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Article

USF1 Recruits Histone Modification Complexes and Is Critical for Maintenance of a Chromatin Barrier

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Pages 7991-8002 | Received 23 Jul 2007, Accepted 30 Aug 2007, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

The insulator element at the 5′ end of the chicken β-globin locus acts as a barrier, protecting transgenes against silencing effects of adjacent heterochromatin. We showed earlier that the transcription factor USF1 binds within the insulator and that this site is important for generating in adjacent nucleosomes histone modifications associated with active chromatin and, by inference, with barrier function. To understand the mechanism of USF1 action, we have characterized USF1-containing complexes. USF1 interacts directly with the histone H4R3-specific methyltransferase PRMT1. USF1, PRMT1, and the histone acetyltransferases (HATs) PCAF and SRC-1 form a complex with both H4R3 histone methyltransferase and HAT activities. Small interfering RNA downregulation of USF1 results in localized loss of H4R3 methylation, and other histone modifications associated with euchromatin, at the insulator. A dominant negative peptide that interferes with USF1 binding to DNA causes silencing of an insulated reporter construct, indicating abolition of barrier function. These results show that USF1 plays a direct role in maintaining the barrier, supporting a model in which the insulator works as a barrier by maintaining a local environment of active chromatin.

We thank Yoshihiro Nakatani, Emery H. Bresnick, Charles Vinson, and Harvey R. Herschman for generously providing reagents and Rodolfo Ghirlando for helping with gel filtration. We are grateful to Jörg Bungert and members of the Felsenfeld laboratory for their helpful suggestions and comments on the manuscript. The FACS analysis was carried out in the Shands Cancer Center Flow Cytometry Core Facility.

The research is in part supported by an American Cancer Society Institutional research grant and the Bankhead-Coley Cancer Research Grant (S.H.). It was also supported by the Intramural Research Program, NIDDK, NIH.

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