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Gene Expression

Histone H2B Ubiquitylation Is Associated with Elongating RNA Polymerase II

, , , , , & show all
Pages 637-651 | Received 20 Sep 2004, Accepted 14 Oct 2004, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Rad6-mediated ubiquitylation of histone H2B at lysine 123 has been linked to transcriptional activation and the regulation of lysine methylation on histone H3. However, how Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation contribute to the transcription and histone methylation processes is poorly understood. Here, we show that the Paf1 transcription elongation complex and the E3 ligase for Rad6, Bre1, mediate an association of Rad6 with the hyperphosphorylated (elongating) form of RNA polymerase II (Pol II). This association appears to be necessary for the transcriptional activities of Rad6, as deletion of various Paf1 complex members or Bre1 abolishes H2B ubiquitylation (ubH2B) and reduces the recruitment of Rad6 to the promoters and transcribed regions of active genes. Using the inducible GAL1 gene as a model, we find that the recruitment of Rad6 upon activation occurs rapidly and transiently across the gene and coincides precisely with the appearance of Pol II. Significantly, during GAL1 activation in an rtf1 deletion mutant, Rad6 accumulates at the promoter but is absent from the transcribed region. This fact suggests that Rad6 is recruited to promoters independently of the Paf1 complex but then requires this complex for entrance into the coding region of genes in a Pol II-associated manner. In support of a role for Rad6-dependent H2B ubiquitylation in transcription elongation, we find that ubH2B levels are dramatically reduced in strains bearing mutations of the Pol II C-terminal domain (CTD) and abolished by inactivation of Kin28, the serine 5 CTD kinase that promotes the transition from initiation to elongation. Furthermore, synthetic genetic array analysis reveals that the Rad6 complex interacts genetically with a number of known or suspected transcription elongation factors. Finally, we show that Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants bearing defects in the pathway to H2B ubiquitylation display transcription elongation defects as assayed by 6-azauracil sensitivity. Collectively, our results indicate a role for Rad6 and H2B ubiquitylation during the elongation cycle of transcription and suggest a mechanism by which H3 methylation may be regulated.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work is supported by NIH grants GM068088 (B.D.S.) and GM40118 (M.A.O.). B.D.S. is a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences.

We thank E. Schiebel for providing the C-terminal tagging constructs, M. Solomon for providing the Kin28 expression plasmids, and J. Corden and R. Young for providing the CTD mutation strains. We also thank B.D.S. and M.A.O. lab members for their technical advice, strain construction, and comments on the manuscript. We are grateful to J. Lieb and Y. Zhang for very helpful comments on the manuscript.

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