A silencing pathway to induce H3-K9 and H4-K20 trimethylation at constitutive heterochromatin (original) (raw)
- Gunnar Schotta1,4,
- Monika Lachner1,4,
- Kavitha Sarma2,
- Anja Ebert3,
- Roopsha Sengupta1,
- Gunter Reuter3,
- Danny Reinberg2, and
- Thomas Jenuwein1,5
- 1Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), The Vienna Biocenter, A-1030 Vienna, Austria; 2Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Division of Nucleic Acids Enzymology, Department of Biochemistry, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA; 3Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Biologicum, 06120 Halle, Germany
Abstract
Histone lysine methylation is a central modification to mark functionally distinct chromatin regions. In particular, H3-K9 trimethylation has emerged as a hallmark of pericentric heterochromatin in mammals. Here we show that H4-K20 trimethylation is also focally enriched at pericentric heterochromatin. Intriguingly, H3-K9 trimethylation by the Suv39h HMTases is required for the induction of H4-K20 trimethylation, although the H4 Lys 20 position is not an intrinsic substrate for these enzymes. By using a candidate approach, we identified Suv4-20h1 and Suv4-20h2 as two novel SET domain HMTases that localize to pericentric heterochromatin and specifically act as nucleosomal H4-K20 trimethylating enzymes. Interaction of the Suv4-20h enzymes with HP1 isoforms suggests a sequential mechanism to establish H3-K9 and H4-K20 trimethylation at pericentric heterochromatin. Heterochromatic H4-K20 trimethylation is evolutionarily conserved, and in Drosophila, the Suv4-20 homolog is a novel PEV modifier to regulate position-effect variegation. Together, our data indicate a function for H4-K20 trimethylation in gene silencing and further suggest H3-K9 and H4-K20 trimethylation as important components of a repressive pathway that can index pericentric heterochromatin.
- Histone code
- histone H4 Lys 20
- mono-, di-, trimethylation
- Suv4-20h HMTases
- heterochromatin
- combinatorial histone methyl marks
Footnotes
Article published online ahead of print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.300704.
Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
↵4 These authors contributed equally to this work.
↵5 Corresponding author. E-MAIL jenuwein{at}imp.univie.ac.at; FAX 43-1-7987153.
- Accepted April 5, 2004.
- Received February 19, 2004.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press