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First published online July 14, 2003; 10.1105/tpc.013995 American Society of Plant Biologists Regulation and Processing of Maize Histone Deacetylase Hda1 by Limited Proteolysis
a Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Innsbruck, Medical School, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail peter.loidl{at}uibk.ac.at; fax 43-512-507-2866
A maize histone deacetylase gene was identified as a homolog of yeast Hda1. The predicted protein corresponds to a previously purified maize deacetylase that is active as a protein monomer with a molecular weight of 48,000 and is expressed in all tissues of germinating embryos. Hda1 is synthesized as an enzymatically inactive protein with an apparent molecular weight of 84,000 that is processed to the active 48-kD form by proteolytic removal of the C-terminal part, presumably via a 65-kD intermediate. The enzymatically inactive 84-kD protein also is part of a 300-kD protein complex of unknown function. The proteolytic cleavage of ZmHda1 is regulated during maize embryo germination in vivo. Expression of the recombinant full-length protein and the 48-kD form confirmed that only the smaller enzyme form is active as a histone deacetylase. In line with this finding, we show that the 48-kD protein is able to repress transcription efficiently in a reporter gene assay, whereas the full-length protein, including the C-terminal part, lacks full repression activity. This report on the processing of Hda1-p84 to enzymatically active Hda1-p48 demonstrates that proteolytic cleavage is a mechanism to regulate the function of Rpd3/Hda1-type histone deacetylases.
Post-translational modifications of core histones, including acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, ubiquitination, and possibly others, represent essential elements of the epigenetic histone code (Loidl, 1988 Among the different types of histone modifications, acetylation is the most extensively characterized. Highly conserved Lys residues in the N-terminal extensions of core histones can be acetylated post-translationally by histone acetyltransferases; the modification is not stable and can be reversed by histone deacetylases. Both enzymes exist as multiple proteins that belong to distinct protein families.
Three main families of histone deacetylases have been identified in plants (Graessle et al., 2001
Although many research reports have been published in recent years on the impact of histone deacetylases for gene regulation in yeast and vertebrate systems, little is known about the specific functions of these enzymes in plants. It has been shown that histone deacetylation cooperates with DNA methylation in the silencing of rRNA genes in allotetraploid Brassica (Pikaard, 1999
Maize embryos represent one of the best-characterized systems with respect to histone deacetylases in biochemical terms (Lusser et al., 2001 Here, we identify the former HD1A as an Hda1-related enzyme. ZmHda1 encodes a 77-kD protein that is post-translationally processed by proteolysis to a catalytically active 48-kD enzyme. Protein microsequencing, mass spectrometry, in vitro protease digestion, immunological analysis, and the expression of truncated versions of ZmHda1 clearly show that the C-terminal portion of the protein has to be removed for the enzyme to gain its enzymatic activity. This is true as well for the ability of ZmHda1 to repress gene transcription, because the C-terminal part of the protein inhibits the transcription repression activity.
Cloning of ZmHda1 A region of the yeast Hda1 protein highly conserved among various organisms was used to design appropriate oligonucleotide primers for reverse transcriptasemediated PCR amplification of a putative maize homolog, starting from mRNA of germinating embryos at 72 h after seed imbibition. Screening of the maize genome database (www.zmdb.iastate.edu) with the resulting product identified an EST clone of 661 bp that was used for the amplification of the 3' and 5' ends using the rapid amplification of cDNA ends protocol (Frohman et al., 1988
Arabidopsis contains a homologous gene (AtHda5) that encodes an open reading frame of 660 amino acids with 57% sequence identity and 86% sequence similarity. Another related Arabidopsis gene, which encodes a small protein of only 252 amino acids (Atg61050), contains a short amino acid stretch (17 amino acids) that is homologous with the N terminus of ZmHda1 and AtHda5; the major portion of this protein is homologous with the C-terminal part of AtHda5 (57.5% sequence identity) and the C-terminal part of ZmHda1 (47.6% sequence identity). In maize, an EST clone for a short polypeptide with 141 amino acids is available (EST HDA115) that is homologous with ZmHda1 (56% sequence identity). Neither short sequence (Atg61050 or EST HDA115) contains the sequence of the catalytic histone deacetylase domain (Figure 1).
ZmHda1 mRNA is expressed in root, leaf, and shoot tissues, as demonstrated by RNA gel blot analysis (Figure 2A). The hybridization signal (at
In a parallel approach, highly purified yet unidentified maize histone deacetylase p48 (formerly designated HD1A; Brosch et al., 1996
At that point, the discrepancy between the molecular weights of the putative maize Hda1 homolog and the purified ZmHda1-p48 remained unsolved. Therefore, polyclonal antibodies were raised against a synthetic peptide corresponding to ZmHda1-p48 amino acids 83 to 96 (Table 1). These antibodies were used for further studies of partially purified ZmHda1-p48. It should be noted that ZmHda1-p48 is present almost exclusively in a soluble fraction during chromatin preparation, together with cytoplasmic proteins (Brosch et al., 1996
Biochemical and Immunological Characterization of ZmHda1
To determine whether the observed protein sizes could be the result of differentially spliced mRNAs or alternative transcription start sites, RNA gel blot analysis was performed with various RNA preparations from different tissues and various germination stages of embryos using DNA probes corresponding to the 5' end, an internal region, and the 3' end of the ZmHda1 cDNA. Regardless of which probe was used, hybridization under low-stringency conditions always revealed a single transcript at
To determine whether enzymatically inactive ZmHda1-p84 is present in a higher molecular weight protein complex, we subjected the soluble fraction of 500 g of germinating maize embryos (72 h after the start of germination) to Q-Sepharose Big Beads chromatography, pooled those fractions containing ZmHda1 enzyme activity (but not ZmRpd3), and applied the concentrated pool to S200 gel filtration chromatography. Chromatographic elution revealed a unique histone deacetylase activity peak at 45 kD; no extra enzyme activity peak was detected (Figure 4A). When chromatographic fractions were immunoblotted with anti-ZmHda1 antibodies (peptide antibody), a strong immunosignal of ZmHda1-p84 was observed at a molecular weight of
Fraction 59 from the S75 gel filtration chromatography (peak of enzyme activity; Figure 3A) was concentrated by ultrafiltration and used for immunoprecipitation with anti-ZmHda1 peptide antibodies coupled to protein ASepharose. The major portion of ZmHda1-p48 was precipitated into the pellet (data not shown). This result was substantiated by enzymatic activity determinations, which showed that histone deacetylase activity was precipitated by the anti-ZmHda1 antibodies, whereas a control precipitation (protein ASepharose alone) did not result in precipitated enzyme activity. When crude protein extracts, which contain very low amounts of ZmHda1-p48 but large quantities of ZmHda1-p84 and ZmHda1-p65, were used for immunoprecipitation, >50% of the enzymatically inactive, high molecular weight forms of ZmHda1 (p65 and p84) were precipitated specifically into the pellet; however, no histone deacetylase enzymatic activity could be precipitated, confirming that the high molecular weight ZmHda1 forms are enzymatically inactive. The same result was obtained when those fractions from S75 gel filtration chromatography that contained only ZmHda1-p84 and ZmHda1-p65 were used for immunoprecipitation (data not shown).
Expression of Recombinant ZmHda1 in the Baculovirus Expression System Therefore, we expressed a full-length ZmHda1 (amino acids 4 to 701) as well as a truncated version (amino acids 23 to 429), each fused to a 6xHis tag, using the baculovirus expression system (Figure 5A). When recombinant proteins were recovered on Talon affinity resin, it became evident that the full-length version of ZmHda1 was enzymatically inactive, whereas the truncated version (ZmHd1a-p48) exhibited catalytic activity (Figure 5B).
Recombinant full-length and truncated ZmHda1 versions were subjected to mass spectrometry, and the results were consistent with the hypothesis that ZmHda1-p48 is derived from ZmHda1-p84 by proteolytic cleavage.
Protease Digestion Experiments
When the same experiment was performed with a chromatographic fraction (S75 gel filtration chromatography) containing mainly the 65-kD intermediate form (fractions 52 and 53; Figure 3), this 65-kD protein was converted to the low molecular weight enzyme form p48 (Figure 6B). During the time course of this digestion, histone deacetylase activity increased significantly, except for during prolonged incubation periods (Figure 6C). These results are in agreement with the hypothesis that inactive ZmHda1-p84 is converted to the well-characterized p48 enzyme form via the formation of a p65 intermediate. To exclude the possibility of nonspecific artifacts, we performed parallel digestion experiments with partially purified maize HD2 and ZmRpd3 (the former HD1B). Carboxypeptidase digestion did not stimulate enzymatic activity; rather, it caused a loss of enzymatic activity (data not shown).
ZmHda1-p84 and ZmHda1-p48 during Maize Embryo Germination
Transcriptional Repression Activity of ZmHda1 Constructs Because various histone deacetylases have been shown to be involved in transcription repression, we wished to determine whether (1) ZmHda1 could inhibit transcription when tethered to a reporter gene in vivo, (2) this repression is dependent on histone deacetylase activity, and (3) the C-terminal part affects repression activity. To this end, transcription experiments were performed using the tetracycline (TET) system (Bohner et al., 1999
The TET system is based on the targeting of TET repressor (TetR) fusion proteins to TET binding sites upstream of a minimal promoter, which directs the transcription of the -glucuronidase (GUS) gene (Gatz, 1997
Four constructs were made to express the full-length protein (DAg), which lacks the N-terminal 139 amino acids but contains the histone deacetylase domain, and the C-terminal part (DAmc), the histone deacetylase core domain alone (DAm), or the histone deacetylase core domain containing a mutation of His-146 to Ala (DAmut), which is believed to be critical for catalytic activity (Taunton et al., 1996
Our results show that VP16 strongly activated GUS activity and that the activity was not reduced significantly by the presence of competing TetR-Zein (Figure 8). Conversely, cotransformation of the DAm construct of ZmHda1, representing the core catalytic domain, resulted in an approximately fourfold decrease of GUS activity compared with cotransformation of the Zein protein. Therefore, the ZmHda1 core domain is able to repress transcription in this system to almost the same extent as is maize ZmRpd3 (Rossi et al., 2003
Histone modifications, in particular histone acetylation, play a fundamental role in chromatin structure and function. Therefore, the substrate molecules, the N-terminal extensions of the core histones, and the enzymes (histone acetyltransferases and deacetylases) are characterized by a high degree of conservation during evolution. More surprising, plants have developed enzymes and regulatory mechanisms with respect to histone deacetylation distinct from fungi and animals. The most prominent is the HD2 family of histone deacetylases (Lusser et al., 1997
Limited proteolysis as a means of generating biologically active molecules from inactive pro-forms is a well-known regulatory mechanism (Seidah and Chrétien, 1997 At present, we cannot determine whether a specific endoprotease is responsible for the proteolysis of the inactive p84 to the enzymatically active p48 or an autocatalytic processing mechanism might be induced by pH changes or by physiological changes during embryo development (e.g., dehydration/rehydration). However, we favor the idea of a specific endoprotease, because the conversion from p84 to p48 could not be mimicked in one step by exoproteases in vitro; proteolytic conversion of native ZmHda1-p84 led only to ZmHda1-p65 without a significant increase of enzymatic activity. Even high amounts of carboxypeptidase did not lead to further processing of p65 to p48. By contrast, when chromatographic fractions of maize extracts containing predominantly ZmHda1-p65 were used for digestion, the p65 was converted readily to p48 with a concomitant increase in histone deacetylase activity. We assume that p84 is converted to p65 by proteolysis, but most likely it has to be modified by (de)phosphorylation in vivo before it can be processed further into the enzymatically active 48-kD enzyme form. The lack of this specific phosphorylation is the most likely reason why we failed to convert p84 directly to p48 under our in vitro conditions.
This assumption is supported by earlier findings that dephosphorylation of maize extracts or purified ZmHda1-p48 results in a significant increase of histone deacetylase activity with a concomitant change of substrate specificity, in particular toward acetylated H4 isoforms (Kölle et al., 1999
Further experimental support for the proteolytic cleavage of ZmHda1 in vivo comes from the detection of a distinct protein in extracts of maize embryos at selected times after germination by an antibody raised against the C-terminal portion of ZmHda1 (the putative cleavage product); a protein migrating at Our transactivation experiments using different constructs of ZmHda1 also support the hypothesis that the truncated version of p48 is the biologically active protein. Full-length ZmHda1 was not effective in transcriptional repression compared with the catalytic core domain (which lacks the C-terminal portion of the protein); the same was true for the construct containing the catalytic deacetylase domain and the C-terminal part. This is a strong indication that the transcriptional repression function of ZmHda1-p48 is attributable to the enzymatic function as a deacetylase. Further evidence for this assumption was provided by analysis of the effect of the mutation of His-146 and trichostatin treatment. His-146 is a conserved residue in the catalytic domain that is essential for histone deacetylase activity. Both mutation of His-146 and trichostatin treatment strongly reduced the transcriptional repression effect. Therefore, we conclude that the C-terminal part of ZmHda1 has to be removed for full biological activity. This conclusion is in agreement with our biochemical results.
However, at present, we cannot definitively exclude an alternative explanation. One may assume that the proteolytic cleavage by an endoprotease occurs during the extraction of the enzyme, giving rise to a cleavage product with histone deacetylase activity in vitro. The intact ZmHda1-p84 organized in a 300-kD complex may be active only on nucleosomes or even on still obscure nonhistone substrates but not on free histones. It is known that the activity of different chromatin-remodeling complexes containing SWI/SNF-related ATPases can be triggered by different substrates; the ATPase activity of some SWI/SNF complexes is stimulated only by nucleosomes or (H3H4)2 tetramers, whereas the ATPase activity of others also is stimulated by free DNA (Boyer et al., 2000 Another argument for a specific endoproteolytic cleavage of ZmHda1 in vivo is based on our observation that enzymatically active p48 appears at a distinct stage of embryo germination. Again, we cannot completely exclude the possibility that the responsible protease is induced at that stage of germination, giving rise to p48 during enzyme preparation. However, this is unlikely because the conversion of ZmHda1-p84 to ZmHda1-p48 occurs irrespective of the method of enzyme extraction (salt extraction, chromatin preparation, with or without protease inhibitors; data not shown). Interestingly, a short protein of unknown function exists in Arabidopsis (Atg61050) that has a high degree of sequence identity to the C-terminal part of ZmHda1 plus a very short N-terminal stretch; however, this protein lacks the catalytic histone deacetylase domain. A possible function of this Arabidopsis protein might be the inhibition of the transcription repression activity of histone deacetylases. In the maize sequence database, an EST clone (EST HDA115; 141 amino acids) is available that displays 56% sequence identity to ZmHda1; however, this truncated sequence lacks the sequence for the catalytic histone deacetylase domain (Figure 1). It is possible that this protein plays a specific regulatory role similar to that of ZmHda1-p84. This protein is certainly distinct from the small Atg61050 of Arabidopsis, because Atg61050 resembles a homolog of the C-terminal part of ZmHda1.
In metazoan systems, Rpd3- and Hda1-related histone deacetylases exist as large multiprotein complexes. In plants, this seems to be different. The two Rpd3-related maize deacetylases both exist as monomeric enzymes or as minimal complexes together with the retinoblastoma-related protein (Lechner et al., 2000 It seems increasingly clear that plants have developed distinct proteins and regulatory mechanisms with respect to histone modifications, most likely as a result of the unique features of plant cells with respect to growth and development. Identification of the endoprotease responsible for the processing of ZmHda1 and its inhibition by drugs or repression of expression will provide further insight into the functional contribution of this type of plant deacetylase.
ZmHda1 cDNA Cloning Total RNA from maize (Zea mays) embryos was used for the generation of cDNA with SuperScript reverse transcriptase (Gibco BRL) according to the manufacturer's general information. For the design of primers, the Hda1 sequence of Saccharomyces cerevisiae was aligned with the sequence of Schizosaccharomyces pombe Clr3, mouse HDA2, human HDAC6, S. cerevisiae Rpd3, and S. cerevisiae Hos2. Consensus regions in the sequences of Hda1-like proteins from these organisms were used to design primers for PCR amplification to screen for a potential homolog of Hda1 in maize. A 158-bp DNA fragment was amplified using primers oHD1 (5'-CCNCCNGGNCAYCAYGC-3') and oHD2r1 (5'-TGNGTNCCRTTNCCRTG-3') for first PCR and oHD2r (5'-GTNCCRTTN- CCRTGRTG-3') for nested PCR. Searching the Maize Genome Database (www.zmdb.iastate.edu) with the 158-bp fragment revealed an EST clone of 661 bp. Primers were designed for amplification of the 3' and 5' ends by the rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) protocol (Frohman et al., 1988
RNA Extraction and RNA Gel Blot Analysis For low-stringency hybridizations, additional probes were synthesized corresponding to the sequence between nucleotide positions 1305 and 2105 (3' probe; primers Anti2 [5'-ATTGGGATCCTTGCAGTGAAGACT- AACTCAAGT-3'] and Anti12r [5'-ATTGCCCGGGTCACAAGGCTCTTGCAGCAGCAGCGTT-3']) and the sequence between positions 73 and 627 (5' probe; primers Akt1 [5'-ATTGCATGCAAGCGCACGCGACGCCCGAC-3'] and Aw25ABr [5'-AAGGATCCTCAGTGAACTGAGAAGAAC- AA-3']). Membranes were incubated in roller tubes overnight at 42°C, and low-stringency washes were performed as follows: twice for 5 min in 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl and 0.015 M sodium citrate) and 0.1% SDS at room temperature and twice for 20 min in 0.1x SSC and 0.1% SDS at 42°C. 2x SSC was used to rinse the membranes. Membranes were subjected to digoxigenin detection according to the manufacturer's recommendations.
Purification of ZmHda1-p48
For biochemical and immunological experiments, ZmHda1 (p84, p65, and p48) was partially purified using Q-Sepharose Big Beads (Pharmacia) chromatography starting with the soluble fraction of 35 g of maize embryos at 72 h after the start of germination. A total of 160 mL of soluble fraction was applied to 50 mL of Q-Sepharose Big Beads. Proteins were eluted with a linear gradient of 200 mL of 0.01 to 0.4 M NaCl at a flow rate of 1 mL/min. Fractions of 4 mL were collected and assayed for histone deacetylase activity using the standard assay (Lechner et al., 2000 For distinct immunoblot experiments, chromatographic fractions were concentrated either by precipitation with trichloroacetic acid or using centrifugal ultrafiltration devices (Centricon; Amicon, Beverly, MA).
Production of Polyclonal Antibodies against ZmHda1 For the production of recombinant proteins for immunization, ZmHda1 constructs were amplified by PCR using gene-specific primers (full-length ZmHda1, 5'-ATTGGGATCCGGATGTGCGCGCACGCGACGCCCGA-3' and 5'-ATTGCCCGGGTCACAAGGCTCTTGCAGCAGCAGCGTT-3'; C-terminal part of ZmHda1, 5'-ATTGGGATCCTTGCAGTGAAGACTAAC- TCAAGT-3' and 5'-ATTGCCCGGGTCACAAGGCTCTTGCAGCAG- CATT-3'). Restriction sites for BamHI and SmaI were used for cloning into pQE32 vector (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). Overexpression of proteins was performed in Escherichia coli (M15; pREP4). Recombinant proteins were purified with Talon affinity resin (Clontech, Palo Alto, CA). Eluted proteins were subjected to SDS-PAGE. Proteins were recovered from Coomassie Brilliant Blue R250stained gel bands and used for the immunization of rabbits.
Immunoblot Analysis and Immunoprecipitation For covalent binding of antibodies onto protein ASepharose, the beads (1 mL) were incubated with 2 mg of purified antibodies (1 h, room temperature, gentle rocking) and washed with 10 volumes of 0.2 M sodium borate, pH 9.0, by centrifugation at 3000g for 5 min. Beads were resuspended in 10 volumes of sodium borate. Ten microliters of beads was removed routinely for analysis by SDS-PAGE. Solid dimethylpimelimidate was added to the beads at a final concentration of 20 mM and mixed on a shaker at room temperature for 30 min. Again, 10 µL of beads was removed for SDS-PAGE analysis. The coupling reaction was stopped by washing the beads once with 0.2 M ethanolamine, pH 8.0, and subsequent incubation with 0.2 M ethanolamine with gentle mixing. Beads were centrifuged as described above and resuspended in PBS with 0.01% merthiolate for storage at 4°C. The efficiency of covalent coupling was checked by SDS-PAGE. After the coupling reaction, the beads should not liberate any Ig heavy chains. If they did, the beads were washed twice with 100 mM Gly, pH 3.0, to remove those antibodies that were only linked to protein A by noncovalent binding.
Aliquots of Superdex S75 gel filtration chromatography fractions were concentrated by ultrafiltration (Centricon-10; Amicon) from 800 to
When crude protein extracts were used for immunoprecipitation experiments, they were prepared as follows. Maize seedlings at 72 h after the start of embryo germination were frozen in liquid nitrogen and ground to powder. Six mL of buffer A (0.5 M NH4Cl, 0.25 mM EDTA, 10 mM 2-mercaptoethanol, and 15 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.9) was added to 3 g of powder. The suspension was homogenized with a potter, stirred on ice for 30 min, and centrifuged at 14,000g for 1 h at 4°C. The supernatant was used as protein extract. Protein concentration was determined according to Bradford (1976)
Carboxypeptidase Digestion
Expression of ZmHda1 Using the Baculovirus Expression System
Protoplast Transfection Experiments
Protein Microsequencing and Mass Spectrometry
For mass spectrometry analysis, in-gel digestion of ZmHda1 was performed with slight modifications according to previously published methods (Wilm et al., 1996
Protein digests were separated using a capillary HPLC system connected online to a mass spectrometer. The solvent delivery system consisted of a Rheos 2000 pump connected to an ERC 3215 degasser (Flux Instruments, Karlskoga, Sweden) running at a flow rate of 80 µL/min, which was reduced to a column flow of Protein digests were analyzed using a LCQ ion-trap instrument (ThermoFinnigan, San Jose, CA) equipped with a nanospray interface. The nanospray voltage was set at 1.6 kV, and the heated capillary was held at 170°C. Tandem mass spectrometry spectra were searched against the Hda1 sequence using SEQUEST (LCQ BioWorks; ThermoFinnigan). Upon request, materials integral to the findings presented in this publication will be made available in a timely manner to all investigators on similar terms for noncommercial research purposes. To obtain materials, please contact A. Pipal, Alexandra.Pipal{at}uibk.ac.at.
Accession Numbers
We thank Gerald Brosch and Hubertus Haas for technical help and numerous discussions. A. Lusser is the recipient of an Austrian Programme for Advanced Research and Technology fellowship from the Austrian Academy of Sciences. This work was supported in part by grants from the Austrian Science Foundation (FWF-P-14528) and the Austrian National Bank (P-7415 and P-9000) to P.L.
Article, publication date, and citation information can be found at www.plantcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1105/tpc.013995. Received May 23, 2003; accepted June 13, 2003.
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