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Cell cycle-dependent binding of yeast heat shock factor to nucleosomes.

Authors :
Venturi CB
Erkine AM
Gross DS
Source :
Molecular and cellular biology [Mol Cell Biol] 2000 Sep; Vol. 20 (17), pp. 6435-48.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

In the nucleus, transcription factors must contend with the presence of chromatin in order to gain access to their cognate regulatory sequences. As most nuclear DNA is assembled into nucleosomes, activators must either invade a stable, preassembled nucleosome or preempt the formation of nucleosomes on newly replicated DNA, which is transiently free of histones. We have investigated the mechanism by which heat shock factor (HSF) binds to target nucleosomal heat shock elements (HSEs), using as our model a dinucleosomal heat shock promoter (hsp82-DeltaHSE1). We find that activated HSF cannot bind a stable, sequence-positioned nucleosome in G(1)-arrested cells. It can do so readily, however, following release from G(1) arrest or after the imposition of either an early S- or late G(2)-phase arrest. Surprisingly, despite the S-phase requirement, HSF nucleosomal binding activity is restored in the absence of hsp82 replication. These results contrast with the prevailing paradigm for activator-nucleosome interactions and implicate a nonreplicative, S-phase-specific event as a prerequisite for HSF binding to nucleosomal sites in vivo.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0270-7306
Volume :
20
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular and cellular biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
10938121
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/MCB.20.17.6435-6448.2000