A chromodomain protein,
Chp1, is required for the establishment of heterochromatin in fission
yeast
Sadaie M, Iida T, Urano T and Nakayama J
Embo J 23(19):3825-35 (2004)
SUMMARY
The chromodomain is a conserved motif that functions in the epigenetic
control of gene expression. Here, we report the functional characterization
of a chromodomain protein, Chp1, in the heterochromatin assembly in fission
yeast. We show that Chp1 is a structural component of three heterochromatic
regions-centromeres, the mating-type region, and telomeres-and that its
localization in these regions is dependent on the histone methyltransferase
Clr4. Although deletion of the chp1(+) gene causes centromere-specific
decreases in Swi6 localization and histone H3-K9 methylation, we show
that the role of Chp1 is not exclusive to the centromeres. We found that
some methylation persists in native centromeric regions in the absence
of Chp1, which is also true for the mating-type region and telomeres,
and determined that Swi6 and Chp2 are critical to maintaining this residual
methylation. We also show that Chp1 participates in the establishment
of repressive chromatin in all three chromosomal regions. These results
suggest that different heterochromatic regions share common structural
properties, and that centromeric heterochromatin requires Chp1-mediated
establishment steps differently than do other heterochromatic regions.
LINK
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15372076