Abstract

The histone acetyltransferase GCN5-associated SAGA complex is evolutionarily conserved from yeast to human and functions as a general transcription co-activator in global gene regulation. In this study, we identified a divergent GCN5 complex in Plasmodium falciparum, which contains two plant homeodomain (PHD) proteins (PfPHD1 and PfPHD2) and a plant apetela2 (AP2)-domain transcription factor (PfAP2-LT). To dissect the functions of the PfGCN5 complex, we generated parasite lines with either the bromodomain in PfGCN5 or the PHD domain in PfPHD1 deleted. The two deletion mutants closely phenocopied each other, exhibiting significantly reduced merozoite invasion of erythrocytes and elevated sexual conversion. These domain deletions caused dramatic decreases not only in histone H3K9 acetylation but also in H3K4 trimethylation, indicating synergistic crosstalk between the two euchromatin marks. Domain deletion in either PfGCN5 or PfPHD1 profoundly disturbed the global transcription pattern, causing altered expression of more than 60% of the genes. At the schizont stage, these domain deletions were linked to specific down-regulation of merozoite genes involved in erythrocyte invasion, many of which contain the AP2-LT binding motif and are also regulated by AP2-I and BDP1, suggesting targeted recruitment of the PfGCN5 complex to the invasion genes by these specific factors. Conversely, at the ring stage, PfGCN5 or PfPHD1 domain deletions disrupted the mutually exclusive expression pattern of the entire var gene family, which encodes the virulent factor PfEMP1. Correlation analysis between the chromatin state and alteration of gene expression demonstrated that up- and down-regulated genes in these mutants are highly correlated with the silent and active chromatin states in the wild-type parasite, respectively. Collectively, the PfGCN5 complex represents a novel HAT complex with a unique subunit composition including an AP2 transcription factor, which signifies a new paradigm for targeting the co-activator complex to regulate general and parasite-specific cellular processes in this low-branching parasitic protist.

Highlights

  • Packaging of the eukaryotic genomes with nucleosomes into chromatin affects all essential cellular processes such as transcription, DNA replication, and repair

  • Using tandem affinity purification and proteomic characterization, we identified that the PfGCN5-associated complex contains nine core components, including two plant homeodomain (PHD) domain proteins (PfPHD1 and PfPHD2) and an AP2-domain transcription factor, which is divergent from the canonical GCN5 complexes evolutionarily conserved from yeast to human

  • These two mutants were associated with dramatic decreases in histone H3K9 acetylation and H3K4 trimethylation, which led to global changes in chromatin states and gene expression

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Summary

Introduction

Packaging of the eukaryotic genomes with nucleosomes into chromatin affects all essential cellular processes such as transcription, DNA replication, and repair. Earlier studies suggested that SAGA regulates about 10% of genes in yeast and plants [15,16], but a GCN5 complex in malaria parasite recent revisit of this issue in yeast revealed ubiquitous localization of SAGA at all gene promoters and reduced transcription of most genes upon the disruption of SAGA [17,18]. From these studies, SAGA appears to act as a general co-activator for all RNA polymerase II transcription, and its methyl reader (Sgf29) and acetyl reader (GCN5) subunits build synergistic crosstalk to coordinate transcription. As a co-activator complex that functions in the recruitment of the preinitiation complex, SAGA plays essential roles in metazoan development [19]

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