4.6 Article

BEAF Regulates Cell-Cycle Genes through the Controlled Deposition of H3K9 Methylation Marks into Its Conserved Dual-Core Binding Sites

Journal

PLOS BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 12, Pages 2896-2910

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060327

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. CIAR
  3. ARC
  4. ACI Canceropole GSO
  5. ANR
  6. French Research Ministry
  7. Fondation de la Recherche Medicale (FRM)
  8. Austrian FWF (Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung)
  9. Louisiana Board of Regents LABOR
  10. LSU FRG
  11. NSF
  12. Human Frontier Science Program
  13. CNRS
  14. INSERM

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Chromatin insulators/boundary elements share the ability to insulate a transgene from its chromosomal context by blocking promiscuous enhancer-promoter interactions and heterochromatin spreading. Several insulating factors target different DNA consensus sequences, defining distinct subfamilies of insulators. Whether each of these families and factors might possess unique cellular functions is of particular interest. Here, we combined chromatin immunoprecipitations and computational approaches to break down the binding signature of the Drosophila boundary element-associated factor (BEAF) subfamily. We identify a dual-core BEAF binding signature at 1,720 sites genome-wide, defined by five to six BEAF binding motifs bracketing 200 bp AT-rich nuclease-resistant spacers. Dual-cores are tightly linked to hundreds of genes highly enriched in cell-cycle and chromosome organization/segregation annotations. siRNA depletion of BEAF from cells leads to cell-cycle and chromosome segregation defects. Quantitative RT-PCR analyses in BEAF-depleted cells show that BEAF controls the expression of dual core-associated genes, including key cell-cycle and chromosome segregation regulators. beaf mutants that impair its insulating function by preventing proper interactions of BEAF complexes with the dual-cores produce similar effects in embryos. Chromatin immunoprecipitations show that BEAF regulates transcriptional activity by restricting the deposition of methylated histone H3K9 marks in dual-cores. Our results reveal a novel role for BEAF chromatin dual-cores in regulating a distinct set of genes involved in chromosome organization/segregation and the cell cycle.

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