Acf1, the largest subunit of CHRAC, regulates ISWI-induced nucleosome remodelling
2001; Springer Nature; Volume: 20; Issue: 14 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1093/emboj/20.14.3781
ISSN1460-2075
Autores Tópico(s)Protein Degradation and Inhibitors
ResumoArticle16 July 2001free access Acf1, the largest subunit of CHRAC, regulates ISWI-induced nucleosome remodelling Anton Eberharter Anton Eberharter Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Simona Ferrari Simona Ferrari Pediatrics Clinic, University of Brescia, Italy Search for more papers by this author Gernot Längst Gernot Längst Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Tobias Straub Tobias Straub Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Axel Imhof Axel Imhof Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Patrick Varga-Weisz Patrick Varga-Weisz Marie Curie Research Institute, The Chart, Oxted, RH8 0TL UK Search for more papers by this author Matthias Wilm Matthias Wilm EMBL, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Peter B. Becker Corresponding Author Peter B. Becker Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Anton Eberharter Anton Eberharter Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Simona Ferrari Simona Ferrari Pediatrics Clinic, University of Brescia, Italy Search for more papers by this author Gernot Längst Gernot Längst Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Tobias Straub Tobias Straub Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Axel Imhof Axel Imhof Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Patrick Varga-Weisz Patrick Varga-Weisz Marie Curie Research Institute, The Chart, Oxted, RH8 0TL UK Search for more papers by this author Matthias Wilm Matthias Wilm EMBL, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Peter B. Becker Corresponding Author Peter B. Becker Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany Search for more papers by this author Author Information Anton Eberharter1, Simona Ferrari2, Gernot Längst1, Tobias Straub1, Axel Imhof1, Patrick Varga-Weisz3, Matthias Wilm4 and Peter B. Becker 1 1Adolf-Butenandt-Institut, Molekularbiologie, Schillerstrasse 44, D-80336 München, Germany 2Pediatrics Clinic, University of Brescia, Italy 3Marie Curie Research Institute, The Chart, Oxted, RH8 0TL UK 4EMBL, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany ‡A.Eberharter and S.Ferrari contributed equally to this work *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2001)20:3781-3788https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/20.14.3781 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info The chromatin accessibility complex (CHRAC) was originally defined biochemically as an ATP-dependent 'nucleosome remodelling' activity. Central to its activity is the ATPase ISWI, which catalyses the transfer of histone octamers between DNA segments in cis. In addition to ISWI, four other potential subunits were observed consistently in active CHRAC fractions. We have now identified the p175 subunit of CHRAC as Acf1, a protein known to associate with ISWI in the ACF complex. Interaction of Acf1 with ISWI enhances the efficiency of nucleosome sliding by an order of magnitude. Remarkably, it also modulates the nucleosome remodelling activity of ISWI qualitatively by altering the directionality of nucleosome movements and the histone 'tail' requirements of the reaction. The Acf1–ISWI heteromer tightly interacts with the two recently identified small histone fold proteins CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16. Whether topoisomerase II is an integral subunit has been controversial. Refined analyses now suggest that topoisomerase II should not be considered a stable subunit of CHRAC. Accordingly, CHRAC can be molecularly defined as a complex consisting of ISWI, Acf1, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16. Introduction The packaging of the eukaryotic genome into chromatin has important implications for fundamental nuclear processes such as DNA replication (DePamphilis, 1999), transcription (Pollard and Peterson, 1998; Varga-Weisz and Becker, 1998; Wolffe and Hayes, 1999; Strahl and Allis, 2000), repair (Schlissel, 2000) and recombination (Moggs and Almouzni, 1999; Smerdon and Conconi, 1999). Repressive chromatin structure can be rendered permissive for interaction of regulatory factors through the action of remodelling machines that modulate the structure of the nucleosome (Kadonaga, 1998; Kingston and Narlikar, 1999; Vignali et al., 2000). One type of 'remodelling' machine requires continuous ATP hydrolysis for its activity. Central to their function are ATPases of the SWI2/SNF2 superfamily that are found in all eukaryotes, from yeast to man (Eisen et al., 1995). The currently characterized enzymes define three distinct families of nucleosome remodelling machines: SWI2/SNF2-like, ISWI-like and Mi2-like (Boyer et al., 2000; Brehm et al., 2000; Guschin et al., 2000). Nucleosome remodelling factors driven by the ATPase ISWI have first been isolated by biochemical fractionation of Drosophila embryo extracts. Three distinct ISWI-containing complexes with different protein composition and functional characteristics have been isolated: the nucleosome remodelling factor (NURF; Tsukiyama and Wu, 1995), the chromatin accessibility complex (CHRAC; Varga-Weisz et al., 1997) and the ATP-dependent chromatin assembly and remodelling factor (ACF; Ito et al., 1997). For the NURF complex, so far two ISWI-associated proteins have been identified: the WD repeat protein NURF-55, which can also be found in the chromatin assembly factor CAF-1 (Martinez-Balbas et al., 1998), and the inorganic pyrophosphatase NURF-38 (Gdula et al., 1998). Following a chromatin assembly activity, Kadonaga and colleagues discovered ACF, a two-subunit complex in which ISWI associates with the 185 kDa Acf1. Acf1 contains a bromodomain, two PHD fingers and a putative heterochromatin-targeting domain (Ito et al., 1999; Poot et al., 2000). ACF-like complexes have also been found in Xenopus and human cells (Bochar et al., 2000; Guschin et al., 2000; Poot et al., 2000). CHRAC was isolated as a factor with two ATP-dependent activities: a remodelling activity increasing the accessibility of nucleosomal arrays and a nucleosome-spacing activity able to convert irregular successions of nucleosomes into regular arrays (Varga-Weisz et al., 1997). These two phenomena may be explained by our recent discovery of ATP-dependent nucleosome sliding, defined as relocation of intact histone octamers on DNA in cis without trans-displacement (Längst et al., 1999). CHRAC was characterized initially as a five-subunit complex consisting of ISWI, topoisomerase II (topo II) and three polypeptides with mol. wts of 175, 16 and 14 kDa (Varga-Weisz et al., 1997). We recently identified the two smallest proteins, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16, as integral subunits of CHRAC (Corona et al., 2000). These two histone fold proteins interact with each other presumably via a histone-like 'handshake' motif (Arents et al., 1991). Their developmental regulation suggests a specialized role in early embryonic development (Corona et al., 2000). We have now cloned and identified the 175 kDa subunit of CHRAC. This protein is identical to Acf1, which is also a component of the ACF complex. A modified purification protocol for CHRAC and interaction studies confirm our previous notion of a functional complex consisting of ISWI, Acf1, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16. During the course of our studies, however, we also observed that topo II could be separated from CHRAC without affecting the integrity or function of the complex. We recently showed that recombinant ISWI, removed from the context of other CHRAC subunits, was able to induce nucleosome sliding. However, the activity of ISWI differed from that of CHRAC by the directionality of nucleosome movements and by the precise requirements for histone N-termini for successful nucleosome sliding (Längst et al., 1999; Clapier et al., 2001), indicating that the ISWI-associated polypeptides modulate the activity of the remodelling engine. We now demonstrate that this modulating function is due to Acf1. Association of Acf1 with ISWI leads to enhanced nucleosome sliding and endows the recombinant ATPase with nucleosome remodelling properties characteristic of native CHRAC. Results CHRAC-175 is identical to Acf1 To identify the largest subunit of CHRAC, we separated purified CHRAC fractions (Varga-Weisz et al., 1997) by SDS–PAGE and subjected the polypeptide with the apparent molecular mass of 175 kDa to mass spectrometry microsequencing. Peptide LAAVEINRK derived from the analysis was used in a TBLASTN search of the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project database (http://www.fruitfly.org/blast/) and was found in a sequence-tagged site (STS) sequence (embl-AL023453) included in the cosmid collection of the European Mapping Project. PCR primers based on the STS sequence amplified a DNA fragment of predicted 400 bp from both Drosophila genomic DNA and mRNA isolated from 16-h-old embryos. The amplified fragment was then used to screen a pSPORT1 phagemid embryo cDNA library, resulting in the identification of three positive clones, corresponding to overlapping portions of the same genomic locus. Clones D1339 and E1459 together spanned an uninterrupted open reading frame (ORF) of 1476 amino acids defining a protein with a molecular mass of 170.4 kDa. The overlapping sequence between D1339 (containing the putative ATG codon) and E1459 (containing the STOP codon) includes the sequence of the initially identified peptide LAAVEINRK. In an independent experiment, the same 400 bp probe was used to screen a P1 Drosophila high density filter (Genome Systems Inc.). Four independent P1 clones scored positive: DS02272, DS00142, DS01277 and DS03654. Each of them belongs to the same physical contig: Ef1alpha100E, spanning band 100D1–E3 on chromosome 3R. Clone DS02272 also hybridized to a degenerate oligonucleotide designed on the basis of a second peptide (YFIGEEV) identified by mass spectrometry microsequencing. The protein encoded by the ORF was essentially identical to Acf1 (Flybase ID: FBgn0027620). Acf1 associates with ISWI to form ACF, a distinct chromatin remodelling complex in Drosophila (Ito et al., 1999). The seven amino acid substitutions between the two sequences may correspond to sequence polymorphisms (our sequence has the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank accession No. AJ238397). The recent completion of the sequencing of the Drosophila genome provided an additional source of information (Flybase: FBgn0001966): the p175/Acf1 gene appears to be unique within the genome and maps to chromosome 3R. Antisera generated against Acf1 confirmed that the factor is a bona fide subunit of CHRAC (see below). CHRAC is composed of the integral subunits Acf1, ISWI, CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14, but does not contain topoisomerase II We recently identified two small histone fold proteins as subunits of Drosophila CHRAC (Corona et al., 2000) and a human complex containing ISWI, Acf1 but no topo II (Poot et al., 2000). In order to clarify whether topo II was an integral subunit of Drosophila CHRAC and to reach a conclusive molecular definition of CHRAC, we established a novel purification procedure for CHRAC (Figure 1A). Antibodies raised against Acf1 and the other known subunits of CHRAC were used to follow their fractionation on different chromatography resins. In highly purified fractions obtained from the hydroxyapatite column, we observed a perfect co-fractionation of Acf1, ISWI, CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14 (Figure 1B). These co-purified with CHRAC activity as measured by the nucleosome sliding assay (data not shown). However, we found that topo II eluted at a higher potassium phosphate concentration (Figure 1B). To separate CHRAC from topo II, it was critical to elute the hydroxyapatite column with a shallow potassium phosphate gradient [i.e. 20 column volumes (CVs)]. We next estimated the size of CHRAC and topo II by gel filtration. Distinct fractions for CHRAC (HAP fractions 21–24) and topo II (HAP fractions 28–32) were pooled, concentrated and subjected to Superose 6 size exclusion chromatography (Figure 2A and B). Acf1, ISWI, CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14 co-eluted perfectly with an estimated size of ∼660 kDa (Figure 2A), in agreement with the size of human, topo II-less CHRAC (Poot et al., 2000) and our previous CHRAC analysis (Varga-Weisz et al., 1997). The co-fractionation of CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14 with ISWI and Acf1 following an entirely different purification scheme confirmed our recent analysis (Corona et al., 2000). Topo II eluted in a broad peak corresponding to mol. wts of 500–600 kDa (Figure 2B). The predominant active form of Drosophila topo II is a dimer with a theoretical mol. wt of ∼300 kDa (Shelton et al., 1983). In order to clarify whether the increased size estimate obtained by gel filtration was due to interaction of topo II with other factors, we expressed full-length Drosophila topo II in yeast and characterized the purified, active enzyme by gel filtration and multiple angle light scattering (MALS). Topo II migrated on the Superose 6 column as a 600 kDa protein complex (Figure 2C). MALS coupled to a Superdex 200 column revealed a molecular mass of ∼3.4 × 105 g/mol (Figure 2D) consistent with a topo II dimer. The simplest interpretation of these results is that topo II is not an integral subunit of CHRAC but co-fractionates with CHRAC during gel filtration due to its unusual shape. Figure 1.CHRAC consists of ISWI, Acf1, CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14. (A) Purification scheme for the isolation of native CHRAC from Drosophila embryos. (B) Bio-gel HT hydroxyapatite chromatography separates CHRAC from topoisomerase II. CHRAC-containing Superose 6 fractions were pooled and applied onto a hydroxyapatite column. Western blot analyses with the indicated antisera show that co-eluting ISWI, Acf1 and CHRAC-14/16 were separated from topo II. Download figure Download PowerPoint Figure 2.Size exclusion chromatography of CHRAC, native topo II and recombinant topo II. Size standards are depicted by arrows. (A) Pooled CHRAC hydroxyapatite fractions (21–24) were separated on a Superose 6 column. Western blot analyses showed that CHRAC eluted with a mol. wt of ∼600 kDa. (B) Superose 6 chromatography of topo II-containing hydroxyapatite fractions (28–32). (C) Superose 6 chromatography of purified recombinant Drosophila topo II. (D) Analysis of recombinant topo II by MALS coupled to a Superdex S-200 sizing column. Download figure Download PowerPoint To substantiate further the association of Acf1 with CHRAC, we performed immunoprecipitation experiments. Antibodies against ISWI, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-14/16 specifically immunoprecipitated Acf1 from Drosophila nuclear extracts while the pre-immune serum did not (Figure 3). Taken together, our results demonstrate that Acf1 is a bona fide subunit of CHRAC. This leads us to a molecular definition of CHRAC, composed of Acf1, ISWI and the two histone fold proteins CHRAC-16 and CHRAC-14. Figure 3.Immunoprecipitation of the CHRAC components from Drosophila nuclear extract. Protein from crude extract was immunoprecipitated with anti-ISWI, anti-CHRAC-14 and anti-CHRAC-14/16 antibodies as well as pre-immune serum. Aliquots of the immunoprecipitated material were resolved by SDS–PAGE and detected by western blotting using the indicated antisera. Download figure Download PowerPoint Acf1 alters the directionality of ISWI-induced nucleosome sliding A heterodimeric complex of Acf1 and ISWI previously has been termed 'ACF' (Ito et al., 1999). In this context, Acf1 significantly increases the activity of ISWI in chromatin assembly. Since we identified Acf1 also as a component of CHRAC, we wished to evaluate the impact of Acf1 on ISWI-induced nucleosome sliding. We previously observed that the directionality of nucleosome sliding differed depending on whether the reaction was catalysed by ISWI alone or by CHRAC (Längst et al., 1999). Flag-tagged ISWI and Acf1 were expressed from baculovirus vectors in insect cells (Hamiche et al., 1999; Ito et al., 1999), affinity purified (Figure 4) and assayed for nucleosome sliding (Figure 5). In agreement with our previous results, catalytic amounts (2–3 fmol) of ISWI moved a mononucleosome from the centre of a 248 bp rDNA fragment to the fragment end (Figure 5A). No mobility was observed when the end-positioned nucleosome was exposed to ISWI (see Figure 5B). In contrast to the movement generated by ISWI, CHRAC catalyses nucleosome sliding from the end to the centre of the DNA fragment (Längst et al., 1999). Strikingly, CHRAC-type directionality of nucleosome sliding was also obtained if Acf1 was added to ISWI, either after separate expression (data not shown) or by co-expression of both proteins in Sf9 cells. While Acf1 alone was inactive for nucleosome sliding, it boosted ISWI activity by at least an order of magnitude such that 10-fold lower enzyme concentrations (0.3–0.5 fmol) were required for nucleosome mobilization. Most importantly, Acf1 changed the directionality of sliding such that end-positioned nucleosomes moved to central positions (Figure 5B). Figure 4.Purification of recombinant ISWI, Acf1 and ISWI/Acf1. The indicated factors (Flag-ISWI, Acf1-Flag or Flag-ISWI + Acf1) were expressed via a baculovirus system and purified by α-Flag immuno affinity chromatography. Two different concentrations for each protein were resolved by 6% SDS–PAGE and stained with Coomassie blue. Arrows depict the positions of Acf1 and ISWI. Download figure Download PowerPoint Figure 5.Nucleosome sliding by recombinant ISWI/Acf1 (= ACF) and ISWI. (A) Nucleosomes positioned at the centre of the 248 rDNA fragment were incubated with the indicated amounts of affinity-purified Acf1-Flag, ACF or Flag-ISWI. Nucleosomes were then analysed on a native 4.5% polyacrylamide gel. Terminal or central nucleosome positions are indicated to the left. Lane (–) indicates the untreated centre nucleosome. (B) End-positioned nucleosomes were incubated with the indicated amounts of affinity-purified Flag-ISWI, ACF or Acf1-Flag. Nucleosome analysis and figure labelling are described in (A). Download figure Download PowerPoint In order to determine whether Acf1 had an additional effect on the kinetics of nucleosome mobility under those conditions, we performed a time course of nucleosome mobility (Figure 6A). The amounts of enzymes were chosen such that we expected complete mobilization of the nucleosome after 90 min (10-fold less ACF than ISWI). At any given time point throughout the reaction, the ratio of nucleosomes that had been mobilized to those that had not moved was determined. Nucleosome movement in the two reactions proceeded with similar speed, indicating that ACF was about an order of magnitude more efficient in nucleosome mobilization than ISWI alone. This could be explained most readily if Acf1 stimulated the ATPase activity of ISWI. To determine whether this was the case, we compared the enzymes in standard ATPase assays (Figure 6B). ISWI alone showed a robust (7-fold) nucleosome stimulation of ATPase. This response to a nucleosomal structure remained unaltered if Acf1 was added, either after separate expression (Figure 6B, ISWI + Acf1) or through co-expression (Figure 6B, ACF). While Acf1 alone did not show any sign of ATPase activity (Figure 6B, Acf1), it also did not stimulate the ATPase of ISWI significantly (7-fold stimulation over the free DNA level in all cases). This conclusion was reached under a number of different conditions and times, and with different enzyme preparations. Figure 6.Functional comparison of ISWI and ACF. (A) Nucleosome sliding was monitored during a time course of reactions containing either 2 fmol of ACF and end-positioned nucleosome, or 25 fmol of F-ISWI with a centrally positioned nucleosome substrate. The reactions were analysed by native gel electrophoresis as before. Signals corresponding to the moved and unmoved nucleosome fraction were quantified by a PhosphoImager (FujiFilm BAS-1500) and the fraction of moved nucleosomes plotted as a function of time. (B) ATPase assays: 400 fmol each of F-ISWI or ACF were tested for ATPase in the presence of 100 ng of naked DNA (open bars) or 100 ng of nucleosomal DNA reconstituted by salt gradient dialysis (black bars). A low background of hydrolysed ATP in the absence of enzyme was subtracted. The results have been reproduced qualitatively under various circumstances, although the absolute numbers vary as a function of ATP batch, age and enzyme preparation. Download figure Download PowerPoint ACF requires the histone H4 tails for nucleosome mobilization Recently, we found that deletion of the H4 N-termini completely abolished the ability of CHRAC to slide nucleosomes, whereas removal of any other histone tail had only minor effects (Clapier et al., 2001). In contrast, ISWI-induced sliding not only required the histone H4 N-termini (like CHRAC), but was also impaired if any of the other tails were deleted (Clapier et al., 2001). Since Acf1 modulated the directionality of nucleosome sliding to resemble that of CHRAC, we tested the histone tail dependence of ACF-induced nucleosomal sliding. As expected, we found that deletion of the H4 tail completely abolished the remodelling activity of ACF (Figure 7). Removal of any other histone tail, however, had only little influence on the sliding activity of ACF. This result reinforces our notion of a qualitative alteration of the nucleosome remodelling activity of ISWI by Acf1, which points to altered interaction with the nucleosomal substrate. Figure 7.Histone tail requirement for nucleosome mobilization by ACF. Recombinant ACF complex was incubated with end-positioned nucleosomes reconstituted with either wild-type histones (intact) or, alternatively, a histone mixture consisting of three wild-type histones and one tailless variant (Δ) as indicated. The reactions were analysed by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Positions of nucleosomes and free DNA are indicated. Reactions contained 0.1, 0.2, 0.5, 0.75, 1 and 2 fmol of ACF (the 2 fmol sample was omitted in the panel 'intact'). Download figure Download PowerPoint Discussion Molecular definition of CHRAC CHRAC was isolated initially as a biochemical activity containing five proteins (Varga-Weisz et al., 1997). In these preparations, two ATPases were identified that potentially could be involved in a nucleosome remodelling reaction: ISWI and topo II. ISWI later proved to be the catalytic core of CHRAC and related complexes (Corona et al., 1999; Längst et al., 1999). Specific inhibition of topo II had no effect on the remodelling reaction (data not shown; Varga-Weisz et al., 1997), but the remarkable co-purification of topo II and ISWI and their consistent co-immunoprecipitation under various conditions suggested that CHRAC combined the activity of both ATPases. While co-purification of topo II with the human homologue of ISWI, hSNF2, was also observed by those who purified human ISWI complexes (discussed in LeRoy et al., 2000; Poot et al., 2000), other researchers failed to detect topoisomerase in association with ISWI (Bochar et al., 2000; Guschin et al., 2000). To clarify the controversial issue of whether topo II is a bona fide subunit of CHRAC, we purified the complex according to a different scheme and found that hydroxyapatite chromatography separated topo II from ISWI/CHRAC without affecting the gel filtration properties of either of the two entities. MALS demonstrated that a dimer of recombinant topo II with a mass of 340 kDa indeed migrates with an apparent mol. wt of ∼600 kDa, providing a satisfactory explanation for the co-fractionation of topo II with CHRAC on a Superose 6 column. Recently, we identified two small histone fold proteins, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16, as integral components of CHRAC (Corona et al., 2000). We have now discovered that the 175 kDa subunit of CHRAC is identical to Acf1. Acf1 is known to associate with ISWI to form ACF, a factor purified from Drosophila embryo extracts following its activity in the assembly of regularly spaced nucleosomes (Ito et al., 1997). CHRAC therefore differs from ACF by the presence of the two small histone fold factors (Corona et al., 2000). Complexes resembling either CHRAC or ACF have also been identified in human cells (LeRoy et al., 2000; Poot et al., 2000). The relationship between the two entities remains to be established, and will certainly become clearer when the functional impact of the association of CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16 with ACF is resolved. Acf1-like factors are commonly associated with ISWI Acf1 is a member of a growing family of proteins with similar domain architecture (Bochar et al., 2000; Jones et al., 2000; Poot et al., 2000) including WSTF, one of the genes invariantly deleted in William–Beuren syndrome patients (Lu et al., 1998; Peoples et al., 1998). In addition to several other sequence similarities, these factors contain a prominent C-terminal bromodomain and one or two PHD fingers. Acf1-like factors so far have been found exclusively in association with ISWI. Complexes consisting of just ISWI and an Acf1-like factor were purified from Drosophila (Ito et al., 1997), human (Bochar et al., 2000; LeRoy et al., 2000) and yeast cells (Goldmark et al., 2000). One of the ISWI-containing remodelling factors in Xenopus extracts contains an unknown protein (p175) in addition to ISWI and Acf1 (Guschin et al., 2000). CHRAC, defined as a four-subunit complex consisting of ISWI, Acf1, CHRAC-14 and CHRAC-16, has been identified so far in human and fly cells (Corona et al., 2000; Poot et al., 2000; this report). Although ISWI can function as a remodelling ATPase in certain in vitro assays (Corona et al., 1999; Längst et al., 1999), it has never been purified from a native source on its own. These data suggest that ISWI and an Acf1-like factor constitute a functional core module with which other proteins may associate to generate a family of diverse remodelling machines, potentially tailored to specific functions. Functional role of Acf1-like factors Acf1 was first identified as a protein associated with ISWI to form the nucleosome assembly and spacing factor ACF (Ito et al., 1997). While either recombinant ISWI or Acf1 alone was only poorly active in the assembly system of Kadonaga and co-workers, the reconstitution of ACF from the two subunits increased the in vitro nucleosome assembly activity by some 30-fold (Ito et al., 1999). We observed earlier that ISWI, expressed in a bacterial system, could, in principle, function autonomously in various cell-free remodelling assays (Corona et al., 1999; Längst et al., 1999; Clapier et al., 2001). The direct comparison of the activity of factors expressed under similar conditions from baculovirus vectors shows that Acf1 enhances ISWI-induced nucleosome mobility by about an order of magnitude. In addition, the association of Acf1 has a striking qualitative effect as it alters the directionality of nucleosome sliding triggered by ISWI and affects the sensitivity of the ATPase towards deletion of the histone N-termini on the nucleosomal substrate. ISWI and Acf1 approach the nucleosome in a co-ordinated manner, leading to a new quality of interaction, such that Acf1 does not simply enhance the action of ISWI, as could have been concluded from the analysis of Ito et al. (1999) of ACF as a nucleosome assembly factor. Whether Acf1 interacts with DNA directly, effectively hindering the sliding of the nucleosome to the fragment end, remains to be explored. Upon association of ISWI with Acf1, 10-fold lower enzyme concentrations and correspondingly fewer ATP hydrolysis events are required to move a nucleosome as compared with free ISWI alone. It is possible that ACF has a higher affinity for the nucleosomal substrate, due to interaction domains contributed by Acf1 (see below). A decreased off-rate may lead to a higher processivity of the enzyme, converting the energy of ATP hydrolysis more effectively into directional nucleosome sliding. Testing this and alternative hypotheses will require more quantitative measurements of the parameters of the nucleosome sliding reaction. The PHD finger and bromodomain are likely to be involved in Acf1 activity. PHD fingers are protein interaction surfaces found in many chromatin-bound regulators (Pascual et al., 2000). Bromodomains are equally abundant among nuclear regulators. They are a hallmark of the remodelling ATPases of the SWI2/SNF2 type, but are absent in ISWI. Bromodomains are known interactors of acetylated histone H4 N-termini (Jacobson et al., 2000; Owen et al., 2000). Nucleosome remodelling by ISWI critically depends on the integrity of the H4 tail on the nucleosomal substrate (Clapier et al., 2001). It is possible that tandem PHD fingers and a bromodomain form a cooperative interaction unit, as has been suggested recently for the KRAB proteins (Schultz et al., 2001). It will be interesting to see whether A
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