TrxG and PcG Proteins but Not Methylated Histones Remain Associated with DNA through Replication
Author(s) -
Svetlana Petruk,
Yurii Sedkov,
Danika M. Johnston,
Jacob W. Hodgson,
Kathryn L. Black,
Sina K. Kovermann,
Samantha Beck,
Eli Canaani,
Hugh W. Brock,
Alexander Mazo
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2012.06.046
Subject(s) - biology , epigenetics , chromatin , histone , epigenomics , histone code , dna replication , ezh2 , histone h3 , genetics , dna , microbiology and biotechnology , dna methylation , nucleosome , gene , gene expression
Propagation of gene-expression patterns through the cell cycle requires the existence of an epigenetic mark that re-establishes the chromatin architecture of the parental cell in the daughter cells. We devised assays to determine which potential epigenetic marks associate with epigenetic maintenance elements during DNA replication in Drosophila embryos. Histone H3 trimethylated at lysines 4 or 27 is present during transcription but, surprisingly, is replaced by nonmethylated H3 following DNA replication. Methylated H3 is detected on DNA only in nuclei not in S phase. In contrast, the TrxG and PcG proteins Trithorax and Enhancer-of-Zeste, which are H3K4 and H3K27 methylases, and Polycomb continuously associate with their response elements on the newly replicated DNA. We suggest that histone modification enzymes may re-establish the histone code on newly assembled unmethylated histones and thus may act as epigenetic marks.
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