X. Bi et al., The yeast HML I silencer defines a heterochromatin domain boundary by directional establishment of silencing, P NAS US, 96(21), 1999, pp. 11934-11939
Citations number
29
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary
Journal title
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
The eukaryotic genome is divided into functional domains defined in part by
local differences in chromatin structure and delimited in many cases by bo
undary elements. The HML and HMR loci in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae
are transcriptionally silent chromosome domains. Each locus is bracketed b
y two cis-acting sequences, designated E and 1, that serve to establish and
maintain repression of genes within each locus. We show that repression at
HML is uniformly high between E and I but decreases sharply beyond I. The
region of repression at HML generally correlates with the domain of histone
hypoacetylation. Despite the sharp definition of the boundaries of HML, no
sequence capable of blocking the spread of heterochromatin resides in the
sequences flanking HML. We find, though, that inverting the orientation of
1 increases silencing outside of HML while weakening silencing within HML.
These results indicate that the HML 1 silencer establishes a boundary betwe
en active and inactive chromatin at HML, but does so by organizing inactive
chromatin in only one direction. This represents a different mechanism for
delimiting the boundaries of a eukaryotic chromosome domain.