Abstract
Trypanosoma brucei is a protozoan parasite that lacks many transcription factors found in other eukaryotes, such as those whose binding demarcates enhancers. T. brucei retains histone variants and modifications, however, and it is hypothesized that it relies on epigenetic marks to define transcription-related boundaries. The histone H3 variant (H3.V) and an alternate nucleotide, base J (ß-D-glucosyl-hydroxymethyluracil), are two chromatin marks found at both transcription termination sites (TTSs) and telomeres. Here, we report that the absence of both base J and H3.V result in transcription readthrough and the appearance of antisense transcripts near TTSs. Additionally, we find that maintaining the transcriptional silencing of pol I-transcribed telomeric Variant Surface Glycoprotein (VSG) genes appears to be dependent on deposition of H3.V alone. Our study reveals that gene expression depends on different epigenetic cues depending on chromosomal location and on the transcribing polymerase. This work provides insight into how these signals may have evolved into the more nuanced and fine-tuned gene regulatory mechanisms observed in other model systems.
Highlights
Trypanosoma brucei, a eukaryotic parasite that causes African sleeping sickness, belongs to the order Kinetoplastida and diverged from mammals ~500 million years ago
We have investigated the effects of base J and H3.V in maintaining the transcriptional landscape surrounding their sites of deposition, which include convergent strand switch regions (cSSRs) and telomeres
We find that H3.V appears to be required for the maintenance of silencing of telomeric genes (VSGs), while both marks are important for proper transcription termination at the ends of polycistronic transcription units (PTUs)
Summary
Trypanosoma brucei, a eukaryotic parasite that causes African sleeping sickness, belongs to the order Kinetoplastida and diverged from mammals ~500 million years ago. Some general transcription factors and one pol I-specific factor have been identified in T. brucei [3,4,5], but the parasite lacks many of the sequence-specific transcription factors found in other eukaryotes that bind to cis-regulatory sequences, and cisregulatory sequences themselves have not been well characterized. The lack of these regulatory factors, and the fact that histone modifications and histone variants are deposited at sites of putative transcription initiation and termination, has led to the idea that chromatin marks are important for demarcating PTUs [6]. A mechanistic involvement of these marks with transcriptional regulation has not been demonstrated
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