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First published online 12 September 2006
doi: 10.1242/jcs.03161
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Research Article |
exchange and chromatin dynamics are ligand- and domain-dependent

1 Molecular Medicine, University of Texas Instititue of Biotechnology, San Antonio, TX, USA
2 Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX 77030, USA
3 Department of Cell Biology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA
4 Vascular Biology Program, Departments of Pathology and Surgery, Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA
Author for correspondence (e-mail: mancini{at}bcm.tmc.edu)
Accepted 5 July 2006
| Summary |
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(ER
) and/or Pit-1 interactions at a physiologically regulated transcription locus. ER
- and ligand-dependent cofactor recruitment, large-scale chromatin modifications and transcriptional activity identified a distinct fingerprint of responses for each condition. Ligand-dependent transcription (more than threefold activation compared with vehicle, or complete repression by mRNA fluorescent in situ hybridization) at the array correlated with its state of condensation, which was assayed using a novel high throughput microscopy approach. In support of the nuclear receptor hit-and-run model, photobleaching studies provided direct evidence of very transient ER-array interactions, and revealed ligand-dependent changes in koff. ER
-truncation mutants indicated that helix-12 and interactions with co-regulators influenced both large-scale chromatin modeling and photobleaching recovery times. These data also showed that the ER
DNA-binding domain was insufficient for array targeting. Collectively, quantitative observations from this physiologically relevant biosensor suggest stochastic-based dynamics influence gene regulation at the promoter level.
Key words: Nuclear receptor, Prolactin, Chromatin, Co-regulator, Transcription, Photobleaching, Stochastics, Probabilistics
| Introduction |
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Three experimental model systems in mammalian cells have been used to target transcription factors to integrated DNA. The spontaneous chromosomal integration of tandem mouse mammary tumor virus promoters in cell line 3617 (MMTV array) can be visualized using translational fusions of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) and the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) (McNally et al., 2000
), the GR coactivator, GRIP-1 (Becker et al., 2002
) and other transcription factors, including coactivators and a chromatin modifier (Muller et al., 2001
). Chromosomally amplified lac-repressor-binding sites (lac arrays) have been used to visualize co-regulator interactions and chromatin changes in response to expression of a lac repressor, VP16 acidic activation domain and GFP chimera (Tumbar et al., 1999
). An estrogen receptor
(ER
, herafter just called ER) chimera (GFP-lac-ER) was also used to document large-scale chromatin changes of the lac array in response to 17-ß estradiol (E2) (Nye et al., 2002
), and to record ligand-influenced, dynamic-recruitment of coactivators (Stenoien et al., 2001a
). lac repeats linked to a repetitive Tet-responsive promoter were also recently used to observe chromatin changes in response to regulated activation of transcription (Janicki et al., 2004
). In addition, live cell data using an HIV promoter array, and a synthetic NF
B binding site array, indicates rapid (seconds) oscillation of a gene regulator (NF
B) on a promoter (Bosisio et al., 2006
). A general theme emerging from live single-cell studies of nuclear receptors and coactivators in individual mammalian cell nuclei is that their interactions (either at bulk chromatin or at specific DNA) are dynamic, with a half-time of residence in the order of seconds. The combined results of these model systems have greatly advanced our understanding of in vivo nuclear receptor (NR)-promoter, NR-co-regulator interactions and chromatin remodeling in general. However, each system individually lacks the ability to directly measure and correlate the multiple aspects of NR-mediated transcription, and has limited ability to assess antagonist-dependent transcriptional repression. The development of a single system with these multiplex capabilities would facilitate a greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in transcription in vivo.
Our goal for the work described here was to develop a system that allows us to analyze the live cell dynamics of ER, including promoter interactions and associated large-scale changes in chromatin. For this purpose, we used an integrated array of ER synergy elements located in the enhancer of the prolactin gene, which also contains a binding site for the POU-class activator Pit-1. In addition to being induced in vivo by estrogen (Carrillo et al., 1987
), the prolactin gene is also repressed by antiestrogens (Lieberman et al., 1983
). Additionally, prolactin chromatin structure was differentially altered by agonists and antagonists (Cullen et al., 1993
; Seyfred and Gorski, 1990
). Our results indicate the establishment of a single-cell model to visualize quantitatively the hormonal regulation of ER action and provide evidence in support of the hypothesis that stochastic ER-promoter interactions are crucial for transcriptional regulation.
| Results |
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| Single-cell analyses of transcription by fluorescent in situ hybridization |
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Co-regulator and RNA polymerase II targeting, and modified histones
To further assess the biological significance of transcriptional responses of the PRL array, we performed immunolocalization studies using a series of antibodies directed against endogenous transcription factors, cofactors and modified histones. The p160 class coactivators (SRC-1 and SRC-3) accumulated over the array (versus nucleoplasmic levels) when GFP-ER without ligand or bound to E2 associated with the array (Fig. 5). In the absence of GFP-ER, neither of the p160 coactivators accumulated over the array (Fig. 5). As expected from previous lacER-p160 studies (Stenoien et al., 2001a
), antagonist treatment resulted in a loss in accumulation of p160 coactivators at GFP-ER-occupied PRL arrays; interestingly, relative to SRC-3, reduction of SRC-1 was not always as robust with 4HT or ICI (Table 1, supplementary material Fig. S3). Similar assays were performed for the chromatin remodeling protein BRG1, which interacts with ER and is required by glucocorticoid receptor for chromatin remodeling (McKenna et al., 1999
). BRG1 accumulated over the array with GFP-ER in vehicle-treated and E2-treated cells, but was not detected at arrays in antagonist-treated cells (Fig. 6, Table 1). Thus, each of these factors previously identified to be important for transcription activation appeared to have a unique signature of receptor- and ligand-dependent accumulation over the array.
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In line with constitutive activity from the integrated transcription unit, the transcription elongation factors cyclin T1, CDK9 (Table 1; supplementary material Figs S4, 5) and the large subunit of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) (Fig. 7) each showed array-associated targeting in non-transfected PRL-HeLa cells. By contrast, cells expressing GFP-ER and treated or not with E2 showed an increased accumulation of these factors over the array. Consistent with FISH results described above, exposure to 4HT or ICI eliminated the accumulation of cyclin T1 and CDK9 from GFP-ER targeted arrays. Similarly, 4HT resulted in loss of RNAPII accumulation at GFP-ER-targeted arrays and ICI treatment was not as effective in abolishing RNAPII array accumulation (Fig. 7).
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We also characterized ligand-dependent histone modifications at the PRL array by immunofluorescence. Histone acetylation is associated with estrogen receptor activation (Kim et al., 2001
), and histone methylation is associated with both transcriptional activation and repression (reviewed by Kouzarides, 2002
). In cells not expressing exogenous estrogen receptor, acetylation of histone H3 at the array was observed (Fig. 8). This is indicative of a low level of constitutive transcription at the array (confirmed by colocalization with dsRed2 RNA FISH, data not shown). Surprisingly, GFP-ER-targeted arrays with or without ligands did not dramatically alter the levels of acetylated histone H3 array accumulation, even when highly condensed by 4HT or ICI (Fig. 8). Similar results were obtained for transcription-associated dimethyl-lysine 4 of histone H3 (Fig. 9). Repression-associated dimethyl-lysine 9 of H3 was not observed on condensed arrays at levels above those in the nucleoplasm, neither was acetylated histone H4 observed at the array under any ligand condition (data not shown).
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In sum, these data on association of cofactors under varying conditions are consistent with the transcription responses observed by reporter FISH, and suggests that the integrated multicopy promoter-enhancer array responded to ER and its ligands in a biologically appropriate manner, albeit with characteristics specific for the prolactin promoter-enhancer.
Ligands affect ER mobility at prolactin array
To better confine real-time measurement of ER dynamics to a smaller nuclear volume containing a specific transcription locus, versus bulk nucleoplasm (Reid et al., 2003
; Stenoien et al., 2001b
), we examined live cell dynamics of GFP-ER at the PRL promoter array by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) methods.
Initially, we transiently transfected GFP-ER and performed a spot-FRAP analysis in both the nucleoplasm and at the array. As in our earlier studies, with minimal media (charcoal-stripped and dialyzed serum-containing), photobleaching the nucleoplasm demonstrated that ER mobility was extremely fast, with a half-maximal recovery (t1/2) of less than 1 second. The addition of E2 or 4HT resulted in significant reduction of ER mobility within the nucleoplasm (E2, 5 seconds; 4HT, 4 seconds) and, as expected, ICI immobilized ER (Table 3, data not shown). With improved normalization and analytical methods (see Materials and Methods), and in refinement of our previous work, we report here that 4HT led to a small but significant increase in mobility throughout the nucleus compared with E2.
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FRAP was also used to specifically measure mobility over the PRL array (Fig. 10A,D; Table 2). GFP-ER recovery was markedly slower than that of nucleoplasmic receptor or Pit-1 (Fig. 10C). In the absence of ligand, t1/2 of GFP-ER was 12.19±1.92 seconds, n=30, which, interestingly, was not significantly different from that observed in the presence of E2 (11.64±3.41 seconds, n=30). 4HT treatments significantly increased mobility of array-associated GFP-ER (10.56±1.70 seconds, n=30), in concert with dramatic alterations in array size, the composition of recruited proteins and reductions of reporter mRNA shown above. As with nucleoplasmic receptors, ICI immobilized array-associated GFP-ER (Fig. 10A,D; Table 2).
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Owing to concerns that the recovery dynamics observed at the de-condensed arrays could have been affected by the larger amount of bulk nucleoplasm interspersed with array chromatin, we reduced bleach regions to an area the size of the 4HT-induced condensed arrays. Because this meant that partial regions of larger arrays were photobleached, we refer to these as intra-array FRAP (FRAPintra-array). As shown in Table 2, FRAPintra-array data qualitatively agreed with the FRAP results above (absolute differences were due to different analysis method, see Methods and Materials), and demonstrated that differences in ER mobility were not the trivial result of differently sized arrays or bleach regions, or to the contribution of bulk nucleoplasmic dynamics in general.
FRAP and FRAPintra-array data provided recovery rates that represented both on- and off-rates of the photobleached proteins. To more directly assess GFP-ER loss from the array, we used inverse FRAP (iFRAP) (Becker et al., 2002
; Dundr et al., 2002
). In iFRAP, the entire nucleus, excluding the array, is bleached (Fig. 10B), and loss of fluorescence is directly related to the dissociation kinetics of GFP-ER from array chromatin. In absence of ligand, half-maximal loss (t1/2-loss) of GFP-ER fluorescence was 4.55±2.54 seconds, n=30) (Table 2). In contrast to FRAP or FRAPintra-array, addition of E2 resulted in a marked and significant (>50%, P<0.001) increase in t1/2-loss (6.49±1.79 seconds, n=30) (Fig. 10E, Table 2). iFRAP after treatment with 4HT, however, resulted in faster t1/2-loss than after treatment with E2 (4.11±0.85 seconds, n=30) (Fig, 10E, Table 2). Consistent with FRAP analyses, iFRAP also indicated that ICI immobilized GFP-ER in association with the array (data not shown).
In vivo mapping of ER domains required for array targeting
We next used PRL-HeLa cells to ask whether well-defined domains of ER contribute to the dynamics of GFP-ER interactions with array chromatin. ER domains associated with subnuclear localization, solubility and mobility have been previously reported (Stenoien et al., 2000
; Stenoien et al., 2001a
), with helix-12 of the ligand-binding domain (LBD) being implicated as a key intranuclear regulatory interface in living cells. To test this model with a biologically relevant, visible chromatin locus, we transiently introduced a GFP-ER-deletion series, including: (1) GFP-ER282 (AF1 with the DNA-binding domain, DBD), (2) GFP-ER534 (AF1, DBD and LBD up to, but excluding, helix-12) and, (3) GFP-ER554 (AF1, DBD and LBD including helix-12), Fig. 11A. In vitro and in vivo assays showed that GFP-ER554 retains agonist-inducible transcription function on an estrogen response element (ERE)-dependent reporter (Pakdel et al., 1993
), whereas GFP-ER282 and GFP-ER534 are transcriptionally inactive (Tzukerman et al., 1994
). In vitro, all deletion mutants bind DNA in an electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA), and ER534 and ER554 bind ligand, whereas ER282 does not.
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Estrogen receptor domains contribute to its nucleoplasmic and PRL array dynamics
Our panel of mutated receptors was next analyzed for mobility in the nucleoplasm and at the PRL array. As we have shown previously (Stenoien et al., 2001b
), GFP-ER282 was very mobile in the nucleoplasm and, as expected, unaffected by ligand (Fig. 11C, Table 5). Unliganded GFP-ER534 was also very mobile in the nucleoplasm and was significantly reduced by E2 (Fig. 11C, Table 4). GFP-ER554 demonstrated slower nucleoplasmic mobility relative to GFP-ER282 and GFP-ER534, consistent with a role for helix-12, and also exhibited reduced mobility upon exposure to E2 (Fig. 10C, Table 4). At the PRL array, GFP-ER554 demonstrated significantly faster recovery compared with GFP-ER in cells treated with vehicle (Fig. 11C, Table 4), similar to its faster reorganization into nucleoplasmic hyperspeckles after addition of E2 (Stenoien et al., 2001a
). In cells treated with E2, GFP-ER534 demonstrated the fastest recovery times at the array, followed by GFP-ER and GFP-ER554 (Fig. 11C, Table 4).
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| Discussion |
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As we (Stenoien et al., 2000
; Stenoien et al., 2001a
; Stenoien et al., 2001b
) and others (Htun et al., 1999
) have shown, ligand exposure within minutes affects intranuclear targeting and dynamics of ER, with maximal reorganization peaking at about 30 minutes. Here, we more directly observed hormonally regulated transcriptional events at the integrated array, including remarkable ligand-dependent size and/or density plasticity of array chromatin marked by GFP-ER, which are tightly correlated to the ligand-regulated activation or repression of the array (Figs 1, 2). We are examining the potential of using HTM in live cell experiments to capture unbiased quantitative data on a large number of cells to assess array-size dynamics under variable experimental conditions similar those in Fig. 2. We currently interpret changes in array size as a reflection of alterations in chromatin state (closing and opening) that correlate directly with ER-mediated differences in transcriptional output and colocalization of RNAPII and its cofactors. The rapid loss of most of these factors from the array in response to antagonists is mechanistically consistent with marked changes in array size and undetectable levels of dsRED2skl mRNA by FISH.
Our ligand-based activation and repression studies document an interesting pattern of array-associated coactivators, chromatin modification enzymes, transcription elongation factors and RNAPII. Accumulation over the PRL array by cyclin T1, CDK9 and RNAPII is specific for transcription, be it constitutive or agonist enhanced. One unexpected observation was the incomplete disassociation of RNAPII from the PRL array chromatin in cells treated with the pure antagonist ICI. The interaction is antagonist-specific, because 4HT treatment reduced RNAPII association to nucleoplasmic levels. As neither cyclin T1 nor CDK9 is detected at arrays in ICI-treated cells, our data suggest that RNAPII is not activated (pre-initiation complex), is in an abortive cycle or is perhaps trapped with immobilized GFP-ER. The apparent association of the p160 coactivators, SRC-1 and SRC-3 is also not as straightforward. In our immunoassays of GFP-ER-expressing cells, colocalization with the array by SRC-3 appears to be strictly receptor dependent, and is regulated by agonist (increased SRC-3) and antagonist (dissociated SRC-3). SRC-1 colocalization, however, appears to be receptor-dependent (with or without agonist), and at least partially resistant to antagonist dissociation. It will be important to extend these immunoassays with experiments using fluorescently tagged SRC coactivators in photobleaching and protein-protein (FRET) studies to establish interactions following transcriptional stimulation or repression.
Significant changes in array size and/or density do not accompany major changes in several histone modifications that we have assayed. Previous histone modification studies have shown changes in acetylation of histone H3 or H4 after targeting repetitive, heterochromatic lac operator arrays directly with lac repressor-activator fusions (e.g. lacVP16, lacer) (see Nye et al., 2002
; Tumbar et al., 1999
). Also, a combined lac operator and tet operator array system regulated by tetOn also demonstrated histone modifications in cis (Janicki et al., 2004
; Tsukamoto et al., 2000
). With our studies, however, despite significant differences in array size (Figs 1, 2), acetylation and dimethylation of lysine 4 of histone H3 is not dramatically altered in immunofluorescence assays. Moreover, acetylation of histone H4 over the PRL array was never observed above nucleoplasmic levels. Finally, we examined the repression-associated methylated histone H3 (at lysine 9) and also did not see significant array signal above nucleoplasmic levels when the locus was repressed and highly condensed by 4HT or ICI (data not shown). One possibility is that minor changes in histone modification are not detectable by our assay, although such changes have been documented using biochemical approaches. Another possibility is that chromatin on the scale observed here may not be primarily mediated by changes in the acetylation and/or methylation of histones, but rather other modifications such as ADP-ribosylation (Tulin and Spradling, 2003
), for which we are in the process of assaying. Also, the lack of changes may represent a form of memory in the histone code. Indeed, we are actively investigating the possibility of ligand-dependent delays in large-scale chromatin modification in hormone-switching experiments. It is also possible that, direct single-cell analyses give different results than cell-population-based biochemical (ChIP) studies that average results from millions of cells. In this vein, the ER molecular dynamics reported here, as with GR (McNally et al., 2000
), differ substantially (range of seconds) from ChIP results (tens of minutes) (Metivier et al., 2003
; Reid et al., 2003
; Shang et al., 2000
). Finally, it is possible that analyses beyond 2-hour time points can more readily show changes in histone modifications. Development of quantitative imaging approaches to better assess histone modifications at the PRL-array are required to help address this issue. Further, analyses of similarly created, hormonally responsive transcription biosensor lines containing other nuclear receptor-targeted arrays will also assist in better understanding these issues.
Accumulating evidence supports a non-ligand-dependent transcription function for ER (reviewed in Coleman and Smith, 2001
). Thus, whereas it was not surprising to frequently observe non-liganded ER interacting with the arrays, it was interesting that unliganded receptor appeared to mediate significantly higher level of colocalizing reporter mRNA. Notably, there is a significant change in mobility of unliganded GFP-ER in the nucleoplasm versus over the PRL array (<1 second versus
12 seconds, respectively). Ligand-dependent activation data are consistent with an increase in the number of cells with GFP-ER targeted arrays after treatment with E2 (from
75% to >99%, supplementary material Fig. S2C).
Together, both FRAP and iFRAP data show that the fluorescently tagged nuclear receptor ER and the POU-class activator Pit-1 exhibit short resident times on a promoter-enhancer-based array, similar to the GFP-GR results reported using both the MMTV (McNally et al., 2000
) and HIV array (Bosisio et al., 2006
) models. An advantage in this system is the opportunity to document the molecular dynamics under conditions of both antagonists and agonist. In the case of ER and the PRL array, it was striking to find that ligand significantly influenced its time of residence. Whereas FRAP data from our lab (Stenoien et al., 2001b
) and others (Reid et al., 2003
) have shown that intra-nuclear mobility of ER is regulated by ligand, proteasome function or ATP, these data reflect the sum of multiple interactions in the nuclear volume that contains (spatially) few ER target genes. Nevertheless, we were surprised that E2 did not significantly change the `dwell time' over transcriptionally active array by standard FRAP. This result might represent a canceling out of putative, E2-mediated changes of (1) on- and off-rates of DNA-binding, (2) ER dimerization, (3) protein recruitment or, (4) proteasome-mediated turnover. Although we addressed potential trivial caveats of array size influencing mobility values using FRAPintra-array, we feel it is clearer to interpret ligand effects using the more focused koff data obtained from iFRAP. Our results from this approach show that the array dwell time is significantly increased after E2 treatment compared with vehicle or 4HT. This would be consistent with E2 promoting productive (additional) interactions at target promoters rather than increasing promoter binding. Differential GFP-ER array-dwell-time might represent assembly and disassembly of the focal and, probably very transient, nuclear receptor complexes, representing important mechanistic steps in regulating transcription and associated large-scale chromatin alterations. We interpret these live cell findings of activation- or repression-associated ER to be an important extension of the previously supported hit-and-run model of transcription activation by ligand-activated GR at the MMTV array (McNally et al., 2000
). We also noticed significant agreement in the beaded morphology of activated and extended PRL loci (Fig. 1, supplementary material Fig. S1) with those bearing the MMTV array (Muller et al., 2001
).
Our results using truncated receptors show that the GFP-ER282 (AF1 plus the DNA-binding domain) is not detectable at the PRL array, suggesting that the DBD is not sufficient for in vivo access to native ER-response elements in a chromosomal environment. Helix-12 appears to be required, presumably for fostering productive ER-protein interactions and array decondensation. We noticed that the rate of nuclear mobility of ER appears to be directly related to the number of functional domains present. The same correlation has been noticed for receptor residency time at the PRL array. The observations that GFP-ER534 interacts with the array only in the presence of E2, and the array remains condensed (and presumably inactive, i.e. no RNAPII recruitment) are consistent with previous in vitro and transient transfection data on this truncated receptor. This underscores the biological relevance of the PRL array-containing cell lines for future studies of ER-Pit-1 synergistic interactions.
Collectively, the data support a stochastic model of nuclear function (Misteli, 2001
; Vermeulen and Houtsmuller, 2002
) because fast (and regulated) ER exhibits altered exchange rates at the chromosomally integrated PRL array. As such, these results do not necessarily support the canonical view of pre-formed, stable holo-complexes recruited to promoters as the principal mechanism of transcription regulation but rather suggest that complex formation can be highly transient in living cells, and stochastically assembled (Peterson, 2003
) influenced by probabilistic interactions. Our current efforts focus on documenting the highly dynamic nature of these interactions and quantitative multiplex read-outs of NR function, particularly through high-throughput screening technologies using high resolution and automated microscopy (Perlman et al., 2004
).
| Materials and Methods |
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The design of the Pit-1-ERE array began with a prolactin promoter enhancer construct (pDm66/Enh) originally described by Smith et al. (Smith et al., 1995
), which consists of a transcriptional fusion of a short region (-66 to +1) of the prolactin (PRL) promoter containing the transcription start site and a high-affinity Pit-1-binding site (1P, Fig. 1A) driving expression of a luciferase (Luc) reporter. Linked upstream is the native distal enhancer of prolactin (-1807 to -1498) that contains four Pit-1 binding sites, 1D, 2D, 3D and 4D (Nelson et al., 1988
), and five EREs (Day et al., 1990
; Day and Maurer, 1989
; Holloway et al., 1995
; Nowakowski and Maurer, 1994
; Seyfred and Gorski, 1990
), PRL1-5 (Fig. 1A). This construct was stably integrated into the chromosomes of HeLa cells (HeLa-PRL-dm66-Enh, e.g. 1XPRL) and tested for Pit-1-ER synergy by transiently expressing one or both of these activators. As expected, expression of Pit-1 or ER alone results in increased levels of luciferase activity over background (seven- or fourfold, respectively, supplementary material Fig. S1B). Interestingly, ER activates this construct in the absence of Pit-1 and E2, which is consistent with GFP-ER interactions with the PRL-integrated array below. In the absence of hormone, exogenous expression of both Pit-1 and ER lead to an approximately twofold induction of luciferase activity compared with that promoted by Pit-1 alone, which increased to a fourfold induction in the presence of E2. These data are in agreement with previous experiments (Day et al., 1990
; Day and Maurer, 1989
; Holloway et al., 1995
; Nowakowski and Maurer, 1994
; Seyfred and Gorski, 1990
), and indicate that this unit would serve well as an integrated reporter in HeLa cells carrying a visible array.
To construct the array-containing plasmids to establish the cell line used in this paper, we first added one unit of the ER-Pit-1 `synergy element' (Fig. 1B) onto the 5'-end of the native enhancer. This element contains one Pit-1-binding site and two EREs (1D, overlapping a full, imperfect site PRL1 and an inverted half site, PRL5, respectively). This complex-binding site (Fig. 1B) was previously shown to be cruial for the transcriptional synergy mediated by Pit-1 and ER (Nowakowski and Maurer, 1994
). The relevant parts of plasmid p1X-PRLLuc, are shown schematically in Fig. 1C. In a separate cloning vector (pBS), reiterative cloning steps generated p2X, 4X, 8X, in which X refers to the number of element repeats in the array. A recombination event generated 13X and subsequent reiterative cloning generated 26X, 52X and 104X. These arrays were transferred into the PRL-Luc plasmids to test for functionality. Transient-transfection assays confirmed the qualitative functionality of three of these constructs (13X, 26X and 52X) with respect to transcription promoted by GFP-Pit-1 (supplementary material Fig. S1A). For integration into the chromosomes of HeLa cells, the Luc reporter was replaced with dsRED2-SKL fluorescent protein, which is similar to the CFP-SKL reporter protein used previously by Spector and co-workers (Tsukamoto et al., 2000
). The SKL peptide represents the amino acids that target proteins to peroxisomes; in our hands, the signal of the dsRED2 reporter is much brighter than that of CFP, and allows an additional color to be used in labeling studies. Here, we describe results from analyses of one of our clonal HeLa lines (number 23) harboring the p52X-PRLdsRed2-Ser-Lys-Leu (SKL) plasmid, referred to throughout this manuscript as PRL-HeLa cells.
FISH and Southern analyses of PRL-HeLa cells
DNA fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) confirmed the integration of the transgene array (e.g. PRL array) that showed an intranuclear focus of signal (Fig. 2B). Colocalization of GFP-ER-Pit1 with DNA-FISH and RNA-FISH focus signals also confirmed the integration of the promoter array and demonstrated protein-DNA interaction and transcriptional activity, respectively (Fig. 2B). Quantitative Southern blotting indicated approximately 200-300 copies of p52X-PRL-dsRED2skl integrated into the HeLa genome (data not shown). These data indicate that the p52X-PRL-dsRed2-SKL-hygro vector integrated into the HeLa genome at a specific locus to form a promoter array that is transcriptionally active and visible through interaction with GFP-ER and/or GFP-Pit-1.
ER and Pit-1 interact with the PRL array separately
To determine whether GFP-ER or GFP-Pit-1 individually interact with the PRL array, single transfections of PRL-HeLa cells were performed. These experiments, originally carried out in OptiMEM (growth-factor-containing minimal essential medium) containing charcoal-stripped serum, showed both GFP-ER and GFP-Pit-1 can target the array individually. To properly assess ligand (ER) or growth factor (Pit-1) stimulation, we grew cells for a minimum of 48 hours in hormone-free stripped and dialyzed serum and DMEM (Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium). Quantitative examination of the number of cells expressing Pit-1 alone (GFP-tagged or untagged) indicated inefficient targeting to the array under hormone-free conditions (data not shown). These data suggest an influence of cell signaling pathways on GFP-Pit-1 interactions with the PRL array, which is consistent with previously reported Pit-1 transcription assays (Xu et al., 1998
).
In contrast to GFP-Pit-1, GFP-ER was capable of targeting the arrays in
75% of the cells in hormone-free medium. Interestingly, E2-treatment (2 hours at 10-8 M; a time and ligand concentration used throughout these studies) resulted in virtually all transfected cells demonstrating targeted arrays by GFP-ER (Fig. 2C). Consistent with our observations in the screens above, when CFP-Pit-1 was co-expressed with YFP-ER in PRL-HeLa cells cultured in hormone-free medium or in OptiMEM with serum, Pit-1 was found to target together with ER at the array (Fig. 2). Thus, in this system, under conditions of minimal global cell signaling, the data indicate that Pit-1 and ER can simultaneously interact with array chromatin. In the experiments reported below, we concentrated on ligand-dependent observations of ER at the array.
Immunolabeling
Antibody labeling was performed as described previously (Stenoien et al., 2000
) using 4% formaldehyde fixation (30 minutes) and indirect labeling with Alexa Fluor-488, -546 or -633 (Molecular Probes) conjugated secondary antibodies. Since the majority of antibodies had previously been mapped to the nuclear compartment, we were able to perform localization experiments without confusing the well-defined dsRED2skl peroxisome signal with antibody label, even when using secondary antibodies with overlapping spectra. DAPI (1 µg/ml) was used to label DNA prior to mounting in Slow Fade (Molecular Probes). Affinity-purified rabbit antibodies against SRC-1 and SRC-3 were a kind gift of Jeimin Wong (Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX); cyclin T, cdk9, BRG-1, RNAPII large subunit, acetylated histone H3 and dimethylated histone H3 (K4 and K9) were obtained from Abcam or Upstate Biotechnology and all used at 1 µg/ml for 1 hour at room temperature or overnight at 4°C.
Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH)
The methods used here, including procedures for non-isotopic probe preparation and fluorescent in situ hybridization, have been published in detail elsewhere (Johnson et al., 1991
; Tam et al., 2002
). Briefly, coverslips with adherent cells were rinsed twice in PBS, dipped in cytoskeleton (CSK) buffer (100 mM NaCl, 300 mM sucrose, 3 mM MgCl2, 10 mM PIPES pH 6.8) (Fey et al., 1986
), extracted on ice for 5 minutes in CSK buffer containing 0.5% Triton X-100 and 2 mM vanadyl-ribonucleoside complex (VRC; Gibco-BRL), rinsed in CSK-VRC buffer, fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde with PBS for 10 minutes, rinsed again in PBS and stored in 0.4% paraformaldehyde at 4°C until use.
Probes substituted with biotin-labeled deoxynucleotides were made by modifications of standard nick-translation procedures (Tam et al., 2002
). For hybridization to DNA, cells were first denatured by incubation in 0.07 M NaOH, 70% EtOH for 5 minutes. This incubation denatures the DNA prior to hybridization and removes RNA. RNA hybridization refers to samples in which the cellular DNA was not heat-denatured, leaving it inaccessible for hybridization. Hybridization to RNA or DNA was carried out overnight at 37°C in rehydration buffer (2 mM VRC, 2 mg/ml BSA, 0.05 g/ml Dextran, and 2x SSC) containing 5 µg/ml probe and 50% formamide. After incubation, samples were rinsed in a dilution series of NaCl-Na-citrate (SSC) buffers, analysed for biotin using streptavidin-conjugated Alexa Fluor-594 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) and rinsed in a dilution series of PBS. Where indicated, cells were counter-stained with 1 mg/ml DAPI (Sigma, St Louis, MO). Coverslips were then mounted on slides in Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA).
To quantify FISH signals, a 20 plane 128x128 (pixels), 0.2 µm Z-stack was collected (constant 100-millisecond exposure). A circular region containing the array was selected and a region of the same size was used to select the background nucleoplasm. Total array associated FISH signal was determined by quantifying the cumulative intensity of the array region after sum projection and background subtraction.
Fixed-cell- and time-lapse-imaging
XFP-fusions and immunofluorescently labeled cells were imaged using a DeltaVision Restoration Microscopy system (Applied Precision, Issaqua, WA) and applying a constrained iterative deconvolution process. Whole nuclear volumes were collected at 0.2 µm Z-steps, and images from select focal planes or 3D-projections were imported into Adobe PhotoShop. Histogram adjustments were made relevant to negative controls, which routinely included non-transfected cells and/or omission of primary antibodies. Live imaging was performed by collecting short Z-stacks (
5-10 focal planes at 300-nm increments); neutral density for the green channel was set at 50% and the images were binned 2x2. Typical exposures were for <1 second, and time points from 3-10 minutes per stack. Projected images from each time point were used to create a QuickTime movie.
Live cell imaging
Cells were grown in 35-mm Delta T dishes (Bioptechs) and secured to a stage adapter for temperature control. HEPES-buffered media was gassed overnight in a 5% CO2 incubator, and circulated through the Delta T dish using a Bioptechs peristaltic pump and inflow-outflow tubing. The temperature was controlled to 37°C (±
0.1 degree); a Bioptechs objective-heating collar was also used (also 37°C). The Delta T dish was covered with a black plastic lid, with room for input-output tubing. For time-lapse imaging, a 63x objective (NA=1.4) was used.
Photobleaching parameters and calculations
For imaging, PRL-HeLa cells were plated and transfected in Delta T dishes. Live cell microscopy was performed using a Zeiss 510 confocal microscope using the 488-nm laser line of the argon laser at 75% of maximal power. In all experiments cells were maintained at 37°C and fresh media containing the appropriate ligand was cycled over the cells. All imaging was done with a 63x objective (NA=1.4) with pinhole set at either 4 Airy units (Au) (FRAP and FRAPintra-array) or 10 Au (i-FRAP). Scanning was bidirectional at the highest possible rate using a 3.5x zoom with laser power attenuated to 1% of bleach intensity. For all experiments, cells were selected for low levels of GFP-ER expression to limit experimental artifacts. For FRAP experiments, a single pre-bleach image was acquired followed by ten iterative bleach pulses of a total duration of 530 milliseconds using a circular bleach region of interest (ROI) of the diameter of either 32 pixels for large arrays or 18 pixels for small arrays. Single-section images were collected every 250 milliseconds for 60 seconds. Relative fluorescence signal in the bleached region was determined by two sequential normalization steps using the mean ROI (It) bleach signals and the mean nucleus signals (Nt):
![]() | (1) |
![]() | (2) |
For FRAPintra-array experiments, five pre-bleach images were collected followed by a single bleach pulse of 220 milliseconds using a circular bleach ROI of the diameter of 13 pixels. Single-section images were collected every 500 milliseconds for 75 seconds. The relative fluorescence signal in the bleached region was determined as above. The unbinding-rate constant and half-time of recovery was calculated by fitting a single-term exponential equation (1-e-kt) to the recovery curve (see Lele et al., 2004
for detailed methods).
Quantitative image analyses by HTM
PRL-HeLa cells transiently expressing GFP-ER were treated with 10 nM E2, 4HT, or ICI for two hours, fixed and DAPI-stained. Cells were imaged using the Cell Lab IC 100 Image Cytometer (Beckman Coulter) with a Nikon 40x Plan S Fluor 0.90 NA objective. Two channels were imaged: channel 0 (DAPI) was used to find the focus and nuclei and channel 1 was used to image GFP-ER. A proprietary algorithm (GPCR) developed at Beckman Coulter was used to identify and quantify the GFP-ER targeted PRL array. The parameters for the GPCR algorithm were: object scale = 30 and minimum peak-height = 10. Foci identified by the GPCR algorithm are masked. The area of the mask in pixels is the measure of PRL array size. Channel 1 was offset 2 microns from the DAPI focus for cells in all treatment conditions. This offset provided the greatest number of in focus arrays identified by the GPCR algorithm. After image acquisition and application of the GPCR algorithm the total cell populations for each treatment were progressively filtered (gated) using the same criteria. Nuclei clusters, mitotic cells and apoptotic cells were filtered from the total cell population using an intersection of DNA-content and DNA-cluster gates. In addition, low GFP-ER-expression gates and low aggregate-number-gates were generated and applied to produce the final cell population to be analyzed. From the final population of cells, the array size was determined using the GPCR mask. The images and masks were visually inspected for accuracy. Unpaired Student's t-tests assuming equal variance were performed to determine statistical significance (two-tailed, P<0.05).
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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* These authors contributed equally to this work ![]()
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