Abstract

The ubiquitous tandem kinase JIL-1 is essential for Drosophila development. Its role in defining decondensed domains of larval polytene chromosomes is well established, but its involvement in transcription regulation has remained controversial. For a first comprehensive molecular characterisation of JIL-1, we generated a high-resolution, chromosome-wide interaction profile of the kinase in Drosophila cells and determined its role in transcription. JIL-1 binds active genes along their entire length. The presence of the kinase is not proportional to average transcription levels or polymerase density. Comparison of JIL-1 association with elongating RNA polymerase and a variety of histone modifications suggests two distinct targeting principles. A basal level of JIL-1 binding can be defined that correlates best with the methylation of histone H3 at lysine 36, a mark that is placed co-transcriptionally. The additional acetylation of H4K16 defines a second state characterised by approximately twofold elevated JIL-1 levels, which is particularly prominent on the dosage-compensated male X chromosome. Phosphorylation of the histone H3 N-terminus by JIL-1 in vitro is compatible with other tail modifications. In vivo, phosphorylation of H3 at serine 10, together with acetylation at lysine 14, creates a composite histone mark that is enriched at JIL-1 binding regions. Its depletion by RNA interference leads to a modest, but significant, decrease of transcription from the male X chromosome. Collectively, the results suggest that JIL-1 participates in a complex histone modification network that characterises active, decondensed chromatin. We hypothesise that one specific role of JIL-1 may be to reinforce, rather than to establish, the status of active chromatin through the phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10.

Highlights

  • JIL-1 is a ubiquitously expressed, nuclear tandem kinase of Drosophila melanogaster that associates with chromatin at all stages of development

  • Active chromatin is characterised by a wealth of histone modifications that collectively define a decondensed form of chromatin that is accessible to regulators and more transcribed

  • A basal level of association can be found at most genes and correlates best with the presence of active chromatin exemplified by methylation of H3K36

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Summary

Introduction

JIL-1 is a ubiquitously expressed, nuclear tandem kinase of Drosophila melanogaster that associates with chromatin at all stages of development. Ectopic recruitment of JIL-1 to a series of Lac operator repeats by fusion to a lacI DNA binding domain leads to local decondensation of polytene chromatin. This reorganisation of chromatin depends on JIL-1’s kinase activity [3]. The essential function of JIL-1 can be explained, at least in part, by the involvement of the kinase in chromosome organisation [4,5], where it plays a role in maintaining the balance between euchromatin and heterochromatin [6,7,8]. Su(var) may be an essential effector in the pathway of heterochromatin spreading, which is counteracted by JIL-1

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