Abstract
Eukaryotic chromatin is separated into functional domains differentiated by post-translational histone modifications, histone variants and DNA methylation1,2,3,4,5,6. Methylation is associated with repression of transcriptional initiation in plants and animals, and is frequently found in transposable elements. Proper methylation patterns are crucial for eukaryotic development4,5, and aberrant methylation-induced silencing of tumour suppressor genes is a common feature of human cancer7. In contrast to methylation, the histone variant H2A.Z is preferentially deposited by the Swr1 ATPase complex near 5′ ends of genes where it promotes transcriptional competence8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20. How DNA methylation and H2A.Z influence transcription remains largely unknown. Here we show that in the plant Arabidopsis thaliana regions of DNA methylation are quantitatively deficient in H2A.Z. Exclusion of H2A.Z is seen at sites of DNA methylation in the bodies of actively transcribed genes and in methylated transposons. Mutation of the MET1 DNA methyltransferase, which causes both losses and gains of DNA methylation4,5, engenders opposite changes (gains and losses) in H2A.Z deposition, whereas mutation of the PIE1 subunit of the Swr1 complex that deposits H2A.Z17 leads to genome-wide hypermethylation. Our findings indicate that DNA methylation can influence chromatin structure and effect gene silencing by excluding H2A.Z, and that H2A.Z protects genes from DNA methylation.
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Acknowledgements
We thank J. Henikoff and B. Nguyen for help with computational analyses, P. Talbert for assistance with cytology, T. Bryson and A. Morgan for technical support, M. Gehring and B. Staskawicz for the root culture protocol, R. Deal and R. Meagher for H2A.Z antibodies, the FHCRC DNA array facility for carrying out microarray hybridizations, and M. Orozco for transgenic lines. D.C.-D. is supported by an NSF predoctoral fellowship. D.Z. is a Leukemia and Lymphoma Society fellow.
Author Contributions D.Z. and S.H. conceived the study; D.Z. and D.C.-D. performed the experiments; D.Z., T.B., D.C.-D. and S.H. analysed the data; and D.Z. and S.H. wrote the paper.
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Zilberman, D., Coleman-Derr, D., Ballinger, T. et al. Histone H2A.Z and DNA methylation are mutually antagonistic chromatin marks. Nature 456, 125–129 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature07324
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature07324
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