Trans-silencing by P elements inserted in subtelomeric heterochromatin involves the drosophila Polycomb group gene, Enhancer of zeste

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Abstract

Drosophila P-element transposition is regulated by a maternally inherited state known as P cytotype. An important aspect of P cytotype is transcriptional repression of the P-element promoter. P cytotype can also repress non-P-element promoters within P-element ends, suggesting that P cytotype repression might involve chromatin-based transcriptional silencing. To learn more about the role of chromatin in P cytotype repression, we have been studying the P strain Lk-P(1A). This strain contains two full-length P elements inserted in the heterochromatic telomere-associated sequences (TAS elements) at cytological location 1A. Mutations in the Polycomb group gene (Pc-G gene), Enhancer of zeste (E(z)), whose protein product binds at 1A, resulted in a loss of Lk-P(1A) cytotype control. E(z) mutations also affected the trans-silencing of heterologous promoters between P-element termini by P- element transgenes inserted in the TAS repeats. These data suggest that pairing interactions between P elements, resulting in exchange of chromatin structures, may be a mechanism for controlling the expression and activity of P elements.

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Roche, S. E., & Rio, D. C. (1998). Trans-silencing by P elements inserted in subtelomeric heterochromatin involves the drosophila Polycomb group gene, Enhancer of zeste. Genetics, 149(4), 1839–1855. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/149.4.1839

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