Differentiation-dependent alterations in histone methylation and chromatin architecture at the inducible chicken lysozyme gene

被引:34
作者
Lefevre, P [1 ]
Lacroix, C [1 ]
Tagoh, H [1 ]
Hoogenkamp, M [1 ]
Melnik, S [1 ]
Ingram, R [1 ]
Bonifer, C [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leeds, St Jamess Univ Hosp, Div Expt Hematol, Leeds LS9 7TF, W Yorkshire, England
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M502422200
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
It is now well established that locus-wide chromatin remodeling and dynamic alterations of histone modifications are required for the developmentally regulated activation of tissue-specific genes. However, little is known about the dynamics of these events during cell differentiation and how chromatin of an entire gene locus responds to signal transduction processes. To address this issue we investigated chromatin accessibility, linker histone distribution, and the histone methylation status at the macrophage-specific chicken lysozyme locus and the ubiquitously expressed gas41 locus in multipotent precursor cell lines and BM2 monoblast cells. The latter can be induced to go through macrophage maturation by treatment with phorbol-12-myristate acetate and can be further stimulated with bacterial lipopolysaccharide. We show that expression of the lysozyme gene in undifferentiated monoblasts is low and that a high level of gene expression requires both cell differentiation and lipopolysaccharide stimulation. However, depletion of the linker histone H1 is observed already in lysozyme non-expressing multipotent precursor cells. In undifferentiated monoblasts, the lysozyme regulatory regions are marked by the presence of monomethylated histone H3 lysine 4, which becomes increasingly converted into trimethylated H3 lysine K4 during cell differentiation. We also present evidence for extensive, differentiation-dependent alterations in nuclease accessibility at the lysozyme promoter without alterations of nucleosome and transcription factor occupancy.
引用
收藏
页码:27552 / 27560
页数:9
相关论文
共 36 条
  • [1] BAGNIS C, 1993, ONCOGENE, V8, P737
  • [2] Histone methylation: Dynamic or static?
    Bannister, AJ
    Schneider, R
    Kouzarides, T
    [J]. CELL, 2002, 109 (07) : 801 - 806
  • [3] CHICKEN HEMATOPOIETIC-CELLS TRANSFORMED BY 7 STRAINS OF DEFECTIVE AVIAN LEUKEMIA VIRUSES DISPLAY 3 DISTINCT PHENOTYPES OF DIFFERENTIATION
    BEUG, H
    VONKIRCHBACH, A
    DODERLEIN, G
    CONSCIENCE, JF
    GRAF, T
    [J]. CELL, 1979, 18 (02) : 375 - 390
  • [4] Removal of promoter nucleosomes by disassembly rather than sliding in vivo
    Boeger, H
    Griesenbeck, J
    Strattan, JS
    Kornberg, RD
    [J]. MOLECULAR CELL, 2004, 14 (05) : 667 - 673
  • [5] The chicken lysozyme locus as a paradigm for the complex developmental regulation of eukaryotic gene loci
    Bonifer, C
    Jagle, U
    Huber, MC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1997, 272 (42) : 26075 - 26078
  • [6] The chicken lysozyme chromatin domain contains a second, widely expressed gene
    Chong, SY
    Riggs, AD
    Bonifer, C
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2002, 30 (02) : 463 - 467
  • [7] Binding of the winged-helix transcription factor HNF3 to a linker histone site on the nucleosome
    Cirillo, LA
    McPherson, CE
    Bossard, P
    Stevens, K
    Cherian, S
    Shim, EY
    Clark, KL
    Burley, SK
    Zaret, KS
    [J]. EMBO JOURNAL, 1998, 17 (01) : 244 - 254
  • [8] Molecular basis for the discrimination of repressive methyl-lysine marks in histone H3 bv Polvcomb and HP1 chromodomains
    Fischle, W
    Wang, YM
    Jacobs, SA
    Kim, YC
    Allis, CD
    Khorasanizadeh, S
    [J]. GENES & DEVELOPMENT, 2003, 17 (15) : 1870 - 1881
  • [9] Nature of the accessible chromatin at a glucocorticoid-responsive enhancer
    Flavin, M
    Cappabianca, L
    Kress, C
    Thomassin, H
    Grange, T
    [J]. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BIOLOGY, 2004, 24 (18) : 7891 - 7901
  • [10] Analysis of in vivo nucleosome positions by determination of nucleosome-linker boundaries in crosslinked chromatin
    Fragoso, G
    Hager, GL
    [J]. METHODS, 1997, 11 (02) : 246 - 252