Title
SET3p monomethylates histone H3 on lysine 9 and is required for the silencing of tandemly repeated transgenes in Chlamydomonas
Date Issued
01 February 2007
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of Nebraska
Abstract
SET domain-containing proteins of the SU(VAR)3-9 class are major regulators of heterochromatin in several eukaryotes, including mammals, insects, plants and fungi. The function of these polypeptides is mediated, at least in part, by their ability to methylate histone H3 on lysine 9 (H3K9). Indeed, mutants defective in SU(VAR)3-9 proteins have implicated di- and/or trimethyl H3K9 in the formation and/or maintenance of heterochromatin across the eukaryotic spectrum. Yet, the biological significance of monomethyl H3K9 has remained unclear because of the lack of mutants exclusively defective in this modification. Interestingly, a SU(VAR)3-9 homolog in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, SET3p, functions in vitro as a specific H3K9 monomethyltransferase. RNAi-mediated suppression of SET3 reactivated the expression of repetitive transgenic arrays and reduced global monomethyl H3K9 levels. Moreover, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays demonstrated that transgene reactivation correlated with the partial loss of monomethyl H3K9 from their chromatin. In contrast, the levels of trimethyl H3K9 or the repression of euchromatic sequences were not affected by SET3 downregulation; whereas dimethyl H3K9 was undetectable in Chlamydomonas. Thus, our observations are consistent with a role for monomethyl H3K9 as an epigenetic mark of repressed chromatin and raise questions as to the functional distinctiveness of different H3K9 methylation states. © 2007 Oxford University Press.
Start page
939
End page
950
Volume
35
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
BioquĂmica, BiologĂa molecular
BiologĂa celular, MicrobiologĂa
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-33847371204
PubMed ID
Source
Nucleic Acids Research
ISSN of the container
13624962
Sponsor(s)
We are grateful to D. Rokhsar and Joint Genome Institute scientists for allowing access to the Chlamydomonas genome sequence prior to publication and to members of the Cerutti’s lab for helpful discussions. This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Science Foundation (MCB-0544448). Funding to pay the Open Access publication charge was provided by the National Science Foundation.
Sources of information:
Directorio de ProducciĂłn CientĂfica
Scopus