Suppression of inositol pyrophosphate toxicosis and hyper-repression of the fission yeast PHO regulon by loss-of-function mutations in chromatin remodelers Snf22 and Sol1.
Beate SchwerAleksei InnokentevAna M SanchezAngad GargStewart ShumanPublished in: mBio (2024)
Inositol pyrophosphates are signaling molecules that regulate cellular phosphate homeostasis in eukaryal taxa. In fission yeast, where the phosphate regulon (comprising phosphate acquisition genes pho1 , pho84 , and tgp1 ) is repressed under phosphate-replete conditions by lncRNA-mediated transcriptional interference, mutations of inositol pyrophosphatases that increase IP 8 levels derepress the PHO regulon by eliciting precocious termination of lncRNA transcription. Asp1 pyrophosphatase mutations resulting in too much IP 8 are cytotoxic in YES medium owing to overexpression of glycerophosphodiester transporter Tgp1. IP 8 toxicosis is ameliorated by mutations in cleavage/polyadenylation and termination factors, perturbations of the Pol2 CTD code, and mutations in SPX domain proteins that act as inositol pyrophosphate sensors. Here, we show that IP 8 toxicity is alleviated by deletion of snf22 + , the gene encoding the ATPase subunit of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex, by an ATPase-inactivating snf22- ( D996A-E997A ) allele, and by deletion of the gene encoding SWI/SNF subunit Sol1. Deletion of snf22 + hyper-repressed pho1 expression in phosphate-replete cells; suppressed the pho1 derepression elicited by mutations in Pol2 CTD, termination factor Seb1, Asp1 pyrophosphatase, and 14-3-3 protein Rad24 (that favor precocious prt lncRNA termination); and delayed pho1 induction during phosphate starvation. RNA analysis and lack of mutational synergies suggest that Snf22 is not impacting 3'-processing/termination. Using reporter assays, we find that Snf22 is important for the activity of the tgp1 and pho1 promoters, but not for the promoters that drive the synthesis of the PHO -repressive lncRNAs. Transcription profiling of snf22 ∆ and snf22- ( D996A-E997A ) cells identified an additional set of 66 protein-coding genes that were downregulated in both mutants.IMPORTANCERepression of the fission yeast PHO genes tgp1 , pho1 , and pho84 by lncRNA-mediated interference is sensitive to inositol pyrophosphate dynamics. Cytotoxic asp1-STF alleles derepress the PHO genes via the action of IP 8 as an agonist of precocious lncRNA 3'-processing/termination. IP 8 toxicosis is alleviated by mutations of the Pol2 CTD and the 3'-processing/termination machinery that dampen the impact of toxic IP 8 levels on termination. In this study, a forward genetic screen revealed that IP 8 toxicity is suppressed by mutations of the Snf22 and Sol1 subunits of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex. Genetic and biochemical evidence indicates that the SWI/SNF is not affecting 3'-processing/termination or lncRNA promoter activity. Rather, SWI/SNF is critical for firing the PHO mRNA promoters. Our results implicate the ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeling activity of SWI/SNF as necessary to ensure full access of PHO -activating transcription factor Pho7 to its binding sites in the PHO mRNA promoters.
Keyphrases
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- genome wide identification
- gene expression
- long non coding rna
- dna damage
- dna methylation
- long noncoding rna
- oxidative stress
- copy number
- dna binding
- small molecule
- induced apoptosis
- high throughput
- single cell
- poor prognosis
- crispr cas
- cell wall
- dna repair
- endoplasmic reticulum
- low cost
- nucleic acid
- network analysis