Access
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
Brief Communications
Nature 418, 498 (1 August 2002) | doi:10.1038/nature00970; Received 30 May 2002; Accepted 1 July 2002; Published online 14 July 2002
nature jobs
Forest Insect Ecologists
- Natural Resources Canada Canadian Forest Service (CFS)
- Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
Scientist for Adrenal Research
- University of Dresden, Dept. of Medicine, Director: Prof. S. Bornstein
- Dresden 01307 Germany
Gene silencing: Trans-histone regulatory pathway in chromatin
Scott D. Briggs1, Tiaojiang Xiao2, Zu-Wen Sun1, Jennifer A. Caldwell3, Jeffrey Shabanowitz3, Donald F. Hunt3, C. David Allis1 & Brian D. Strahl2
Abstract
The fundamental unit of eukaryotic chromatin, the nucleosome, consists of genomic DNA wrapped around the conserved histone proteins H3, H2B, H2A and H4, all of which are variously modified at their amino- and carboxy-terminal tails to influence the dynamics of chromatin structure and function1, 2 — for example, conjugation of histone H2B with ubiquitin controls the outcome of methylation at a specific lysine residue (Lys 4) on histone H3, which regulates gene silencing in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae3. Here we show that ubiquitination of H2B is also necessary for the methylation of Lys 79 in H3, the only modification known to occur away from the histone tails, but that not all methylated lysines in H3 are regulated by this 'trans-histone' pathway because the methylation of Lys 36 in H3 is unaffected. Given that gene silencing is regulated by the methylation of Lys 4 and Lys 79 in histone H3, we suggest that H2B ubiquitination acts as a master switch that controls the site-selective histone methylation patterns responsible for this silencing.
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
