Barrier-to-Autointegration Factor influences specific histone modifications

R Montes de Oca, PR Andreassen, KL Wilson - Nucleus, 2011 - Taylor & Francis
R Montes de Oca, PR Andreassen, KL Wilson
Nucleus, 2011Taylor & Francis
Defects in the nuclear envelope or nuclear 'lamina'networks cause disease and can perturb
histone posttranslational (epigenetic) regulation. Barrier-to-Autointegration Factor (BAF) is
an essential but enigmatic lamina component that binds lamins, LEM-domain proteins, DNA
and histone H3 directly. We report that BAF copurified with nuclease-digested
mononucleosomes and associated with modified histones in vivo. BAF overexpression
significantly reduced global histone H3 acetylation by 18%. In cells that stably …
Defects in the nuclear envelope or nuclear ‘lamina’ networks cause disease and can perturb histone posttranslational (epigenetic) regulation. Barrier-to-Autointegration Factor (BAF) is an essential but enigmatic lamina component that binds lamins, LEM-domain proteins, DNA and histone H3 directly. We report that BAF copurified with nuclease-digested mononucleosomes and associated with modified histones in vivo. BAF overexpression significantly reduced global histone H3 acetylation by 18%. In cells that stably overexpressed BAF 3-fold, silencing mark H3-K27-Me1/3 and active marks H4-K16-Ac and H4-Ac5 decreased significantly. Significant increases were also seen for silencing mark H3-K9-Me3, active marks H3-K4-Me2, H3-K9/K14-Ac and H4-K5-Ac and a mark (H3-K79-Me2) associated with both active and silent chromatin. Other increases (H3-S10-P, H3-S28-P and silencing mark H3-K9-Me2) did not reach statistical significance. BAF overexpression also significantly influenced cell cycle distribution. Moreover, BAF associated in vivo with SET/I2PP2A (protein phosphatase 2A inhibitor; blocks H3 dephosphorylation) and G9a (H3-K9 methyltransferase), but showed no detectable association with HDAC1 or HATs. These findings reveal BAF as a novel epigenetic regulator and are discussed in relation to BAF deficiency phenotypes, which include a hereditary progeria syndrome and loss of pluripotency in embryonic stem cells.
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