2 research outputs found

    Telomeric Position Effect Variegation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by Caenorhabditis elegans Linker Histones Suggests a Mechanistic Connection between Germ Line and Telomeric Silencing

    No full text
    Linker histones are nonessential for the life of single-celled eukaryotes. Linker histones, however, can be important components of specific developmental programs in multicellular animals and plants. For Caenorhabditis elegans a single linker histone variant (H1.1) is essential in a chromatin silencing process which is crucial for the proliferation and differentiation of the hermaphrodite germ line. In this study we analyzed the whole linker histone complement of C. elegans by telomeric position effect variegation in budding yeast. In this assay an indicator gene (URA3) placed close to the repressive telomeric chromatin structure is subject to epigenetically inherited gene inactivation. Just one out of seven C. elegans linker histones (H1.1) was able to enhance the telomeric position effect in budding yeast. Since these results reflect the biological function of H1.1 in C. elegans, we suggest that chromatin silencing in C. elegans is governed by molecular mechanisms related to the telomere-dependent silencing in budding yeast. We confirmed this hypothesis by testing C. elegans homologs of three yeast genes which are established modifiers of the yeast telomeric chromatin structure (SIR2, SET1, and RAD17) for their influence on repeat-dependent transgene silencing for C. elegans

    Linker Histone HIS-24 (H1.1) Cytoplasmic Retention Promotes Germ Line Development and Influences Histone H3 Methylation in Caenorhabditis elegans

    No full text
    RNA interference with one of the eight Caenorhabditis elegans linker histone genes triggers desilencing of a repetitive transgene and developmental defects in the hermaphrodite germ line. These characteristics are similar to the phenotype of the C. elegans Polycomb group genes mes-2, mes-3, mes-4, and mes-6 (M. A. Jedrusik and E. Schulze, Development 128:1069-1080, 2001; I. Korf, Y. Fan, and S. Strome, Development 125:2469-2478, 1998). These Polycomb group proteins contribute to germ line-specific chromatin modifications. Using a his-24 deletion mutant and an isoform-specific antibody, we characterized the role of his-24 in C. elegans germ line development. We describe an unexpected cytoplasmic retention of HIS-24 in peculiar granular structures. This phenomenon is confined to the developing germ lines of both sexes. It is strictly dependent on the activities of the chromatin-modifying genes mes-2, mes-3, mes-4, and mes-6, as well as on the C. elegans sirtuin gene sir-2.1. A temperature shift experiment with a mes-3(ts) mutant revealed that mes gene activity is required in a time window ranging from L3 to the early L4 stage before the onset of meiosis. We find that the his-24(ok1024) mutant germ line is characterized by an increased level of the activating H3K4 methylation mark concomitant with a decrease of the repressive H3K9 methylation. In the germ line of his-24(ok1024) mes-3(bn35) double mutant animals, the repressive H3K27 methylation is more reduced than in the respective mes single mutant. These observations distinguish his-24 as an unusual element in the developmental regulation of germ line chromatin structure in C. elegans
    corecore