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Deubiquitylation of histone H2A activates transcriptional initiation via trans-histone cross-talk with H3K4 di- and trimethylation
- Source :
- Genes & Development. 22:37-49
- Publication Year :
- 2008
- Publisher :
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2008.
-
Abstract
- Transcriptional initiation is a key step in the control of mRNA synthesis and is intimately related to chromatin structure and histone modification. Here, we show that the ubiquitylation of H2A (ubH2A) correlates with silent chromatin and regulates transcriptional initiation. The levels of ubH2A vary during hepatocyte regeneration, and based on microarray expression data from regenerating liver, we identified USP21, a ubiquitin-specific protease that catalyzes the hydrolysis of ubH2A. When chromatin is assembled in vitro, ubH2A, but not H2A, specifically represses the di- and trimethylation of H3K4. USP21 relieves this ubH2A-specific repression. In addition, in vitro transcription analysis revealed that ubH2A represses transcriptional initiation, but not transcriptional elongation, by inhibiting H3K4 methylation. Notably, ubH2A-mediated repression was not observed when H3 Lys 4 was changed to arginine. Furthermore, overexpression of USP21 in the liver up-regulates a gene that is normally down-regulated during hepatocyte regeneration. Our studies revealed a novel mode of trans-histone cross-talk, in which H2A ubiquitylation controls the di- and trimethylation of H3K4, resulting in regulation of transcriptional initiation.
- Subjects :
- Transcriptional Activation
Chromatin Immunoprecipitation
Methylation
Models, Biological
Histone Deacetylases
Histones
Mice
Ubiquitin
Transcription (biology)
Histone H2A
Genetics
Animals
Nucleosome
Histone code
Psychological repression
Models, Genetic
biology
Lysine
Ubiquitination
Molecular biology
Chromatin
Histone
biology.protein
Transcription Initiation Site
Ubiquitin Thiolesterase
Research Paper
Developmental Biology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15495477 and 08909369
- Volume :
- 22
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Genes & Development
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0573f59abb8151f5a4426cc77a230eb9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.1609708