Abstract

Posttranslational modification of histones through acetylation, methylation, and phosphorylation is a common mode of regulating chromatin structure and, therefore, diverse nuclear processes. One such modification, methylated histone H3 at lysine-4 (H3-meK4), colocalizes with hyperacetylated histones H3 and H4 in mammalian chromatin. Whereas activators directly recruit acetyltransferases, the process whereby H3-meK4 is established is unknown. We tested whether the hematopoietic-specific activators NF-E2 and GATA-1, which mediate transactivation of the beta-globin genes, induce both histone acetylation and H3-meK4. Through the use of NF-E2- and GATA-1-null cell lines, we show that both activators induce H3 acetylation at the promoter upon transcriptional activation. However, analysis of H3-mek4 revealed that NF-E2 and GATA-1 differentially regulate chromatin modifications at the betamajor promoter. NF-E2, but not GATA-1, induces H3-meK4 at the promoter. Thus, under conditions in which NF-E2 and GATA-1 activate the transcription of an endogenous gene at least 570-fold, these activators differ in their capacity to induce H3-meK4. Despite strong H3-meK4 at hypersensitive site 2 of the upstream locus control region, neither factor was required to establish H3-meK4 at this site. These results support a model in which multiple tissue-specific activators collectively function to assemble a composite histone modification pattern, consisting of overlapping histone acetylation and methylation. As GATA-1 induced H3 acetylation, but not H3-meK4, at the promoter, H3 acetylation and H3-meK4 components of a composite histone modification pattern can be established independently.

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