Article

  • The EMBO Journal (2000) 19, 2641 - 2651
  • doi:10.1093/emboj/19.11.2641

Locus specificity determinants in the multifunctional yeast silencing protein Sir2

Guido Cuperus1, Reza Shafaatian1 and David Shore1

  1. Department of Molecular Biology, University of Geneva, Geneva 4, CH-1211 Switzerland

Correspondence to:

David Shore, E-mail: David.Shore@molbio.unige.ch

Received 4 February 2000; Accepted 30 March 2000; Revised 30 March 2000


Yeast SIR2, the founding member of a conserved gene family, acts to modulate chromatin structure in three different contexts: silent (HM) mating-type loci, telomeres and rDNA. At HM loci and telomeres, Sir2p forms a complex with Sir3p and Sir4p. However, Sir2p's role in rDNA silencing is Sir3/4 independent, requiring instead an essential nucleolar protein, Net1p. We describe two novel classes of SIR2 mutations specific to either HM/telomere or rDNA silencing. Despite their opposite effects, both classes of mutations cluster in the same two regions of Sir2p, each of which borders on a conserved core domain. A surprising number of these mutations are dominant. Several rDNA silencing mutants display a Sir2p nucleolar localization defect that correlates with reduced Net1p binding. Although the molecular defect in HM/telomere-specific mutants is unclear, they mimic an age-related phenotype where Sir3p and Sir4p relocalize to the nucleolus. Artificial targeting can circumvent the silencing defect in a subset of mutants from both classes. These results define distinct functional domains of Sir2p and provide evidence for additional Sir2p-interacting factors with locus-specific silencing functions.

  • Keywords:

    • aging,
    • nucleolus,
    • silencing,
    • Sir2,
    • telomere