethality (Fig. 6C). This result indicates that the Set1 protein, but not its enzymatic activity, was required for the H3 K4,36,79R lethality. Deletion of the SET2 or DOT1 gene also rescued the lethal phenotype of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, though the H3 K4,36,79R dot1
mutant strain was very slow growing (data not shown).
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The phenotype of the histone H3 K4,36,79R mutant. Genome-wide expression profiling of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain following depletion of wild-type histone H3 revealed an initial decline in the transcription of genes proximal to telomere regions. At later time points, even genes located in euchromatin regions of yeast chromosomes suffered a decline in transcription. These data support a model in which the decrease in the transcription of essential genes in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain causes cell lethality. The genome-wide expression data alone do not distinguish whether the decline in transcriptional activity is due to a defect in transcriptional activation or elongation or to an enhancement in transcriptional repression. The isolation of loss-of-function suppressor mutations in the SIR transcriptional silencing complex and our observation that the SIR complex binds to adjacent euchromatin regions in the mutant strain, however, indicate that the transcriptional defect is due at least in part to SIR-mediated transcriptional repression.
The H3 K4,36,79R mutant strain also displays defects in cell cycle progression, particularly in mitosis. While a fairly small subset of mutant cells (11 to 16%) show cell cycle irregularities during the time course, the observed defects are significantly enriched in the mutant strain compared to that of the wild type and could be a contributing factor to the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. Previous studies have shown that the Set1 methylation of Dam1 plays an important role in regulating chromosome segregation during mitosis (38). Our data indicate that Set1-catalyzed methylation of histone H3, in parallel with Set2- and Dot1-catalyzed methylation, is also vital for proper mitotic progression.
It is important to note that previous studies have linked the spread of the SIR complex with yeast growth and cell cycle defects. Deletion of the GCN5 and ELP3 histone acetyltransferase genes, which caused the spread of the SIR complex into subtelomeric heterochromatin, resulted in a yeast strain with multiple growth defects (14). A second study showed that overexpression of the SIR complex led to cell cycle defects in mitosis and a decrease in chromosome stability (7). Hence, it is possible that the cell cycle defects observed for the H3 K4,36,79R mutant may be a consequence of the aberrant spread of SIR-mediated heterochromatin.
Role of the SIR complex in the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. We have isolated two distinct classes of mutants that suppress the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. These classes of suppressor mutants provide insight into the mechanism underlying the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype. The first class of suppressor mutants occurs in components of the SIR silencing complex.
Previous studies have shown that the association of the SIR silencing complex with chromatin is regulated by the methylation of H3K4 and H3K79. Trimethylation of H3K4 and H3K79 blocks SIR association (22, 26), while hypomethylated H3K4 and H3K79 favor SIR association (22, 26). This model fits our data, as the lysine-to-arginine mutations in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant, which elicit SIR binding (Fig. 5), are thought to mimic hypomethylated lysine residues. In contrast, the lysine-to-glycine mutations in the H3 K4,36,79G mutant would be expected to disrupt SIR binding because they eliminate the hypomethylated lysine side chain. This would explain why the H3 K4,36,79G mutant is viable and why the H3 K4,36,79G mutant disrupts telomeric gene silencing instead of enhancing it (see Fig. S6 in the supplemental material). It is also possible, however, that the arginine mutants bind more strongly to the SIR complex than would hypomethylated lysine residues and thus cause an artificially high degree of SIR binding.
We find that the H3 K4,79R mutation alone causes only a modest increase in gene silencing, primarily confined to genes located within 10 kb of a telomere. Only when H3K36 is also mutated to arginine is the silencing of euchromatin genes observed. This conclusion is supported by the SIR binding data, which clearly demonstrate more extensive binding of the SIR complex farther into the chromosome in the H3 K4,36,79R mutant than in the H3 K4,79R mutant. These data suggest that H3K36 plays an important role in regulating telomeric silencing. Previous studies have shown that mutants in the Paf1 complex, which regulates H3K4 and H3K36 methylation, have silencing phenotypes (15, 23, 24). This finding is also in accordance with a recent study which showed that Set2 regulated SIR complex spreading (35). Our microarray data indicate that the H3 K36R mutation has a significant but modest effect on telomeric gene expression (data not shown).
Role of histone methyltransferase proteins in the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype.
The second class of suppressor mutants we have identified are in the histone lysine methyltransferase genes themselves. Deletion of either SET1, SET2, or DOT1 rescued the H3 K4,36,79R lethal phenotype (though the dot1 suppressor mutant was very slow growing). In light of this finding, it is not surprising that the set1
set2
dot1
triple deletion also yields a viable yeast strain. However, Set1 mutations that eliminate or disable its methylation activity are lethal in combination with either the H3 K4,36,79R or the H3 K36,79R histone mutant. It is important to note that while the set1-N1016Q and set1-C1068A mutations disrupt Set1 catalytic activity, they do not affect the stability of the Set1 protein or the integrity of the Set1-associated COMPASS complex (28), unlike the SET1 deletion mutant (25).
We have yet to test the phenotypes of catalytically inactive mutations in Set2 and Dot1, as inactivating mutations in these methyltransferases have not been as well as studied as those in Set1. However, we have found that the deletion of CTK1, which is required for Set2-catalyzed methylation of H3K36 (37), is lethal in combination with the H3 K4,79R mutation (data not shown). The CTK1 deletion disrupts Set2 methyltransferase activity but not the integrity of the Set2 protein; hence, this result mirrors the effects seen for the Set1 catalytically inactive mutants.
In summary, we have shown that the histone methyltransferases are required for the lethality of the H3 K4,36,79R mutant. Perhaps the simplest explanation for this observation is what we call the "stymied methyltransferase" model. This model asserts that the lethal phenotype arises, in part, due to the association of histone methyltransferase enzymes with a histone substrate that cannot be methylated. Thus, this model would predict that the histone H3 lysine-to-arginine mutants and the catalytically inactive methyltransferase mutants are lethal because they prevent lysine methylation without disrupting the association of the methyltransferase with its substrate. On the other hand, mutations that disrupted this association (e.g., methyltransferase deletion or histone lysine-to-glycine mutations) would not be expected to be lethal, in accordance with our results. While it is not clear why a "stymied methyltransferase" would necessarily be lethal, it is intriguing to speculate that the Set1 protein may have a direct inhibitory function, as is the case for the yeast Kss1 mitogen-activated protein kinase (1, 4, 18, 30). For example, Set1 binding to histone substrates in the absence of histone methylation could inhibit gene transcription. Alternatively, Set1 could exert its inhibitory effect through its interaction with other substrates, such as Dam1 (38).
A second possible explanation for these genetic data is that proteins associated with the histone methyltransferases may have additional functions that are required for lethality. Deletion of the histone methyltransferase would disrupt these functions and suppress the lethal phenotype. For example, it is possible that other components of the COMPASS complex have additional functions, which may be compromised by the deletion of SET1. In any case, future studies are needed to test these hypotheses.
This work was supported by American Cancer Society grant RSG-03-181-01-GMC. A.R. was supported by NIH postdoctoral fellowship GM074541-01 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.
Published ahead of print on 30 July 2007. ![]()
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