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Suppressor of zeste 12, a Polycomb group gene in Drosophila melanogaster; one piece in the epigenetic puzzle

<p>In multicellular organisms all cells in one individual have an identical genotype, and yet their bodies consist of many and very different tissues and thus many different cell types. Somehow there must be a difference in how genes are interpreted. So, there must be signals that tell the genes when and where to be active and inactive, respectively. In some instances a specific an expression pattern (active or inactive) is epigenetic; it is established and maintained throughout multiple rounds of cell divisions. In the developing <i>Drosophila</i> embryo, the proper expression pattern of e.g. the homeotic genes <i>Abd-B</i> and <i>Ubx</i> is to be kept active in the posterior part and silenced in the anterior. Properly silenced homeotic genes are crucial for the correct segmentation pattern of the fly and the Polycomb group (Pc-G) proteins are vital for maintaining this type of stable repression.</p><p>As part of this thesis, <i>Suppressor of zeste 12 (Su(z)12)</i> is characterized as a <i>Drosophila</i> Pc-G gene. Mutations in the gene cause widespread misexpression of several homeotic genes in embryos and larvae. Results show that the silencing of the homeotic genes <i>Abd-B</i> and <i>Ubx</i>, probably is mediated via physical binding of SU(Z)12 to Polycomb Response Elements in the BX-C. <i>Su(z)12</i> mutations are strong suppressors of position-effect-variegation and the SU(Z)12 protein binds weakly to the heterochromatic centromeric region. These results indicate that SU(Z)12 has a function in heterochromatin-mediated repression, which is an unusual feature for a Pc-G protein. The structure of the <i>Su(z)12</i> gene was determined and the deduced protein contains a C2-H2 zinc finger domain, several nuclear localization signals, and a region, the VEFS box, with high homology to mammalian and plant homologues. <i>Su(z)12 </i>was originally isolated in a screen for modifiers of the zeste-white interaction and I present results that suggests that this effect is mediated through an interaction between <i>Su(z)12 </i>and <i>zeste</i>. I also show that <i>Su(z)12</i> interact genetically with other Pc-G mutants and that the SU(Z)12 protein binds more than 100 euchromatic bands on polytene chromosomes. I also present results showing that SU(Z)12 is a subunit of two different E(Z)/ESC embryonic silencing complexes, one 1MDa and one 600 kDa complex, where the larger complex also contains PCL and RPD3. </p><p>In conclusion, results presented in this thesis show that the recently identified Pc-G gene, <i>Su(z)12</i>, is of vital importance for correct maintenance of silencing of the developmentally important homeotic genes.</p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA/oai:DiVA.org:umu-98
Date January 2003
CreatorsBirve, Anna
PublisherUmeƄ University, Molecular Biology
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDoctoral thesis, comprehensive summary, text

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