Abstract

As a conserved posttranslational modification, SUMOylation has been shown to play important roles in chromatin-related biological processes including transcription. However, how the SUMOylation machinery associates with chromatin is not clear. Here, we present evidence that multiple SUMOylation machinery components, including SUMO E1 proteins SAE1 and SAE2 and the PIAS (protein inhibitor of activated STAT) family SUMO E3 ligases, are primarily associated with the nuclear matrix rather than with chromatin. We show using nuclease digestion that all PIAS family proteins maintain nuclear matrix association in the absence of chromatin. Of importance, we identify multiple histones including H3 and H2A.Z as directly interacting with PIAS1 and demonstrate that this interaction requires the PIAS1 SAP (SAF-A/B, Acinus, and PIAS) domain. We demonstrate that PIAS1 promotes SUMOylation of histones H3 and H2B in both a SAP domain– and an E3 ligase activity–dependent manner. Furthermore, we show that PIAS1 binds to heat shock–induced genes and represses their expression and that this function also requires the SAP domain. Altogether, our study reveals for the first time the nuclear matrix as the compartment most enriched in SUMO E1 and PIAS family E3 ligases. Our finding that PIAS1 interacts directly with histone proteins also suggests a molecular mechanism as to how nuclear matrix–associated PIAS1 is able to regulate transcription and other chromatin-related processes.

Highlights

  • small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO) (Small Ubiquitin-related MOdifier) modification (SUMOylation) is a conserved posttranslational modification uniquely present in eukaryotes

  • We analyzed the distribution of two SUMO E1 subunits SAE1 and SAE2, E2 UBC9, and E3 PIAS1 in these three fractions by Western blotting

  • To determine if the above SUMO enzymes were associated with chromatin and/or the nuclear matrix, we utilized a protocol as illustrated in Figure 1C that removes chromatin from the nuclear matrix [38,39,40]

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Summary

Introduction

SUMO (Small Ubiquitin-related MOdifier) modification (SUMOylation) is a conserved posttranslational modification uniquely present in eukaryotes. This experiment supports UBC9 as a chromatin-associated protein, it reveals surprisingly that PIAS1 and SAE1/SAE2 are primarily localized in the nuclear matrix.

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