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Article

Histone Variant H2A.Z and RNA Polymerase II Transcription Elongation

, &
Pages 1848-1860 | Received 23 Nov 2010, Accepted 16 Feb 2011, Published online: 20 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Nucleosomes containing histone variant H2A.Z (Htz1) serve to poise quiescent genes for activation and transcriptional initiation. However, little is known about their role in transcription elongation. Here we show that dominant mutations in the elongation genes SPT5 and SPT16 suppress the hypersensitivity of htz1Δ strains to drugs that inhibit elongation, indicating that Htz1 functions at the level of transcription elongation. Direct kinetic measurements of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) movement across the 9.5-kb GAL10p-VPS13 gene revealed that the elongation rate of polymerase is 24% slower in the absence of Htz1. We provide evidence for two nonexclusive mechanisms. First, we observed that both the phospho-Ser2 levels in the elongating isoform of Pol II and the loading of Spt5 and Elongator over the GAL1 open reading frame (ORF) depend on Htz1. Second, in the absence of Htz1, the density of nucleosome occupancy is increased over the GAL10p-VPS13 ORF and the chromatin is refractory to remodeling during active transcription. These results establish a mechanistic role for Htz1 in transcription elongation and suggest that Htz1-containing nucleosomes facilitate Pol II passage by affecting the correct assembly and modification status of Pol II elongation complexes and by favoring efficient nucleosome remodeling over the gene.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank Jesper Svejstrup for reagents and Carl Wu, Stefan Bekiranov, David Auble, and members of the Smith lab for helpful discussions.

This work was supported by an ASCB MAC Visiting Professorship Award to M.S.S., a Robert R. Wagner Fellowship to M.H., and grants GM28920 and GM60444 from the National Institutes of Health to M.M.S.

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