Vigilin is an RNA-binding protein localized to both the cytoplasm and the nucleus and has been previously implicated in heterochromatin formation and chromosome segregation. We demonstrate here that the C-terminal domain of human vigilin binds to the histone methyltransferase SUV39H1 in vivo. This association is independent of RNA and maps to a site on vigilin that is not involved in its interaction with several other known protein partners. Cells that express high levels of the C-terminal fragment display chromosome segregation defects, and ChIP analyses show changes in the status of pericentric β-satellite and rDNA chromatin from heterochromatic to more euchromatic form. Finally, a cell line with inducible expression of the vigilin C-terminal fragment displays inducible alterations in β-satellite chromatin. These and other results lead us to present a new model for vigilin-mediated, RNA-induced gene silencing. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2008 RNA Society.
CITATION STYLE
Zhou, J., Wang, Q., Chen, L. L., & Carmichael, G. G. (2008). On the mechanism of induction of heterochromatin by the RNA-binding protein vigilin. RNA, 14(9), 1773–1781. https://doi.org/10.1261/rna.1036308
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