Abstract

In D. melanogaster polytene chromosomes, intercalary heterochromatin (IH) appears as large dense bands scattered in euchromatin and comprises clusters of repressed genes. IH displays distinctly low gene density, indicative of their particular regulation. Genes embedded in IH replicate late in the S phase and become underreplicated. We asked whether localization and organization of these late-replicating domains is conserved in a distinct cell type. Using published comprehensive genome-wide chromatin annotation datasets (modENCODE and others), we compared IH organization in salivary gland cells and in a Kc cell line. We first established the borders of 60 IH regions on a molecular map, these regions containing underreplicated material and encompassing ∼12% of Drosophila genome. We showed that in Kc cells repressed chromatin constituted 97% of the sequences that corresponded to IH bands. This chromatin is depleted for ORC-2 binding and largely replicates late. Differences in replication timing between the cell types analyzed are local and affect only sub-regions but never whole IH bands. As a rule such differentially replicating sub-regions display open chromatin organization, which apparently results from cell-type specific gene expression of underlying genes. We conclude that repressed chromatin organization of IH is generally conserved in polytene and non-polytene cells. Yet, IH domains do not function as transcription- and replication-regulatory units, because differences in transcription and replication between cell types are not domain-wide, rather they are restricted to small “islands” embedded in these domains. IH regions can thus be defined as a special class of domains with low gene density, which have narrow temporal expression patterns, and so displaying relatively conserved organization.

Highlights

  • The problem of intercalary heterochromatin (IH) has a history of over 70 years

  • In Kc cell line, these chromatin domains are flanked by stretches of YELLOW and RED chromatin, both enriched with active chromatin marks (RNA polymerase II, active histone marks, ORC2) and interband-specific protein CHRIZ/CHRO and both depleted for histone H1

  • For several regions tested, the DNA probes from CHRO-positive regions adjacent to the repressed domains in Kc cells were shown to hybridize in situ to interbands flanking IH bands in salivary glands

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Summary

Introduction

IH was defined as regions scattered in euchromatic arms of polytene chromosomes and showing a number of features similar to ‘‘classic’’ pericentric heterochromatin (PH) [1]. IH appears as massive dense bands that frequently form ectopic contacts with each other and with PH [2]. In salivary gland polytene chromosomes, IH is transcriptionally inert and completes replication late in the S phase. IH becomes underreplicated as endocycles that form polytene chromosomes proceed [3,4,5,6]. It is underreplication that results in chromosome breaks, originally called ‘‘weak spots’’ by Bridges [7]. Ectopic contacts are likely formed by repair-mediated end-joining of DNA molecules following their underreplication [8,9]

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