Developmental control of gene copy number by repression of replication initiation and fork progression
- Noa Sher1,
- George W. Bell1,
- Sharon Li1,
- Jared Nordman1,
- Thomas Eng1,
- Matthew L. Eaton2,
- David M. MacAlpine2 and
- Terry L. Orr-Weaver1,3
- 1Whitehead Institute and Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA;
- 2Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA
Abstract
Precise DNA replication is crucial for genome maintenance, yet this process has been inherently difficult to study on a genome-wide level in untransformed differentiated metazoan cells. To determine how metazoan DNA replication can be repressed, we examined regions selectively under-replicated in Drosophila polytene salivary glands, and found they are transcriptionally silent and enriched for the repressive H3K27me3 mark. In the first genome-wide analysis of binding of the origin recognition complex (ORC) in a differentiated metazoan tissue, we find that ORC binding is dramatically reduced within these large domains, suggesting reduced initiation as one mechanism leading to under-replication. Inhibition of replication fork progression by the chromatin protein SUUR is an additional repression mechanism to reduce copy number. Although repressive histone marks are removed when SUUR is mutated and copy number restored, neither transcription nor ORC binding is reinstated. Tethering of the SUUR protein to a specific site is insufficient to block replication, however. These results establish that developmental control of DNA replication, at both the initiation and elongation stages, is a mechanism to change gene copy number during differentiation.
Footnotes
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↵3 Corresponding author.
E-mail weaver{at}wi.mit.edu.
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[Supplemental material is available for this article.]
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Article published online before print. Article, supplemental material, and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.126003.111.
- Received May 7, 2011.
- Accepted October 17, 2011.
- Copyright © 2012 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Freely available online through the Genome Research Open Access option.