Abstract
Eukaryotic nuclei contain regions of differentially staining chromatin (heterochromatin), which remain condensed throughout the cell cycle and are largely transcriptionally silent. RNAi knockdown of the highly conserved heterochromatin protein HP1 in Drosophila was previously shown to preferentially reduce male viability. Here we report a similar phenotype for the telomeric partner of HP1, HOAP, and roles for both proteins in regulating the Drosophila sex determination pathway. Specifically, these proteins regulate the critical decision in this pathway, firing of the establishment promoter of the masterswitch gene, Sex-lethal (Sxl). Female-specific activation of this promoter, SxlPe, is essential to females, as it provides SXL protein to initiate the productive female-specific splicing of later Sxl transcripts, which are transcribed from the maintenance promoter (SxlPm) in both sexes. HOAP mutants show inappropriate SxlPe firing in males and the concomitant inappropriate splicing of SxlPm-derived transcripts, while females show premature firing of SxlPe. HP1 mutants, by contrast, display SxlPm splicing defects in both sexes. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays show both proteins are associated with SxlPe sequences. In embryos from HP1 mutant mothers and Sxl mutant fathers, female viability and RNA polymerase II recruitment to SxlPe are severely compromised. Our genetic and biochemical assays indicate a repressing activity for HOAP and both activating and repressing roles for HP1 at SxlPe.
Highlights
Eukaryotic genomes are organized into two distinct classes of chromatin, euchromatin and heterochromatin
The former is less condensed to enable transcription, whereas heterochromatin, which is marked by Heterochromatin Protein 1 (HP1), remains compact and mostly transcriptionally silent throughout the cell cycle
We describe a male viability defect for the telomeric partner of HP1, HP1/origin recognition complex (ORC)-Associated Protein (HOAP), and misregulation of the sex determination pathway
Summary
Eukaryotic genomes are organized into two distinct classes of chromatin [1]. The major class (euchromatin) can undergo decondensation to enable transcription during interphase, whereas a minor fraction (heterochromatin) remains compact and mostly transcriptionally silent throughout the cell cycle. Lysine 9 methylation of histone H3 is catalyzed by the Drosophila SU(VAR) protein [7] (human SUV39H1 [8], S. pombe clr4 [9]) and provides a chromatin-binding site for HP1. Both heterochromatin marks have been observed in euchromatic genes [10], where their roles in gene activation, as well as repression, have recently been uncovered [11,12,13].
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