Objective: In past work in budding yeast, we identified a nucleosomal region required for proper interactions between the histone chaperone complex yFACT and transcribed genes. Specific histone mutations within this region cause a shift in yFACT occupancy towards the 3' end of genes, a defect that we have attributed to impaired yFACT dissociation from DNA following transcription. In this work we wished to assess the contributions of DNA sequences at the 3' end of genes in promoting yFACT dissociation upon transcription termination.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious work in Saccharomyces cerevisiae identified three residues located in close proximity to each other on the side of the nucleosome whose integrity is required for proper association of the Spt16 component of the FACT complex across transcribed genes. In an effort to gain further insights into the parameters that control Spt16 interactions with genes in vivo, we tested the effects of additional histone mutants on Spt16 occupancy across two constitutively transcribed genes. These studies revealed that mutations in several charged residues in the vicinity of the three residues originally identified as important for Spt16-gene interactions also significantly perturb normal association of Spt16 across genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a PCR- and homologous recombination-based system for generating targeted mutations in histone genes in budding yeast cells. The resulting mutant alleles reside at their endogenous genomic sites and no exogenous DNA sequences are left in the genome following the procedure. Since in haploid yeast cells each of the four core histone proteins is encoded by two non-allelic genes with highly homologous open reading frames (ORFs), targeting mutagenesis specifically to one of two genes encoding a particular histone protein can be problematic.
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