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Mol Gen Genet (1993) 237 :449~459 © Springer-Verlag 1993 Molecular and genetic characterization of SPT4, a gene important for transcription initiation in Saccharom yces cerevisiae Elizabeth A. Malone*, Jan S. Fassler**, and Fred Winston* Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA Summary. Mutations in the SPT4 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were isolated as suppressors of g insertion mutations that interfere with adjacent gene transcription. Recent genetic evidence indicates that the SPT4 protein functions with two other proteins, SPT5 and SPT6, in some aspect of transcription initiation. In this work we have characterized the SPT4 gene and we demonstrate that spt4 mutations, like spt5 and spt6 mutations, cause changes in transcription. Using the cloned SPT4 gene, spt4 null mutations were constructed; in contrast to spt5 and spt6 null mutants, which are inviable, spt4 null mutants are viable and have an Spt- phenotype. The DNA sequence of the SPT4 gene predicts a protein product of 102 amino acids that contains four cysteine residues positioned similarly to those of zinc binding proteins. Mutational analysis suggests that at least some of these cysteines are essential for SPT4 function. Genetic mapping showed that SPT4 is a previously unidentified gene that maps to chromosome VII, between ADE6 and CL Y8. Key words: Saccharomyces cerevisiae - Transcription spt mutants Introduction The process of mRNA transcription initiation in eukaryotes involves the interaction of a large number of general and specific transcription factors with a chromatin template (for recent reviews see Sawadogo and Sentenac 1990; Grunstein 1990; Pugh and Tjian 1992). These factors include RNA polymerase II, several general factors required for transcription in vitro, and activating and repressing proteins involved in transcriptional regu* Present address: Department of Genetics, SK-50, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA ** Present address: Department of Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA Correspondence to: F. Winston lation. Some proteins that are essential or important for proper transcription initiation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae have been identified by isolation of suppressors of transposable element insertion mutations that disrupt expression of adjacent genes (Winston et al. 1984a, 1987; Fassler and Winston 1988; Natsoulis et al. 1991). Mutations in 17 S P T genes (SPT = suppressor of Ty) suppress such insertion mutations and many of these spt mutations have additional effects on gene expression (for examples see Neigeborn et al. 1987; Hirschhorn and Winston 1988; Eisenmann et al. 1989; Fassler and Winston 1989; Rowley et al. 1991). Genetic analysis of one insertion mutation, his4-9126, indicated that competition exists between the tandemly arranged 6 TATA and HIS4 TATA sequences (Hirschman et al. 1988), suggesting that one possible function of the S P T genes is to influence the strength of different TATA elements in vivo. Two loci identified by selection for spt mutants encode biochemically characterized proteins believed to affect the transcription of a wide variety of genes: SPT15 encodes the TATA binding protein TFIID (Eisenmann et al. 1989) and H T A l ( S P T l l ) - H T B l ( S P T 1 2 ) encodes the historic proteins H2A and H2B (Clark-Adams et al. 1988). Many other spt mutants can be classified into two groups on the basis of phenotypes they share with either spt15 mutants or htal-htbl mutants, suggesting that other SPT gene products may play important roles in transcription, related to either TFIID or to chromatin structure. The SPT4 gene analyzed in this study falls into the "histone group" of S P T genes. SPT4 was previously identified by mutations that suppress the 8 insertion mutations his4-9126 and lys2-1286 (Winston et al. 1984a; Fassler and Winston 1988). More recent analysis has revealed that spt4 mutations also suppress mutations in the gene encoding the transcriptional activator SNF2 for defects in transcription of both the SUC2 gene and Ty elements (Happel et al. 1991; Swanson and Winston 1992). These phenotypes are shared by mutations in the group of S P T genes that includes HTA1-HTB1, SPT5, SPT6, and SPT16 (Clark-Adams and Winston 1987; 450 Neigeborn et al. 1987; Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Happel etal. 1991 ; Swanson and Winston 1992; Hirschhorn etal. 1992). In addition, genetic evidence suggests that SPT4 interacts with the SPT5 and SPT6 gene products: recessive mutations in SPT4 do not complement recessive mutations in SPT5 or SPT6 and combinations of mutations in any two of these three genes are lethal (Winston et al. 1984a; Swanson and Winston 1992). These observations have led to the model that the SPT4, SPT5, and SPT6 proteins form a complex that is required for the normal transcription of a large number of loci in Vivo. To understand further the function of SPT4, we have characterized some effects of spt4 mutations on transcription and we have analyzed the SPT4 gene and its product. We have also used the cloned SPT4 gene to construct an spt4 null mutation. Unlike SPT5 and SPT6, SPT4 is not essential for growth. The spt4 null mutation does cause suppression of 6 insertion mutations at the transcriptional level, resulting in patterns of transcription similar to those described previously in spt5 and spt6 missense mutants, as well as in other spt mutants (ClarkAdams and Winston 1987; Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Eisenmann et al. 1989; Malone et al. 1991; Swanson et al. 1991). We genetically mapped the SPT4 gene to a new locus, indicating it has not been previously characterized. The sequence of the SPT4 gene predicts a 102 amino acid protein with an arrangement of cysteine residues suggesting a zinc binding region. Alteration of some of the cysteines indicates that they are required for SPT4 function. Brackets indicate integrated plasmids. Strain DBY703 was from David Botstein. Strains K382-23A, K398-4D, K399-7D, and K396-11A are described by Klapholz and Esposito (1982). All other strains were constructed in this laboratory. The his4-9126 mutation is an insertion of a element at position - 97 relative to the HIS4 transcription initiation site (Chaleff and Fink 1980; Farabaugh and Fink 1980; Roeder and Fink 1980). The lys2-128~ mutation is a fi insertion at + 153 relative to the LYS2 translation initiation site (Simchen et al. 1984; ClarkAdams and Winston 1987). Standard procedures for yeast crosses, sporulation, and tetrad analysis were followed (Rose et al. 1990). Yeast strains were transformed using the lithium acetate method (Ito et al. 1983). A number ofEscherichia coli strains were used. Strain HB101 (Boyer and Roulland-Dussoix 1969) was a host for plasmids. Strain SY316 (F- (lac pro) AXIII ara argE, mnalA rif R B1- recA srl: :TnlO cys: :Tn5; obtained from M. Syvanen) was used for Tn5 mutagenesis of SPT4. Strain JM101 (Messing 1979) was a host for M13 bacteriophage vectors. Strain CJ236 (dut-1, ung-1, thi-1, reIA-1; pCJ105 Cm9 (Biorad, Richmond, Calif.) was used to synthesize uracil-containing DNA for use in vitro site-directed mutagenesis. These strains were transformed or transfectes as previously described (Maniatis et al. 1982). Media. Yeast strains were grown using rich medium (YPD), minimal medium (SD), SD with nutritional supplements, or synthetic complete media lacking single nutrients (e.g. SC-ura lacks uracil) (Rose et al. 1990). Presporulation and sporulation media have been previously described (Rose et al. 1990). Materials and methods Strains and genetic methods. The Saccharomyces eerevisiae strains used in this study are listed in Table 1. DNA preparation. Plasmid DNA was prepared from bacteria by the alkaline lysis method (Birnboim and Doly 1979). Plasmid and genomic DNA were prepared from Table 1. Yeast strains Strain Genotype FW221 JF2 JF125 M A T a his4-9126 spt4-3 ura3-52 ade2-1 lysl-1 can R M A Ta his4-912~ spt4-3 ura3-52 M A T a / M A T~ his4-9218/his4-912 ~ or his4-917 5 lys2-128 8/lys2-128 6 SPT4/spt4-3 ura3-52/ura3-52 trp A1/trp A1 M A T a his4-9125 lys2-1286 ura3-52 leu2A1 M A T a his4-912 8 lys2-1286 spt4 A : : Tn5-156:: URA3 ura3-52 leu2 A1 M A T a his3 trpl ura3-52 cir ° M A Tct his3 trp l ura3-52 cir ° [SPT4-pJF27-SPT4] M A T a s p o l l ura3 canl cyh2 ade2 his7 horn3 M A T a s p o l l ura3 ade6 ar94 aro7 asp5 m e t l 4 lys2 p e t l 7 trpl M A T a s p o l l ura3 his2 leul lysl met4 pet8 M A T a s p o l l ura3 adel hisl leu2 lys7 met3 trp5 M A T a lys2-1285 ade6 ely8 leu2-3 ura3-52 M A TcL lys2-1288 spt4-3 his4-917 ura3-52 M A T a his4-9128 lys2-128 8 spt4 : : Tn5-156 ura3-52 M A T a his4-9125 lys2-128~ spt4-289 ura3-52 ade2-1 M A T a his4-9128 lys2-128 ~ spt4-3 ura3-52 M A Te~ lys2-128~ spt4-6 ura3-52 M A Ta his4-9128 lys2-128~ ura3-52 M A Ta leu2A1 ura3-52 M A Ta ura3-52 leu2A1 spt4A1 :: URA3 FY120 FY243 DBY703 JF103 K382-23A K398-4D K399-7D K396-11A JF135 JFll3 L793 L331 L351 L374 FW619 FY98 FY247 451 yeast as previously described (Hoffman and Winston 1987; Rose et al. 1990). Restriction enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA) or Boehringer Mannheim (Indianapolis, Ind.). Restriction fragments were separated by electrophoresis and purified by electroelution. Southern hybridization analysis was performed as previously described (Southern 1975; Roeder and Fink 1980). Plasmids used as probes were labeled with [~_32p] dATP (Amersham, Arlington Heights, Ill) by nick translation (Rigby et al. 1977) or random priming (Feinberg and Vogelstein 1983) using kits from Boehringer Mannheim. T4 DNA ligase and DNA polymerase I large (Klenow) fragment were from New England Biolabs and bacterial alkaline phosphatase was from Boehringer Mannheim. Plasmids. The plasmids pJF17, pJF42, and pBM25 contain subclones of the cloned SPT4 gene in the centromere-containing vector YCp50 (Johnston and Davis 1984) and were used to delimit the SPT4 gene (Fig. 1). The HindIII fragment that contains SPT4 function was cloned in the integrating vector YIp5 (Struhl et al. 1979), creating pJF19. The effect of increased copy number of the SPT4 gene was tested using pJF27, which was constructed by inserting the 8.0 kb BamHI-BglII SPT4 fragment in the 2 gm vector YEp24 (Botstein et al. 1979). The 3.1 kb EcoRI fragment containing the SPT4 gene was cloned in pUC18 (Norrander et al. 1983), creating pJF64 for use as a hybridization probe. E. coli strains carrying SPT4 on plasmids that are maintained in high copy numbers in E. coli, such as pUC18, grew poorly. Plasmids used as probes were: for HIS4, pFW45 (Winston et al. 1984b); for LYS2, pFW47 (a BglII-XhoI restriction fragment internal to L YS2 cloned in pBR322; Clark-Adams and Winston 1987) and pFW112 (an Eco RI-Bg/II restriction fragment from the 5' region of L YS2 cloned in pBR322; Clark-Adams and Winston 1987); for TUB2, pYST 138 (Sore et al. 1988); and for SPT4, pJF64, which recognizes two transcripts in addition to the SPT4 mRNA. Construction of spt4Al: :URA3. spt4 null mutants were constructed in several steps. First, Tn5 transposon mutagenesis was used to disrupt the SPT4 gene. Bacterial strain SY316 was transformed with pJF42. Ampicillinresistant transformants were purified on LB plates containing 50 gg/ml kanamycin, and single colonies were then streaked on LB plates containing 1 mg/ml neomycin, to select for increased expression of the kan gene in Tn5. Increased expression is expected to result from transposition of Tn5 into the plasmid and subsequent amplification (Van Dyk et al. 1986). Plasmid DNA was prepared from independent Neo r colonies and screened by restriction digestion with HindIII to identify plasmids carrying Tn5 insertions. Of approximately 50 Neo r candidates screened, about 50% of the plasmids contained a Tn5 element. Of these, about one-third were in the SPT4 insert. These plasmids were used to transform strain JF2 to Ura +, and screened for their ability to complement spt4-3. One plasmid (pJF72, containing spt4: : Tn5-156) did not complement. Further restriction mapping with PvuII confirmed that the site of insertion is approximately 1.8 kb to the left of the HindIII site, within the SPT4 open reading frame (Fig. 1). The twostep gene replacement method (Scherer and Davis 1979) was used, beginning with strain JF125, to construct a diploid strain containing spt4::Tn5-156. Following sporulation and tetrad dissection, we determined that haploid strains that contain spt4." .'Tn5-156 are viable and Spt-. Next, a deletion derivative of spt4. :Tn5-156 was created, pJF72 was digested with PvuII, which cuts in the Tn5 element and in the adjacent SPT4 gene. Self-ligation of the fragment containing YCp50, SPT4, and some Tn5 sequences resulted in pJF91, which contains a deletion of a part of the SPT4 gene, spt4A1. The EcoRI fragment containing spt4A1 was subcloned into the integrating vector pRG331 (generously provided by Richard Gaber), yielding pJF101. The URA3 gene was inserted at the unique XhoI site in the remaining portion of the Tn5, resulting in pJF104. The EcoRI fragment containing spt4A 1 : : URA3 was purified and used to transform strain FY120 to Ura + (Rothstein 1983), creating strain FY243. Southern hybridization analysis (Southern 1975) confirmed that the wild-type SPT4 allele had been replaced by spt4A 1 . : URA3. RNA preparation and analysis. Cells used for preparation of RNA were grown at 25°C in SD medium supplemented with the necessary requirements to a density of 1-2 x 107 cells per ml. RNA was prepared (Carlson and Botstein 1982), fractionated on formaldehyde agarose gels, and blotted to GeneScreen (New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass) as previously described (Swanson et al. 1991). Probes were hybridized by the dextran sulfate method as described in the GeneScreen manual. Prior to hybridization of additional probes, membranes were stripped of old probes by incubation at 80° C in 0.15 M NaC1, 0.015 M sodium citrate, 50% formamide. The amounts of RNA in each lane were standardized based on hybridization to TUB2 DNA. Genetic mappin9 of the SPT4 9ene. The SPT4 gene was first localized to chromosome VII using the 2 ~tm mapping method (Falco and Botstein 1983). The 2 gm plasmid pJF27, which contains SPT4, was integrated into the genome following transformation of the cir° strain DBY703. Strain JF103 resulted from this transformation, and Southern hybridization analysis showed that integration occurred at SPT4. The integration of a part of the 2 gm circle has been shown to cause instability of the chromosome in which integration occurred (Falco et al. 1982). Strain JF103 was crossed to strains K382-23A, K398-4D, K399-7D, and K396-11A, and diploids were selected on SD + trp and purified on YPD. The diploids were then plated for single colonies on YPD and replica plated to SC-ura and S D + u r a + t r p . Colonies that did not grow on either plate had lost the URA3 gene integrated at SPT4 and had gained another auxotrophy. Of the Ura- colonies from the cross with K398-4D, 85% were also Ade-, indicating that SPT4 is on the same chromosome as ADE6 (chromosome VII). Genetic link- 452 age of SPT4 to ADE6 and CLY8 was determined by tetrad analysis of the cross of strains JF135 and JF113. spt4-3 was scored by suppression of lys2-128fi and cly8 was scored by temperature sensitive lethality. DNA sequence analysis. DNA fragments were cloned in the vectors M13mpl8 and M13mpl9 (Norrander et al. 1983) and sequenced by the dideoxy chain-termination method (Sanger et al. 1977) using [a35S] dATP (New England Nuclear, Boston, Mass) and Sequenase (US Biochemical, Cleveland, Ohio). All sequences were determined on both strands. The primers used in sequencing and in oligo-directed mutagenesis were synthesized by Lise Riviere and Mark Fleming, Biopolymers Laboratory, Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School. Verification of the SPT4 open readin9 frame. To confirm the location of the SPT4 gene within the cloned DNA, we constructed a frameshift mutation in the SPT4 open reading frame. The 2.4 kb EcoRI-HindIII SPT4 fragment was cloned in pUC19. The resulting plasmid, pBM27 was digested with AccI. The 5' overhanging ends were made flush with DNA polymerase I large (Klenow) fragment and ligated to create pBM28, containing a + 2 frameshift. The EcoRI-HindIII fragment of pBM28 was cloned into YCp50, and the resulting plasmid (pBM30) was transformed into strain L793 to test for complementation of spt4 : :Tn5-156. To determine the DNA sequence of three spontaneous spt4 mutations, the mutations were first cloned by the method of gap repair (Oft-Weaver et al. 1983). pJF42 was digested with BstEII and XbaI, which cut on either side of the SPT4 open reading frame. The gapped plasmid was then used for transformation of spt4 mutant strains L331, L351, and L374. Plasmid DNA was prepared from Ura + Spt- transformants, and the EcoRIHindIII fragments containing spt4 mutations were cloned into M13mp18 and M13mp19 prior to sequence analysis. analysis. Primers of 31 to 61 nucleotides were used to make sequence alterations such that the codons 7, 24, and 27 of SPT4 would be changed from U G U (cysteine) to either U C U (serine) or CAC (histidine). HindIII fragments containing mutations in SPT4 were subcloned into the low-copy-number vector YCp50 and fragments encoding HA1-SPT4 and mutant versions were subcloned into the high-copy-number 2 gm vector pCGS42 (Collaborative Research, Bedford, Mass.). The low-copynumber plasmids and the SPT4 amino acid changes they encode are as follows: pBM47, C7S (Cys7~Ser); pBM49, C7H; pBM50, C27S; and pBM61, C27H. The high-copy-number plasmids and the SPT4 amino acid changes they encode are as follows: pBM76, C7S; pBM77, C7H; pBM89, C24S; pBM83, C24H; pBM79, C27S; pBM80, C27H; and pBM84, C24H and C27H. Following transformation of strain L793 with the resulting plasmids, the effect of the mutations on SPT4 function was assessed by determining the Lys phenotypes of the Ura ÷ transformants on SC-ura-lys plates. Immunoblot analysis. Strains were grown in SC-ura medium to maintain selection for plasmids, and total protein extracts were prepared as previously described (Celenza and Carlson 1986). Proteins were separated by electrophoresis in 15% SDS polyacrylamide gels and transferred by electrophoresis to nitrocellulose. To detect wild-type or mutant HA1-SPT4 hybrid proteins, filters were incubated with the HAl-specific monoclonal antibody 12CA5 (Niman et al. 1983) diluted 1 : 500, and then with alkaline phosphatase conjugated goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (Promega, Madison, Wis.) diluted 1:7,500. The Prot-blot system (Promega) was used to visualize the HAl-specific bands. Nucleotide sequence accession number. The GenBank accession number for the SPT4 sequence is M83672. Results Site-directed mutagenesis of SPT4. To allow identification of the SPT4 protein, sequences that encode a 9-amino acid epitope from influenza virus hemagglutinin HA1 (Niman et al. 1983; Field et al. 1988) were inserted at the 5' end of SPT4 using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis (Kunkel et al. 1987) with the Muta-Gene M13 kit (Biorad). The 2.0 kb ScaI-EcoRI fragment containing SPT4 was subcloned into the EcoRI and HincII sites of M13mpl8 (Norrander et al. 1983) to construct pM106A, the template used for in vitro oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The primer used in mutagenesis included 15 nucleotides 5' of the SPT4 initiation codon, the initiation codon, 27 nucleotides encoding the HA1 epitope, and 15 nucleotides 3' to the SPT4 initiation codon. Creation of the correct insertion was verified by DNA sequence analysis. Digestion with HindIII resulted in a 1.6 kb HA1-SPT4 fragment, which was cloned into the HindIII site of pCGS42 to create pBM65. Mutations in the SPT4 coding sequence were created in a similar manner using either pM106A or the HA1SPT4 encoding template and were verified by sequence Clonin 9 of SPT4 and construction of an spt4 null mutation To study the effects of complete loss of SPT4 function, we cloned the SPT4 gene and used it to construct an spt4 null mutant. We cloned SPT4 by screening a yeast genomic library (Rose et al. 1987) for plasmids that complement the recessive spt4-3 mutation. The recipient strains, FW221 and JF2, contain his4-9123 but are His + due to suppression by spt4-3. After screening approximately 12000 Ura + transformants, we identified six Hiscolonies. Purification and retransformation of the plasmids showed that the Spt + phenotype is conferred by the plasmids. To determine if the plasmids contain DNA linked to SPT4, a common 3.5 kb HindIII restriction fragment was subcloned into an integrating vector, creating plasmid pJF 19. Integration of pJF 19 into strain JF2 (spt4-3) resulted in a strain with an Spt ÷ phenotype that was then crossed with strain FW619 (SPT4+). Of 53 complete tetrads analyzed, all displayed 4:0 segregation 453 Tn5-156 plasmid pJF27 pdF18 pJF17 pJ F42 pBM25 SPT4 function l I I I + + + + 500 bp Fig. 1. The S P T 4 restriction map. D N A cloned from a yeast genomic library is shown as an open bar. Flanking D N A of the YCp50 vector is shown as a line. Subcloned D N A fragments are pictured below with their ability to complement spt4 mutations. The positions of the Tn5 insertion and the PvuII site used in construction of spt4Al: :URA3 are shown, as is the E c o R V site at which the URA3 gene was inserted in a separate construction. The XbaI and BstElI sites used to gap pJF42 for rescue o f s p t 4 mutations are also shown. There is an additional E e o R V site outside of the 3.1 kb EcoRI fragment and there may be additional BstEII and XbaI sites as well. The location of the S P T 4 open reading frame (Fig. 5) and direction of transcription are indicated by the arrow for Spt + : Spt-, demonstrating that pJF19 directed plasmid integration to the SPT4 locus. Subcloning indicated that a small portion of the cloned DNA contains the SPT4 gene. The 1.5 kb ScaIHindIII fragment has full SPT4 function when cloned in YCp50 (pBM25; Fig. 1). In addition, insertion of the URA3 gene at the EcoRV site within this fragment does not disrupt SPT4 function (Fig. 1). To determine the effects of complete loss of the SPT4 gene, we constructed an spt4 null mutation (see Materials and methods). Strains carrying this spt4 null mutation are viable, have an Spt- phenotype, and grow slightly more slowly than SPT4 + strains. The spt4 null mutation, like other spt4 alleles, is fully recessive. Therefore, an Spt- phenotype is caused by loss of SPT4 function. Previous analysis of SPT5, SPT6, SPT16, and HTA1HTB1, mutations in which cause phenotypes similar to those of spt4 mutations, showed that increased dosage of these genes also causes an Spt- phenotype (Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Clark-Adams and Winston 1987; Malone et al. 1991 ; Swanson et al. 1991). To test if the SPT4 gene shares this property, we cloned SPT4 on a high-copynumber, 2 gin-based plasmid. Transformation of strain FY120 (SPT4 +) with this plasmid, pJF27, had no effect on suppression of his4-9126 or Iys2-1285. Immunoblot analysis (described below) demonstrated that increased SPT4 gene dosage does cause a significant increase in the level of SPT4 protein (data not shown). Therefore, the lack of a high-copy-number suppression phenotype distinguishes SPT4 from other phenotypically related S P T genes. ,A Transcription of c~ insertion mutations is altered in spt4 mutants Mutations in SPT4 were previously shown to suppress the His- and Lys- phenotypes caused by the 8 insertion mutations his4-9128 and lys2-128~ (Winston et al. 1984a; Fassler and Winston 1988). To determine if the suppression by spt4 mutations is the result of changes in transcription, we analyzed transcription at both his4-9125 and lys2-128~ by Northern hybridizations. The 5 element in his4-9128, located between the HIS4 upstream activating sequence (UAS) and the HIS4 HIS4 I his4-9128 II + I -t- HIS4 TUB2 1 2 3 4 B UAS ~ TATA SPT4 + spt4AI::URA3 ~i~i~i ~i~i~i ~i!i i!i!i~!ii:i ~i!~i!~i~i ~i!i !~i~i ~i ~i~i~i~i~i~!~!~!i~i~!~!!~i!!~i!i i ~i ~i~i~!i~i~i~!ii i !~i~i~i~i i~i!~i!i !~i!~ii~i~!!~!!~i!~ii!~ii~i!!ii!~ ~:~s:~i:~:~s:~!i:~i~i!i:~s:~:~:~i!si!~i~i!i:!:~:!~!~:!~:!i!~:~:~i~:~i~i~i~i~isi~i:~i:~i~:i!i:~i~:!~:s~:!~i)l a:~i~:~i:~s:i~i:~!i!iai!~:!~:!~:~is)~ H His- ~ His+ Fig. 2A, B. Transcription of his4-9125 in spt4 mutants. A Total R N A was separated in a 1.2% agarose gel and subjected to Northern hybridization analysis. The membrane was hybridized first to the HIS4 probe pFW45 and then to the TUB2 probe pYST138 In lanes 1 and 2, approximately 1.5 gg of R N A was loaded, and in lanes 3 and 4, approximately 10 gg was loaded. The strains used were (left to right) FY98, FY247, FY120, and FY243. B The top line depicts the structure of his4-912& The stippled box represents the HIS4 open reading frame. This thin lines represent flanking DNA. The box with the solid triangle represents a solo S-element. Labels above indicate the relative positions of known T A T A boxes (TATA) and upstream activating sequences (UAS). The lower lines depict the probable origins of transcripts in S P T 4 + and spt4 strains 454 A L YS2 I II "I- 1: 1 2 m a n et al. 1988; Silverman and Fink 1984). In spt4Al: :URA3 mutants, transcription of his4-9128 is altered; a transcript that co-migrates with the wild-type HIS4 m R N A is present as well as the longer, nonfunctional transcript (Fig. 2A, lane 4). F o r lys2-1286, altered transcription was also observed. The 6 element in lys2-1286 is located in the 5' end of the L Y S 2 open reading frame. In S P T 4 + strains, transcription of lys2-1288 initiates at the L YS2 initiation site and the small transcript size indicates that termination occurs in the 6 (Fig. 3A, lane 3). In spt4Al: .'URA3 strains, a transcript slightly shorter than the wild-type L Y S 2 m R N A is found in addition to the short transcript (Fig. 3A, lane 4). Similar changes in his4-9126 and lys21286 transcription have been observed in spt5, spt6, sptl6, and htal-htbl mutants (Clark-Adams and Winston 1987; Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Malone et al. 1991 ; Swanson et al. 1991). These results suggest that these spt mutations permit use of a second, downstream transcription initiation, site in addition to the upstream site preferred in S P T + strains (Fig. 2B; Fig. 3B). We also examined transcription of the wild-type HIS4 and L YS2 genes and of Ty elements. We found that spt4A 1 : : URA3 slightly reduces the level of HIS4 transcription and has no effect on transcription of L YS2 or Ty elements (Fig. 2A, Fig. 3A, E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). Like spt4 mutations, spt5, spt6, sptl6, and htal-htbl mutations have little or no effect on the levels of these transcripts (ClarkAdams and Winston 1987; Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Malone et al. 1991 ; Swanson et al. 1991). Another group of spt mutants (spt3, spt7, spt8, and sptl5) can be distinguished from spt4 mutants in part because they have dramatically reduced levels of Ty transcription (Winston et al. 1984b; 1987; Eisenmann et al. 1992). ly$-1288 I :: LYS2 L YS2 TUB2 3 4 B TATA UAS TATA [ i iii i iii~i?i;i SPT4 + spt4AI::URA3 iii iiii iiiiiiiiii i~i!i:~:?:::::~:~:~:~:~:~:~ ::iiii ~i~iiiili~:. i!ii i;ili~!~i~i~! ?!!!~ili~ii i:. Lys - ~ ~ = Lys + Fig. 3A, B. Transcription of lys2-1286 in spt4 mutants. A Total RNA was fractionated in a 1% agarose gel and subjected to Northern hybridization analysis. The membrane was hybridized first to a mixture of the internal LYS2 probe pFW47 and the 5' LYS2 probe pFW 112 and then rehybridized to the TUB2 probe pYST 138 Because the 5" L YS2 transcript is much more abundant than the long LYS2 transcript, we used a pFW47 probe that was approximately 10-fold more radioactive than the pFW112 probe. In lanes 1 and 2, approximately 2.5 gg of RNA was loaded, and in lanes 3 and 4, approximately 10 p~gwas loaded. The strains used were the same as those shown in Fig. 2A. B The top line depicts the structure of lys2-1288. The stippled box represents the LYS2 open reading frame. The thin lines represent flanking DNA. The box with the solid triangle represents a solo g-element. Labels above indicate the relative positions of known TATA boxes (TATA) and upstream activating sequences (UAS). The lower lines depict the probable origins of transcripts in SPT4 + and spt4 strains. The dotted line indicates that the site of transcription initiation is not known T A T A box, contains a weak UAS, a T A T A box and an initiation site (Elder et al. 1983; Liao et al. 1987). In S P T 4 + strains, transcription initiation occurs predominantly at the 8 initiation site and results in a longer, non-functional HIS4 m R N A (Fig. 2A, lane 3; Hirsch- Genetic mapping o f the SPT4 9ene We genetically m a p p e d S P T 4 to determine whether it is a previously identified gene. First, by the 2 g m m a p p i n g method (Falco and Botstein 1983; see Materials and Methods) we determined that S P T 4 is on c h r o m o s o m e VII. Second, tetrad analysis demonstrated that S P T 4 is on the right a r m of c h r o m o s o m e VII, linked to A D E 6 (0.7 cM) and C L Y 8 (26.5 cM) (Table 2). In the single case of recombination between A D E 6 and SPT4, C L Y 8 and S P T 4 had not recombined, indicating the gene order A D E 6 - S P T 4 - C L Y 8 (Fig. 4). N o other gene has been m a p p e d to the position of S P T 4 (Mortimer et al. 1989). Table 2. Mapping SPT4 by tetrad analysis Segregating markersa PD b NPD T cM spt4-cly8 spt4-ade6 cly8-ade6 3l 66 30 0 0 0 35 1 36 26.5 0.7 27.3 a The tetrads scored come from the cross JF135 x JF113 b PD, parental ditype; NPD, nonparental ditype; T, tetratype 455 v,, o reading frame adjacent to SPT4 revealed that it has significant sequence similarity to an open reading frame on the S. cerevisiae chromosome III, YCR28C (37% identity over 178 amino acids; Oliver et al. 1992). Analysis of spt4 mutations confirmed our identification of the SPT4 open reading frame. First, we created a + 2 frameshift at the AccI site in the SPT4 open reading frame (Fig. 5). This mutation was unable to complement an spt4 mutation, indicating that the AccI site is in the SPT4 gene. We also cloned and sequenced three spontaneous spt4 alleles by the gap rescue method (OrrWeaver et al. 1983; see Materials and methods). The sequence changes in these mutants verifies this open reading frame as encoding SPT4:spt4-6 is a small deletion (positions 553 to 584 in Fig. 5) and spt4-3 and spt4-289 are nonsense mutations at codons 32 and 57, respectively, in the SPT4 open reading frame (Fig. 5). The predicted SPT4 amino acid sequence was compared to other predicted protein sequences in GenBank by the program Blast (Altschul et al. 1990) and it was also examined for previously described sequence motifs. Although no significant similarity was found to other proteins in GenBank, the SPT4 amino acid sequence contains four cysteines (at amino acid positions 7, 10, 24 and 27) that are spaced like those found in zinc binding proteins (reviewed in Berg 1986; 1990). Most other amino acid residues conserved in different classes of zinc binding proteins are not present in SPT4. As described in a later section, these cysteines in SPT4 are required for SPT4 function. / Fig. 4. Genetic map position of SPT4. Tetrad analysis demonstrated S P T 4 is linked to ADE6 and C L Y 8 on chromosome VII (See Table 2 and text). The position of TRP5 is shown as an additional reference point Therefore, we conclude that it is a previously unidentified gene. Sequence of the SPT4 9ene To understand better the function of SPT4, we sequenced most of the 3.1kb EcoRI DNA fragment that includes SPT4. We identified a single open reading frame in the region of the clone previously shown to be required for SPT4 activity (Figs. 1 and 5). The SPT4 DNA sequence predicts a 102 amino acid protein of 11 kDa. The size is consistent with subcloning experiments and with the size of the SPT4 m R N A (0.46 kb (E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). The orientation of the SPT4 open reading frame is consistent with the direction of transcription, as determined by Northern hybridization analysis using single-stranded probes (E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, F. Winston, unpublished results; diagrammed in Fig. 1). (Analysis of the predicted 485 amino acid sequence of a partial open 1 61 AATATGGAGGAAAGAGATGGTTACTACTATTTAAAGCGGTCCTC GAAGTAGATAGGTATATTACGCTTTAGACAC CATACCT 121 TAATTTAATCATCT 181 TCTATGAGTGAAATCGAGTGAAAAAGTGAAATTTAAGAAAGGGCT 241 GTAATAAT 301 361 CGAAGGAT TACACCTGGCCACATTCAGTTTGGCAAAAGCGAACGAGGTACAGT S E R TGTATGCT A C M GTAAGAG GTGTGGCATAGTGCAGACCACAAAT L C G I V Q T T GTAC T GT GAGTTTAAT N E F 20 N AGAGATGGTTGTCCC~CTGTCAGGGTATTTTTG~GAGGCAGGTGTTTCTAC~TGG~ R 421 S CAAATAAATATATTCATGTATA TCTATCTATAATTAATCTCGATGTTGATA/IAGGTCACCTTATACGT ATGTCTAGTGAAAGAGCC M GTAGTCCAATTTACGT D G C P N C Q G I F E E A G V S T M 40 E TGTACGTCGCCTTCTTTCGAGGGCCTCGTAGGAATGTGTAAGCCTACT_AAGTCGTGGGTA C T S P S F E G L V G M C K P T K S W V 60 AccI 481 GCAAAGTGGCTGAGCGTAGATCATAGTATAGCTGGTATGTACGCCATCAAGGTCGATGGT A K W L S V D H S I A G M Y A I K V D G 80 G S Q i00 PvuII 541 AGACTACCAGCTGAGGTTGTGGAGCTGTTGCCTCACTACAAACCGAGGGATGGCAGTCAA R L P A E V V E L L R H Y K P R D EcoRV 601 GTTGAGTAA/%ACCTTCCGTTCTGATATCACATGTATAATAGTAATGAATTTTTTTTACTT V E * 661 TTTTTTTTTTTTAGTAAATATTCTAGCATATGAGTTTATGCTTTCATTTATTTAACGTTC 721 TGCACTTTTGTTTTTGCTGGCAAACCCAATTTTTCTACCGTCCAGTAATTCAACTAAGGC 781 TAAAAAGACTTTCATTAGAAAAAAAAGGTCCAAGGATAGGA/iAATTTCAAGATA_AAGTAT 102 Fig. 5. Nucleotide sequence of the S P T 4 gene and the predicted sequence of the SPT4 protein. Most of the EeoRI fragment containing S P T 4 was sequenced on both strands, and a portion of the sequence is shown here. (The entire region that was sequenced has been submitted to GenBank, accession number M83672.) Nucleotides are numbered on the left and amino acids are numbered on the right. The PvuII site used in restriction mapping, the E e o R V site at which the URA3 gene was inserted, and the AecI site used in construction of a frameshift are labeled above the D N A sequence. Underlinin9 highlights the location of three spontaneous spt4 mutations. The bases at positions 394 and 469 are thymidines in spt4-289 and spt4-3, respectively. Bases 553 to 584 are deleted in spt4-6. The cysteines that comprise the zinc-binding motif are also underlined 456 ,,¢ I--. n •"r- n ¢/1 116-66-45-- 29-- 12-6-- Fig. 6. Identification of the SPT4 protein. Proteins were separated in a 15% SDSpolyacrylamide gel, electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose, and probed with an HAl-specific antibody. In each lane, 175 gg of total yeast protein was loaded. The locations of proteins of known molecular weight (kDa) are indicated on the left. Protein extracts were prepared from strain FY120 transformed with pBM65 (HA1-SPT4, lane 1) and pBM25 (SPT4, lane 2) Identification of the SPT4 protein To facilitate detection of the SPT4 protein, we constructed a fusion gene that encodes a 9-amino acid epitope from the hemagglutinin HA1 of influenza virus (Niman et al. 1983; Field et al. 1988) fused to the amino-terminus of SPT4 (see Materials and methods). The fusion gene has full SPT4 function, as judged by its ability to complement an spt4 null mutation. A monoclonal antibody that recognizes the HA1 epitope (Niman et al. 1983) specifically recognizes the HA1-SPT4 fusion protein (Fig. 6). A second protein consisting of the HA1 epitope fused to the carboxy-terminus of SPT4 was not detected with this antibody (E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). Based on its migration on SDSpolyacrylamide gels, the HA1-SPT4 protein has an apparent molecular weight of 14 kDa, in close agreement with the predicted size of 12 kDa (Fig. 6). HA1-SPT4 was only detected when the fusion gene was carried on a high-copy-number plasmid, indicating that the increased copy number results in a higher level of SPT4 protein. In addition, we were unable to detect HA1-SPT4, even when on a high-copy-number plasmid, by indirect immunofluorescence using fixed cells. These results suggest that the SPT4 protein is maintained at low levels, consistent with the relatively low levels of SPT4 m R N A detected on Northern blots (E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). Particular cysteine residues of SPT4 are required for function The pattern C X2-C-X13-C-X2 C found at amino acid positions 7-27 of SPT4 is similar to the pattern found in some zinc-binding proteins (Berg 1990). To test if these cysteines are important for SPT4 function, we used sitedirected mutagenesis to change these residues to serine or histidine. Serine is structurally most like cysteine, and histidine, like cysteine, can participate in binding metal ions (Berg 1986). The mutations were analyzed in two types of plasmids. First, we analyzed one set in low-copy-number plasmids to assess function under approximately normal gene dosage conditions. Second, we examined a larger set of mutations in a high-copy-number plasmid in which SPT4 was fused to H A l (pBM65). Use of these highcopy-number constructs gave us the potential to determine the level of the mutant protein present in vivo. All plasmids were tested for complementation of spt4: ."Tn5156 by examining suppression of lys2-128~ after transformation of strain L793. The results of testing changes in three different cysteines in the SPT4 zinc-binding domain demonstrate that these particular amino acids are essential for SPT4 function. First, each change of cysteine to serine eliminated SPT4 function (Table 3). Second, changes of cysteine to histidine also confirmed the importance of these amino acid residues and further suggested that their role may be in metal binding. The C y s 7 ~ H i s change eliminated SPT4 function; however, both the C y s 2 4 ~ H i s and Cys27-~His changes resulted in only a partial loss-offunction. For the C y s 2 7 ~ H i s change, increased gene dosage resulted in increased SPT4 function (Table 3). The partially functional substitution of histidine for cysteine indicates that both Cys24 and Cys27 may be involved in binding to metal ions. When all these plasmids were transformed into the SPT4 + strain FY120 no mutant phenotypes were detected; therefore, these mutations are recessive. To determine the levels of the mutant SPT4 proteins, we used immunoblot analysis to compare the amount of wild-type and mutant SPT4 proteins in transformants of Table 3. Effect of altering cysteines in SPT4 Amino acid changes" None Cys7--,Ser Cys7-~His Cys24~Ser Cys24~His Cys27--*Ser Cys27--+His Cys27~His, Cys24~His SPT4 function b Low copy number High-copy number + ND ND - /+ ND + +/+ " Mutations carried on low-copy-number CEN plasmids were constructed in the wild-type SPT4 gene. Mutations carried on highcopy-number 2gm plasmids were constructed in the HA1-SPT4 fusion gene. In both cases, amino acids are numbered as in Fig. 5 b SPT4 function was assessed based on growth of tranformants of strain L793 on SC-ura-lys plates after 2 days at 30° C. +, + / - , - / + , and - indicate no growth, weak growth, moderate growth, and strong growth, respectively. ND indicates that the effect was not determined 457 both strains F Y t 2 0 and L793. Surprisingly, we were unable to detect any of the mutant proteins, including the two with partial function (E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). The implications of this result are discussed in the following section. Discussion Previous studies of spt4 mutations have shown that they can suppress solo 8 insertion mutations and a deletion of the gene that encodes the transcription activator SNF2 (Happel et al. 1991; Swanson and Winston 1992). Furthermore, genetic studies have suggested that the SPT4 protein interacts with the essential proteins SPT5 and SPT6 (Swanson and Winston 1992). In our current work, we have characterized the effect of spt4 mutations on transcription, as well as the SPT4 gene and its product. In spite of many similarities between spt4, spt5, and spt6 mutants, our analysis of the SPT4 gene and its product indicates that some features of SPT4 are quite distinct from SPT5 and SPT6. First, SPT5 and SPT6 are essential for growth (Clark-Adams and Winston 1987; Swanson et al. 1991), while an spt4 null mutation results in only a minor growth defect. Second, spt4 mutants are mildly sensitive to the mutagens methyl methanesulfonate and ?-rays, a phenotype not caused by spt5 or spt6 mutations (Winston et al. 1984a; E.A. Malone, J.S. Fassler, and F. Winston, unpublished results). Third, increased dosage of SPT5 and SPT6 causes an Sptphenotype (Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Clark-Adams and Winston 1987; Swanson et al. 1991), a characteristic not shared by SPT4. Finally, SPT5 and SPT6 both encode large proteins with very acidic amino-termini (Swanson et al. 1990; 1991). In contrast, the SPT4 protein is small and has no acidic regions. Thus, although these SPT proteins are likely to be involved in the same process, the function of SPT4 is probably different from those of SPT5 and SPT6. Mutations in SPT4, SPT5, or SPT6 also confer many phenotypes similar to those conferred by mutations in SPT16 (Malone et al. 1991 ; Rowley et al. 1991). However, genetic evidence suggests that there is no direct interaction of SPT 16 with the putative SPT4SPT5-SPT6 complex (Malone et al. 1991). Our mutational analysis suggests that metal binding may be important for the function of SPT4. The arrangement of cysteines at the amino-terminus of SPT4 (C~2-C-X13-C-X2-C) is similar to patterns found in proteins known to bind zinc ions. We have individually changed three of these cysteines to serine, an amino acid of a similar structure, and have shown that these changes eliminate SPT4 function. Substitution of histidine for the cysteine at position 24 or 27, however, has a less severe effect on SPT4 function. Since histidine residues can also coordinate zinc and other metal ions, these results support the idea that folding of this SPT4 domain around a metal ion is important for activity of the SPT4 protein. Functional substitution of histidine for zinc-binding cysteines has been accomplished previously in the glucocorticoid receptor (Severne et al. 1988; Hard et al. 1990; Pan et al. 1990). Our experiments to analyze the roles of the cysteines in the SPT4 metal-binding motif were inconclusive, due to the fact that the mutant SPT4 proteins have decreased stability compared to wild-type SPT4. Perhaps the instability of the mutant SPT4 proteins is due to an inability to interact normally with SPT5 or SPT6 or due to an inability to bind zinc. More sensitive methods to measure SPT4 protein levels, as well as more direct experiments must be done before we can conclude that metal-binding plays a role in SPT4 function. Our results suggest that the SPT4 protein (along with SPT5 and SPT6) may normally act to repress transcription at a variety of loci, In this current work, we have shown that spt4 mutations result in new transcripts from his4-9128 and lys2-1288, probably through the use of additional transcription initiation sites. Similarly, spt4 mutations partially restore expression of SUC2 and Ty elements in the absence of the transcriptional activator SNF2 (Happel et al. 1991 ; Swanson and Winston 1992). These results are consistent with the idea that SPT4 (along with SPT5 and SPT6) plays a role in chromatin structure or assembly. In vitro studies have indicated that chromatin structure is a general repressor of transcription. Furthermore, in vivo alterations in yeast histone genes, like mutations in SPT4, permit transcription from otherwise inactive promoters, including some of those activated by spt4 mutations (Clark-Adams et al. 1988; Han and Grunstein 1988; Kayne et al. 1988; Mcgee et al. 1990; Park and Szostak 1990; Hirschhorn et al. 1992). Analysis of chromatin structure spt4 mutants would begin to address this hypothesis. Alternatively, SPT4 may repress transcription by interactions with certain promoter sequences or by inhibition of either specific activators or general transcription factors. However SPT4 may function, it apparently does so in combination with SPT5 and SPT6. Acknowledgements.This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM32967, National Science Foundation grant DCB8451649, and grants from the Monsanto Company and the Stroh Brewery Company, all to F.W.E.A.M. was supported by an National Institutes of Health training grant to the Genetics Program (T32-GM07196) and by the Lucille P. Markey Charitable Trust. J.S.F, was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM10168 and a Charles A. King Trust fellowship from The Medical Foundation. References Altschul SF, Gish W, Miller W, Myers EW, Lipman DJ (1990) Basic local alignment search tool. J Mol Biol 215:403-410 Berg JM (1986) Potential metal binding domains in nucleic acid binding proteins. Science 232:485-487 Berg JM (1990) Zinc fingers and other metal binding domains. J Biol Chem 265 : 6513-6516 Birnboim HC, Doly J (1979) A rapid alkaline extraction procedure or screening recombinant plasmid DNA. 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