Yeast heterochromatin is a dynamic structure that requires silencers continuously

  1. Tzu-Hao Cheng and
  2. Marc R. Gartenberg1,2
  1. Department of Pharmacology, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854 USA

Abstract

Transcriptional silencing of the HM loci in yeast requirescis-acting elements, termed silencers, that function during S-phase passage to establish the silent state. To study the role of the regulatory elements in maintenance of repression, site-specific recombination was used to uncouple preassembled silent chromatin fragments from silencers. DNA rings excised from HMR were initially silent but ultimately reactivated, even in G1- or G2/M-arrested cells. In contrast, DNA rings bearing HML-derived sequence were stably repressed due to the presence of a protosilencing element. These data show that silencers (or protosilencers) are required continuously for maintenance of silent chromatin. Reactivation of unstably repressed rings was blocked by overexpression of silencing proteins Sir3p and Sir4p, and chromatin immunoprecipitation studies showed that overexpressed Sir3p was incorporated into silent chromatin. Importantly, the protein was incorporated even when expressed outside of S phase, during G1 arrest. That silencing factors can associate with and stabilize preassembled silent chromatin in non-S-phase cells demonstrates that heterochromatin in yeast is dynamic.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • 1 Member, The Cancer Institute of New Jersey.

  • 2 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL gartenbe{at}UMDNJ.edu; FAX (732) 235-4073.

    • Received December 6, 1999.
    • Accepted January 7, 2000.
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