Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Hormone activation induces nucleosome positioning in vivo

2000; Springer Nature; Volume: 19; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/emboj/19.5.1023

ISSN

1460-2075

Autores

Sergey Belikov, Birgitta Gelius, Geneviève Almouzni, Örjan Wränge,

Tópico(s)

Epigenetics and DNA Methylation

Resumo

Article1 March 2000free access Hormone activation induces nucleosome positioning in vivo Sergey Belikov Sergey Belikov Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden W.A.Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 117984 Russia Search for more papers by this author Birgitta Gelius Birgitta Gelius Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden Search for more papers by this author Geneviève Almouzni Geneviève Almouzni Dynamique de la Chromatine, UMR 218 CNRS, Institute Curie, FR-75231 Paris, Cedex 05, France Search for more papers by this author Örjan Wrange Corresponding Author Örjan Wrange Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden Search for more papers by this author Sergey Belikov Sergey Belikov Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden W.A.Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 117984 Russia Search for more papers by this author Birgitta Gelius Birgitta Gelius Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden Search for more papers by this author Geneviève Almouzni Geneviève Almouzni Dynamique de la Chromatine, UMR 218 CNRS, Institute Curie, FR-75231 Paris, Cedex 05, France Search for more papers by this author Örjan Wrange Corresponding Author Örjan Wrange Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden Search for more papers by this author Author Information Sergey Belikov1,2, Birgitta Gelius1, Geneviève Almouzni3 and Örjan Wrange 1 1Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17177 Stockholm, Sweden 2W.A.Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 117984 Russia 3Dynamique de la Chromatine, UMR 218 CNRS, Institute Curie, FR-75231 Paris, Cedex 05, France *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2000)19:1023-1033https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/19.5.1023 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info The mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter is induced by glucocorticoid hormone. A robust hormone- and receptor-dependent activation could be reproduced in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The homogeneous response in this system allowed a detailed analysis of the transition in chromatin structure following hormone activation. This revealed two novel findings: hormone activation led to the establishment of specific translational positioning of nucleosomes despite the lack of significant positioning in the inactive state; and, in the active promoter, a subnucleosomal particle encompassing the glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-binding region was detected. The presence of only a single GR-binding site was sufficient for the structural transition to occur. Both basal promoter elements and ongoing transcription were dispensable. These data reveal a stepwise process in the transcriptional activation by glucocorticoid hormone. Introduction All eukaryotic cells have their DNA packaged into a protein–DNA structure, chromatin. The basic subunit of chromatin is the nucleosome (Luger et al., 1997), which can be located at specific DNA segments in the eukaryotic genome (Simpson, 1991). Translational nucleosome positioning depends on local variations in DNA curvature, helical periodicity and/or boundary effects. When present in gene regulatory regions, nucleosomes can act as a barrier to the process of transcriptional initiation (Han et al., 1988; Perlmann and Wrange, 1991) in a gene-specific manner (Wyrick et al., 1999). This repressive effect of chromatin is modulated at specific loci by the rapid remodeling of the chromatin structure during gene activation. One well studied example of transcription activation-dependent chromatin remodeling is the mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) promoter. This promoter is strongly induced by glucocorticoid hormone. Activation is associated with the appearance of a DNase I-hypersensitive site (Zaret and Yamamoto, 1984; Truss et al., 1995) over the glucocorticoid response element (GRE). Micrococcal nuclease (MNase) and methidiumpropyl-EDTA·iron(II) complex (MPE) digestion of the MMTV long terminal repeat (LTR) in situ initially revealed that this regulatory DNA segment harbors six translationally positioned nucleosomes and that nucleosome B, positioned over the GRE, undergoes an activation-dependent remodeling (Richard-Foy and Hager, 1987). Further mapping experiments at high resolution showed that nucleosomes, although not precisely positioned, displayed a clustered distribution (Fragoso et al., 1995). Interestingly, despite the drastic increase in transcription activation and the occurrence of a glucocorticoid-dependent DNase I-hypersensitive site (see above), careful in vivo analyses have failed to detect any hormone-induced changes at the level of nucleosomal organization for the MMTV LTR stably incorporated in tissue culture cells (Fragoso et al., 1995; Truss et al., 1995). In these in vivo studies, the positioned nucleosome ladder seemed to remain unchanged independent of the transcriptional status of the promoter. In vivo footprinting experiments showed that basal transcription factors, such as nuclear factor 1 (NF1) and TATA-box binding factor (TFIID), do not interact with their cognate target sites in the MMTV promoter unless a hormone-induced chromatin remodeling event has taken place (Cordingley et al., 1987; Archer et al., 1992; Truss et al., 1995). This suggested a role for chromatin in keeping the inactive promoter in a closed configuration (Han et al., 1988; Perlmann and Wrange, 1991). As a direct implication, chromatin rearrangements should occur to permit the transition towards an active state. The discovery that transcription coactivators had histone acetyltransferase, histone deacetylase and nucleosome remodeling properties, as reviewed in Kingston and Narlikar (1999), further provided the possible molecular players in this process. However, structural aspects of in vivo chromatin remodeling during gene activation remain obscure. Xenopus oocytes represent an attractive in vivo system to follow these issues. Estrogen- (Theulaz et al., 1988), glucocorticoid- (Perlmann and Wrange, 1991) and thyroid hormone-dependent (Wong et al., 1998) gene regulation occur in Xenopus oocytes merely by expression of the appropriate receptor protein(s) and by injection of a DNA reporter plasmid. Here, we revealed a robust glucocorticoid-dependent and transcription-coupled chromatin remodeling over the GRE of the MMTV LTR. This remodeling was homogeneous and, in contrast to previous results in tissue culture cells, it involved major rearrangements at the nucleosome level. The hormone-induced chromatin remodeling of the MMTV promoter resulted in induction of translational positioning of initially randomly organized nucleosomes. This was independent of basal promoter elements and of ongoing transcription, but required a high affinity glucocorticoid receptor (GR)-binding site, highlighting the distinct steps involved in hormone activation in vivo. We conclude that nucleosome positioning in the MMTV LTR is not functionally required to achieve hormone-dependent induction but is a consequence of the induction event. Results Chromatin assembly and glucocorticoid hormone induction in Xenopus oocytes The MMTV LTR was fused to the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSVTK) gene coding sequence (Buetti and Kuhnel, 1986) and propagated in the M13 filamentous phage (Figure 1A). It was used for intranuclear Xenopus oocyte injections in single-stranded (ss) form. This results in replication-coupled chromatin assembly of the injected ssDNA (Almouzni and Wolffe, 1993), which leads to formation of naturally spaced chromatin. This can be monitored after MNase digestion by the appearance of DNA fragments whose lengths are multiples of the size corresponding to a nucleosome repeat length (Figure 2B). Figure 1.Reconstitution of glucocorticoid regulation in Xenopus oocytes. (A) The reporter DNA construct, the pMTV:M13 coding vector with the primer used for primer extension analysis of the SacI in situ accessibility assay (solid black arrow) and the restriction enzyme cleavage sites that are referred to in the text. White boxes, GRE hexanucleotide elements; black box, NF1 site; light gray box, OCT 1 site; and dark gray box, TATA-box sequence. (B) GR expression in oocytes. Western blot of SDS–PAGE: lane 1, GR prepared from rat liver (Perlmann and Wrange, 1988); lanes 2 and 3, one Xenopus oocyte equivalent was analyzed 24 h after injection of 5 ng of pSTC GR 3-795 expression vector; lane 4, one oocyte equivalent injected with 5 ng of in vitro transcribed GR RNA 24 h before analysis. Hormone (TA, 1 μM) was added as indicated. (C) Hormone-dependent MMTV transcription in Xenopus oocytes. Transcription analysis by S1 nuclease protection of MMTV and the AdML promoter. Oocytes in groups of five were injected with 1 ng of pMTV:M13 coding vector ssDNA and 0.25 ng of pAdML reference and either 5 ng of GR expression vector (pSTC GR 3-795) (lanes 3 and 4) or 5 ng of in vitro transcribed GR RNA (lanes 5–7). After 24 h, hormone (TA, 1 μM) was added to oocyte culture media and oocytes were harvested for RNA analysis at the time indicated. Download figure Download PowerPoint Figure 2.Chromatin structure of the MMTV promoter. (A) Hormone-dependent DNase I-hypersensitive sites are located in the MMTV LTR. Groups of 12 oocytes were injected with 1 ng of pMTV:M13 coding ssDNA, 5 ng of dsDNA for pSTC GR 3-795 and 0.25 ng for pAdML reference (lanes 1–8). After overnight incubation, hormone was added (TA; 1 μM) (lanes 1–4) or not added (lanes 5–8) and oocytes were harvested after 24 h for the DNase I hypersensitivity assay. Lane 9, internal molecular weight marker showing the position of the SacI restriction enzyme cut. Lane 10, naked dsMMTV promoter DNA digested with DNase I. (B) MNase in situ digestion shows hormone-dependent disruption of the canonical nucleosome structure in the vicinity of GRE elements. Groups of 10 oocytes were injected. The next day, hormone (TA; 1 μM) was added as indicated and oocytes were harvested after 24 h for MNase digestion. DNA was resolved in an agarose gel, transferred and hybridized with a labeled MMTV promoter probe encompassing region −192/−100, and then washed and rehybridized with an M13 vector probe. Lane 1, internal DNA marker; lane 2, naked dsMMTV promoter DNA digested with MNase. The arrow shows a subnucleosomal particle ∼120 bp DNA fragment revealed only after hybridization with specific probe. Download figure Download PowerPoint GR protein is required to elicit a hormone response in Xenopus oocytes (Perlmann and Wrange, 1991). Full-length GR protein was provided either by nuclear injection of a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter-driven rat GR cDNA expression vector (pSTC GR 3-795), or by cytoplasmic injection of in vitro synthesized rat GR RNA. The presence of full-length GR protein was verified by immunoblotting (Figure 1B). The accumulation of the MMTV-specific mRNA was assayed by S1 nuclease protection analysis. The MMTV promoter was virtually silent in the absence of hormone (Figure 1C). In contrast, a strong induction was observed after addition of 1 × 10−6 M synthetic glucocorticoid hormone triamcinolone acetonide (TA) to the oocyte culture medium (Figure 1C). This MMTV promoter-driven transcription was already detectable after 2 h (data not shown). Xenopus oocytes translate injected RNA efficiently (Colman, 1984). The injection of in vitro transcribed GR RNA gave rise to a stronger transcriptional response than that obtained using the GR expression vector strategy (compare lanes 4 and 7 in Figure 1C). As a consequence, GR was usually provided by injection of GR RNA in subsequent experiments. Glucocorticoid-induced chromatin remodeling in the MMTV LTR To follow possible chromatin changes upon hormone induction, Xenopus oocytes were injected with ssMMTV reporter DNA and GR expression vector and incubated with TA (1 μM) for 24 h. The oocytes were then homogenized and digested with increasing amounts of DNase I. Digestion products were analyzed by an indirect end-labeling assay (Wu, 1989). These experiments revealed several glucocorticoid-dependent DNase I-hypersensitive segments within the MMTV LTR. The strongest DNase I hypersensitivity was distributed around position −200/−100, which includes the MMTV GRE, −185/−79 (compare Figure 2A, lane 4, labeled with a double circle, with lane 8 non-hormone-treated oocytes, and the location of the SacI restriction site at −108, lane 9). There were additional hormone-dependent DNase I-hypersensitive regions with a lower intensity further upstream within the MMTV LTR. These were distributed around three positions, −400, −550 and −650 (Figure 2A, lane 4, open circles). The DNase I hypersensitivity at the −200/−100 position, however, was always the most prominent, and the extent of DNase I hypersensitivity correlated with the extent of MMTV transcription, as measured by S1 nuclease analysis (data not shown). MNase digestion was used to examine in more detail the effects of hormone activation on chromatin structure in the vicinity of the GRE (−185/−79) (Payvar et al., 1983; Buetti and Kuhnel, 1986). Injected oocytes were homogenized and digested with MNase. Isolated DNA was resolved on an agarose gel, blotted and probed with a short MMTV promoter fragment −192/−100, covering the strongest DNase I-hypersensitive area. The substantial alteration of the canonical MNase ladder indicated that hormone activation leads to drastically increased MNase cutting of the DNA in the vicinity of the GRE region (Figure 2B left, compare lanes 3–5 with 6–8). Unexpectedly, the mononucleosome fraction at 146–185 bp, which was present in the inactive promoter, was replaced by an unusual subnucleosomal particle protecting a DNA fragment of ∼120 ± 10 bp, in the active promoter (Figure 2B, left, compare lane 5 with lane 6). The relative resistance of this subnucleosomal particle to MNase digestion and its discrete migration on the agarose gel suggest that it represents a defined DNA–protein complex. Importantly, the signal corresponding to this subnucleosomal particle reflects the fact that chromatin remodeling involves the vast majority of the MMTV DNA copies. Reprobing the filter of the MNase in situ digested chromatin with M13 vector DNA as probe (Figure 2B, right) showed that the hormone-induced subnucleosomal particle was not present in the vector DNA (compare lanes 6–8 in the left and right panels). There is, however, a slight but clearly detectable hormone-dependent increase in MNase digestion in the vector DNA (Figure 2B, right, compare lanes 3–5 with lanes 6–8). We attribute this to chromatin 'domain' effects of the strong transcriptional response. We conclude that transcription activation of the MMTV promoter results in (i) increased accessibility of DNA in the vicinity of the GRE segment; (ii) reorganization of the DNA harboring the GRE into a subnucleosomal protein–DNA complex that protects ∼120 ± 10 bp of DNA; and (iii) virtually all copies of the MMTV template undergoing a similar nucleosome remodeling event in the vicinity of the GRE region. Chromatin remodeling can be followed by in situ digestion of DNA with an appropriate restriction enzyme that cuts within the remodeled chromatin region (Archer et al., 1992; Truss et al., 1995; Fragoso et al., 1998). We used the SacI restriction enzyme, which cuts the MMTV promoter at position −108 within the GRE segment. For quantitation, we carried out a primer extension analysis with a primer annealing to the DNA strand that is synthesized in the oocyte after ssDNA injection. In this way, molecules assembled into chromatin are specifically revealed. A distinct increase in SacI cutting 1 h after hormone addition was observed and it reached a plateau after 3–6 h (Figure 3A). In addition, a significant stimulation of both chromatin remodeling (Figure 3B) and MMTV transcription (Figure 3C) was detected at a hormone concentration of 10 nM. This illustrates the parallel between chromatin remodeling and accumulation of MMTV RNA. Both hormone-dependent SacI cutting and MMTV transcription were dependent on the presence of GR, which was provided here by GR RNA injection (see inset right part of Figure 3B and C for oocytes not injected with GR RNA). We conclude that glucocorticoid hormone-induced chromatin remodeling (quantified by a SacI in situ cutting assay) and transcription are closely correlated in the MMTV promoter. Figure 3.Evaluation of the effect of time and hormone concentration on hormone-induced chromatin remodeling. (A) Oocytes were injected with 10 ng of GR RNA and 1 ng of ssDNA pMTV:M13 coding strand, and 0.25 ng of pAdML for reference. After overnight incubation, oocytes were divided into 12 groups of five oocytes each; 1 μM TA was added at various times. Oocytes were homogenized and two-thirds taken for SacI in situ accessibility assay and one-third for RNA analysis (not shown). White diamonds signify each individual analysis as quantified by PhosophorImager, and black diamonds the mean value for each double sample. (B) Oocytes were injected with DNA and GR RNA (+GR-RNA) or with DNA only (−GR-RNA) and the next day divided into 16 groups with six oocytes in each and treated with the indicated concentrations of hormone (TA) for 9 h and then homogenized. Two-thirds was taken for SacI and one-third for RNA analysis. Symbols as in (A). Log [TA] is given on the abscissa. (C) Quantitaion of MMTV RNA relative to AdML RNA of the experiment described in (B) using S1 nuclease protection assay and PhosphorImager analysis, arbitrary units (A.U.). Symbols as in (A). Download figure Download PowerPoint Hormone activation induces translational nucleosome positioning in the MMTV LTR The presence of many sequence-specific MNase cut sites in the MMTV LTR (Richard-Foy and Hager, 1987) made the use of this enzyme inappropriate to determine nucleosome positioning over these sequences. Thus, we used the chemical nuclease MPE, which has a strong preference for internucleosomal regions and that, due to its small size, shows almost no sequence specificity in DNA cleavage (Richard-Foy and Hager, 1987; Truss et al., 1995). Figure 4A and B shows the MPE cleavage pattern of the MMTV promoter. Surprisingly, we observed no obvious nucleosomal pattern in the inactive MMTV promoter (Figure 4A and B, lanes 2 and 3). After hormone-induced transcription activation, however, a distinct cleavage pattern was seen, suggesting a strong nucleosome positioning over the entire MMTV LTR (compare lanes 2 and 3 with lanes 4 and 5 in Figure 4A and B). The nucleosome positioning revealed here by MPE digestion experiments in hormone-treated Xenopus oocytes coincides with that shown previously for the MMTV promoter stably incorporated into bovine papilloma virus (BPV)-based episomal vector constructs in tissue culture cells (Richard-Foy and Hager, 1987; Truss et al., 1995). In agreement with these results, our MPE cleavage pattern suggests that at least six nucleosomes are positioned over the MMTV LTR. Our interpretation of this MPE-induced pattern with respect to nucleosome positioning is shown (Figure 4A and B, diagram on the right). We have termed these positioned nucleosomes A–F following the previously used nomenclature (Richard-Foy and Hager, 1987). Contrary to previous findings, however, we did not observe any significant translational nucleosome positioning in the inactive MMTV promoter. Figure 4.Hormone-induced nucleosome positioning analyzed by MPE and MNase digestion in situ. (A and B) Transcriptional activation leads to establishment of nucleosome positioning along the MMTV promoter. Injected oocytes were analyzed after 24 h of hormone treatment. MPE digestion was performed for 3 min (lanes 2 and 4) and 10 min (lanes 3 and 5). Isolated DNA was digested with SalI and EcoRV, resolved on agarose, blotted and hybridized first with a random-primed labeled fragment adjacent to the EcoRV site (EcoRV–SacI fragment in A) and then stripped and reprobed with SalI–RsaI (B). Lanes 1 and 7, internal molecular weight markers (see map to the right); lanes 2–5, MPE digestion of injected oocytes, treated (lanes 4 and 5) and not treated (lanes 2 and 3) with hormone; lane 6, naked dsMMTV promoter DNA digested with MPE. To the right in (A) and (B) is a schematic summary of MPE cuts along the MMTV LTR with putative nucleosome positions. (C) Mapping of dinucleosome borders suggests that nucleosomes are translationally positioned along the MMTV promoter only after activation of transcription. Groups of 10 oocytes were hormone treated as in (A) and (B) and MNase digested as in Figure 2B (lanes 3 and 8). DNA was isolated and resolved in a 4% NuSieve GTG agarose gel together with size markers. The band corresponding to dinucleosome DNA (360–370 bp in length) was excised from the gel, DNA was eluted and analyzed as a control (lanes 1 and 4) or digested either with HinfI (lanes 2 and 5) or RsaI (lanes 3 and 6). DNA was resolved in a 1% SeaKem GTG + 2.5% NuSieve GTG agarose gel, blotted and hybridized with a random-primed probe encompassing region −415/−100. Black dots outline the DNA bands revealed by hybridization. (D) Chromatin organization of the MMTV promoter as revealed by MNase and MPE mapping. A magnified section of lanes 3 and 4 in (A) is shown together with a schematic presentation of the MMTV LTR and the restriction enzyme cleavage sites. All symbols are as in Figure 1A. The positions of the nucleosomes (on the right) are based on the results in (A–C). The co-localizations of MPE cuts with internucleosome linkers and/or factor-binding sites are indicated by arrows. Download figure Download PowerPoint To determine to what extent the observed MPE cleavage pattern was caused by nucleosome positioning, we used an alternative strategy to map the borders of the putative dinucleosome that covers the −425/−60 segment of the MMTV promoter. This was achieved by isolating dinucleosomal DNA (360–370 bp) from an agarose gel after MNase digestion and determining its borders by restriction enzyme cutting. We reasoned that the agarose gel size selection would reduce the influence of any local sequence specificity of MNase cutting. Oocytes were processed for MNase digestion. Dinucleosomal DNA was isolated and cleaved with either HinfI or RsaI restriction enzymes (Figure 4D; the diagram on the right side displays the locations of restriction sites). The resulting DNA samples were resolved in a 3.5% agarose gel, blotted and hybridized with an α-32P-labeled MMTV promoter probe that encompassed the −415/−100 segment of MMTV DNA. The hormone-activated MMTV promoter cleavage with HinfI resulted in conversion of the 360–370 bp dinucleosome DNA fragment into a discrete 340 bp fragment, while cleavage with RsaI generated distinct bands of 310 and 320 bp (Figure 4C, lanes 5 and 6). In contrast, digestion of the dinucleosomal DNA from the inactive MMTV promoter (not treated with hormone) with either HinfI or RsaI resulted in several bands ranging from 240 to 370 bp in size (Figure 4C, lanes 2 and 3). This result is in agreement with the MPE data, and the results taken together strongly suggest that the hormone-dependent activation of the MMTV promoter induces a precise nucleosome positioning of initially randomly organized nucleosomes. The additional MPE cut sites, which do not coincide with the location of the nucleosome linkers, could possibly reflect transactivating factors binding to DNA (Figure 4D, e.g. the −180 cut site, which coincides with a strong GR-binding site). These cut sites are clustered within and proximal to the nucleosome B segment where most transactive factors bind. Overall, the nucleosome B segment displays hormone-dependent hypercutting. This is in contrast to the nucleosome C segment, which shows hormone-induced MPE protection, probably reflecting translational positioning and the relative lack of factor binding in this region (Figure 4A, B and D). Hormone-induced nucleosome positioning depends on the presence of GR-binding site(s) but not on OCT1, NF1 or TATA-box elements To evaluate the influence of different promoter elements and their cognate transactivating factors on hormone-dependent chromatin remodeling, we created three MMTV LTR deletion mutants. These mutants and the wild type are represented in Figure 5A. Their hormone-dependent transcriptional activity was 10%, 1% and non-detectable for the Δ−60/−10, Δ−124/−10 and Δ−181/−10 mutants, respectively, relative to the wild type (data not shown). None of the mutants displayed constitutive MMTV expression. Figure 5.Nucleosome remodeling and establishment of nucleosome positioning are dependent on GR binding but not on other basal promotor elements. (A) Maps of MMTV deletion mutants. Names of mutants signify the base pairs that were deleted relative to the transcription initiation start (+1). The strong GRE site at position −185/−171 in the wild type and the corresponding site in Δ−60/−10 and Δ−124/−10 mutants are underlined. Hormone-dependent transcriptional efficiency relative to wild type, as measured by S1 nuclease protection, is given on the right. (B) Nucleosome remodeling in the vicinity of the GRE elements in wild type (lanes 1–4) and Δ−60/−10 mutant (lanes 5–8) as revealed by SacI restriction enzyme accessibility assay. Groups of five oocytes were subjected to the SacI restriction enzyme accessibility assay. Arrows show specific bands generated by SacI and HinfI. The diagram below shows SacI cutting as a percentage of total DNA. (C) MPE analysis. See Figure 4A legend for details. Lane 1, internal molecular weight marker, showing the positions of HinfI and SacI restriction enzyme cuts. Lanes 2–17, wild-type or mutant ssDNA injected as indicated. Lane 18, naked dsMMTV promoter DNA digested with MPE. Solid black lines mark the position of the strong GRE elements at −185/−171 in the wild type and in Δ−60/−10 and Δ−124/−10 mutants. Open circles connected with a black line mark the hormone-induced positioning of nucleosomes C and B (from top to bottom). Download figure Download PowerPoint We analyzed the MMTV chromatin structure of the Δ−60/−10 mutant using two assays: MNase digestion and SacI in situ cutting. In the first assay, a similar hormone-dependent increase in MNase cutting was revealed in both the mutant and wild-type promoter (not shown). The second assay further confirmed that these two promoters could respond to the hormone in a similar way at the structural level. The SacI cutting profiles were superimposable (Figure 5B). MPE digestion experiments showed strong hormone-dependent nucleosome positioning along the MMTV LTR, and hormone-dependent hypercutting, indicating chromatin remodeling, around the GRE segment within the nucleosome B region in the wild-type MMTV promoter as well as in the Δ−60/−10 and Δ−124/−10 mutants (Figure 5C). As observed earlier (Figure 4A and B), the nucleosome C region displayed as a hormone-dependent, MPE-protected region in the wild type and in these two deletion mutants (Figure 5C). Conversely, the nucleosome C region was not protected in the Δ−181/−10 mutant where all GR-binding sites had been deleted. In this mutant, 67% of the wild-type −240/−60 nucleosome B segment has been deleted; however, the −425/−240 nucleosome C region as defined above remains intact. This demonstrates that positioning of nucleosome C depends on the more proximal region of the promoter, which is deleted in the Δ−181/−10 mutant and that contains a strong GR-binding site(s) (Payvar et al., 1983). Therefore, a high affinity GR-binding site(s) seems to be necessary and sufficient for the establishment of chromatin remodeling and nucleosome positioning in the proximal part of the MMTV LTR. Since only 1% of transcriptional activity remained in the Δ−124/−10 mutant, while a significant level of chromatin remodeling and distinct nucleosome positioning was detected, these experiments further suggest that chromatin remodeling can be uncoupled from transcription. Chromatin remodeling does not depend on ongoing transcription To achieve a complete transcriptional arrest, we injected α-amanitin, a toxin known for its ability to arrest RNA polymerase II-driven transcription. The toxin was co-injected with ssMMTV DNA and AdML reference DNA. S1 nuclease protection showed that transcription from both the MMTV and the AdML promoter was abolished by α-amanitin at a final intracellular concentration of ∼0.5 μg/ml (Figure 6A, lanes 5–8). However, hormone-dependent chromatin remodeling of the MMTV promoter occurred independently of transcription as revealed by (i) MNase (Figure 6B, compare lanes 1–3 and 4–6 with lanes 7–9 and 10–12), (ii) SacI restriction enzyme accessibility assay (Figure 6C, compare lanes 1, 2 and 3, 4 with lanes 5, 6 and 7, 8), and (iii) MPE footprinting (Figure 6D, compare lanes 2, 3 and 4, 5 with lanes 6, 7 and 8, 9). Hormone-ac

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