Abstract

Histone H3 di- and trimethylation on lysine 4 are major chromatin marks that correlate with active transcription. The influence of these modifications on transcription itself is, however, poorly understood. We have investigated the roles of H3K4 methylation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by determining genome-wide expression-profiles of mutants in the Set1 complex, COMPASS, that lays down these marks. Loss of H3K4 trimethylation has virtually no effect on steady-state or dynamically-changing mRNA levels. Combined loss of H3K4 tri- and dimethylation results in steady-state mRNA upregulation and delays in the repression kinetics of specific groups of genes. COMPASS-repressed genes have distinct H3K4 methylation patterns, with enrichment of H3K4me3 at the 3′-end, indicating that repression is coupled to 3′-end antisense transcription. Further analyses reveal that repression is mediated by H3K4me3-dependent 3′-end antisense transcription in two ways. For a small group of genes including PHO84, repression is mediated by a previously reported trans-effect that requires the antisense transcript itself. For the majority of COMPASS-repressed genes, however, it is the process of 3′-end antisense transcription itself that is the important factor for repression. Strand-specific qPCR analyses of various mutants indicate that this more prevalent mechanism of COMPASS-mediated repression requires H3K4me3-dependent 3′-end antisense transcription to lay down H3K4me2, which seems to serve as the actual repressive mark. Removal of the 3′-end antisense promoter also results in derepression of sense transcription and renders sense transcription insensitive to the additional loss of SET1. The derepression observed in COMPASS mutants is mimicked by reduction of global histone H3 and H4 levels, suggesting that the H3K4me2 repressive effect is linked to establishment of a repressive chromatin structure. These results indicate that in S. cerevisiae, the non-redundant role of H3K4 methylation by Set1 is repression, achieved through promotion of 3′-end antisense transcription to achieve specific rather than global effects through two distinct mechanisms.

Highlights

  • Packaging of eukaryotic DNA with histones has a generally repressive effect on transcription [1]

  • The histone modification that has been predominantly linked with active transcription in all eukaryotes is histone H3 lysine 4 (H3K4) methylation

  • We investigate the functional effects of each H3K4 methylation state on transcription

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Summary

Introduction

Packaging of eukaryotic DNA with histones has a generally repressive effect on transcription [1]. Histones themselves are subject to a variety of post-translational modifications, such as acetylation, methylation and ubiquitinylation. These modifications correlate with specific states of transcription, as well as with the activity of other DNAlinked processes, such as chromosome segregation and DNA repair [2,3]. Vertebrates possess several H3K4 methyltransferases related to the SET domain of yeast Set and Drosophila Trx (MLL family) [5] These methyltransferases are responsible for mono- (H3K4me1), di- (H3K4me2) and trimethylation (H3K4me3) of H3K4 [6].

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