Project Details
Description
DESCRIPTION: In addition to gene specific mechanisms of regulation, gene
expression is known to be modulated by more global changes in chromsomal
structure as evidenced by such phenomenon as position effect variegation,
imprinting, and silencing. Silencing of telomeric gene expression and
of the HML and HMR mating type loci in S. cerevisiae represents one of
the best defined systems in which this phenomenon has been studied.
Work from several laboratories has resulted in the identification of a
number of the critical components of this system, including RAP1,
SIR1-4, RIF1, and histones H3 and H4. The cis acting sequences at the
E mating type silencer are the A, E, and B domains. These bind
different trans-acting factors: the ORC replication complex, RAP1 a
protein which has been identified as a context dependent repressor or
activator, and ABF (ARS binding factor), respectively. Silencing
requires two of three of these domains and the aforementioned transacting
factors. Of the identified factors, RAP1 is the only one with DNA
binding activity. It has been shown to interact with SIR3 and its role
is presumed to involve docking other proteins to the DNA. The Shore lab
recently showed that SIR1 if targeted to the DNA by a heterologous
fusion domain bypassed the requirement for RAP1. Silencing propagated
inward from the telomeres and requires the same factors with the
exception of SIR1 and is less stable. This grant is highly focused on
defining the initiating signals for silencing and on understanding the
interactions among the requisite protein factors. There are three
specific aims: 1) Characterization of the protein-protein interactions
between RAP1 and SIR3 and SIR4; 2) studying the interactions between
pairs of SIR proteins in order to identify functional domains involved
in initiation and propagation of repressed chromatin; and 3) definition
of the molecular role of SIR1 in the establishment of silencing at HM
loci.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 4/1/88 → 12/31/97 |
Funding
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Genetics
- Molecular Biology
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