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P-Element Repression in Drosophila melanogaster by Variegating Clusters of P-lacZ-white Transgenes
Stéphane Ronsseraya, Antoine Boivina, and Dominique Anxolabéhèreaa Laboratoire "Dynamique du Génome et Evolution," Institut Jacques Monod, UMR7592, CNRS-Universités Paris 6 et 7, 75251 Paris Cedex 05, France
Corresponding author: Stéphane Ronsseray, Laboratoire “Dynamique du Génome et Evolution,” Institut Jacques Monod, Université Paris 7, 2 place Jussieu,75251 Paris Cedex 05, France., ronsseray{at}ijm.jussieu.fr (E-mail)
Communicating editor: M. J. SIMMONS
| ABSTRACT |
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In Drosophila, clusters of P transgenes (P-lac-w) display a variegating phenotype for the w marker. In addition, X-ray-induced rearrangements of chromosomes bearing such clusters may lead to enhancement of the variegated phenotype. Since P-lacZ transgenes in subtelomeric heterochromatin have some P-element repression abilities, we tested whether P-lac-w clusters also have the capacity to repress P-element activity in the germline. One cluster (T-1), located on a rearranged chromosome (T2;3) and derived from a line bearing a variegating tandem array of seven P-lac-w elements, partially represses the dysgenic sterility (GD sterility) induced by P elements. This cluster also strongly represses in trans the expression of P-lacZ elements in the germline. This latter suppression shows a maternal effect. Finally, the combination of variegating P-lac-w clusters and a single P-lacZ reporter inserted in subtelomeric heterochromatic sequences at the X chromosome telomere (cytological site 1A) leads to strong repression of dysgenic sterility. These results show that repression of P-induced dysgenic sterility can be elicited in the absence of P elements encoding a polypeptide repressor and that a transgene cluster can repress the expression of a single homologous transgene at a nonallelic position. Implications for models of transposable element silencing are discussed.
THE P-transposable element is a recent invader of natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster (![]()
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The P cytotype represses transcription from the P promoter (![]()
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The ability of the P-element family to repress its own activity was first interpreted as resulting from the synthesis of polypeptides encoded by various P elements. ![]()
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However, P repression may not depend exclusively on the production of P-encoded repressor polypeptides (![]()
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The repression ability of the telomeric P elements at cytological site 1A is sensitive to the dose of HP1 (![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Drosophila stocks:
Cantony is a typical M strain (![]()
Harwich-2 is a strong P strain. The subline used here shows >80 P labels by in situ hybridization on polytene chromosomes. It carries an unidentified autosomal recessive marker (sepia-colored eye), which appeared spontaneously in the stock.
Lk-P(1A):
This line carries two autonomous P elements inserted in TAS at the X chromosome telomere (cytological site 1A; ![]()
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BQ16/Cy, BC69/Cy, and ABOO/Cy: These three lines carry a P-lacZ-rosy enhancer-trap insertion (P[lac, ry+]A, renamed P{A92} in Flybase) at different sites on the second chromosome. The lacZ coding sequence is fused in frame with the first 587 bp of P, a sequence that includes exon 0 and part of exon 1 of the P element. ß-Galactosidase staining is mostly nuclear since the 5' part of the P element carries a nuclear localization signal. These insertions express ß-galactosidase activity in the germline tissues of the ovaries and testes (J. L. COUDERC and F. A. LASKI, personal communication). In addition, ABOO is expressed in the somatic follicle cells. The genes adjacent to these insertions are still unidentified except for the BC69 insertion, which is near the gene vasa.
R3-29: This P-lacZ insertion, located in 1A-B on the X chromosome, is expressed only in late stage nurse cells. The genes adjacent to this insertion are unidentified.
P-Co-1: This line carries a homozygous viable insertion of pCo (P-white-otu-lacZ; see below) on the third chromosome (87A-B, according to an inverse PCR cloning procedure; DDBL/EMBL/GenBank accession no. AC007889). ß-Galactosidase expression in this transgene is driven by the otu promoter and is therefore strongly detected in both nurse cells and the mature oocyte. The staining is cytoplasmic because the ß-galactosidase encoded by this construct does not possess a nuclear localization signal.
P-1039:
cn1
; ry506.This line, provided by Allan Spradling, carries a P-lacZ-ry transgene inserted at 60B. This transgene is strongly expressed in the female germline (nurse and follicle cells).
P-1152:
P[ry+t7.2 = lArB]A171.1F1; ry506 (synonym WG-1152). This line, from Walter Gehring, carries a P-lacZ-ry-adh construct at cytological site 1A. It is inserted in TAS (![]()
P-lac-w clusters:
Seven lines with different numbers of P-lacZ-white elements (P[lacZP/I.W w+mC ampR ori = lacw]; ![]()
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P-605:
y w;
. This line carries an insertion of a P-lacZ-white enhancer trap at 39E on chromosome 2.
w; T-1/Cy Roi; P-Co-1: This line carries both the T-1 cluster on the second chromosome and the P-Co-1 insertion on the third chromosome. The balancer of the second chromosome carries two dominant markers, Curly and Roi.
wm4; Su(var)(205)5/Cy; +/+:
This stock carries a Su(var)205 mutant allele, which encodes only the first 10 amino acids of the HP1 protein (![]()
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Making of the pCo plasmid:
The otu promoter was amplified by PCR from the pCOG plasmid (![]()
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Southern blot analysis:
Genomic DNA was extracted as described previously (![]()
Gonadal dysgenesis assay:
The ability of lines to repress the occurrence of GD sterility was measured by the A* assay (![]()
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Repression of P-lacZ expression in ovaries:
G1 females derived from a cross between individuals from a tested line and individuals from lines bearing a P-lacZ transgene were examined by staining for their ability to repress P-lacZ expression in the ovaries. Staining of ovaries to detect lacZ expression was performed as described in ![]()
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Assay of the Su(var)205 mutant allele effect on the ability of T-1 to repress a transgene in the germline:
Females with the genotype w; T-1/Cy Roi; P-Co-1 were crossed with wm4; Su(var)2055/Cy; +/+ males at 25°. G1 females bearing both the T-1 and the P-Co-1 transgenes (phenotype [Roi+]) as well as the Su(var)2055 mutant allele (phenotype [Cy+]) were compared to their sisters [Cy Roi+] for lacZ expression in ovaries. As a positive control of lacZ expression, G1 females that inherited the P-Co-1 insertion but not the cluster (phenotype [Cy Roi]) were also stained.
Statistical analysis:
The repression abilities as measured by GD sterility percentages were compared using the nonparametric Mann-Whitney test performed on A* assay replicates.
| RESULTS |
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Molecular comparison of the clusters:
X-ray irradiation, performed on the line BX2, led to the recovery of the T-1 line (![]()
P repression capacities of the clusters:
The ability of the lines to repress P-element activity was tested with four different assays.
(a) Repression of GD A* sterility (Table 1, left): G1 females reared at 29° and generated from the cross of M females (Cantony) with strong P males (Harwich-2) are sterile due to atrophy of the gonads (100% gonadal dysgenesis). Conversely, females with the P cytotype [Harwich-2 or Lk-P(1A)] crossed with strong P males produce G1 females with trivial percentages of GD sterility (0.3 and 1.1%, respectively) due to the repressive component transmitted by the P females. Lines with a single P-lacZ do not significantly repress GD sterility (see P-1152, P-605, and 6-2). Among lines carrying tandem arrays of P-lac-w transgenes, only one represses GD sterility. The exception is the T-1 line, which partially but significantly represses the occurrence of dysgenic sterility (74.3% GD). The comparison of the T-1 repression ability with that of the M control (Cantony) is highly significant (P < 0.01) as judged by the Mann-Whitney test. In addition, for some of the GD assay replicate tests (16 out of 20) performed with T-1, the G1 females bearing the cluster [Cy+] and their siblings lacking the cluster [Cy] were dissected separately. Similar percentages of GD sterility were found for the two kinds of progeny: [Cy+], m = 77.2%, s = 15.5, n = 16; [Cy], m = 79.3%, s = 16.6, n = 16. This shows that G1 females that did not inherit the T-1 cluster nonetheless inherited the capacity to repress GD.
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(b) Combination effect between tested lines and a P-lacZ telomeric insertion:
The combination of a telomeric transgene with regulatory P elements results in a combination effect, i.e., an enhancement of the repression ability of the regulatory P elements (![]()
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Taken together, these results show that a cluster (T-1) can elicit a significant repression of dysgenic sterility by itself and that the combination of a cluster (four copies or more) with a telomeric P-lacZ leads to enhanced levels of repression. In addition, strong repression (21.0% GD) can be reached by combining T-1 with P-1152.
(c) Repression of a P-lacZ element in the germline:
The BQ16 P-lacZ insertion was used in this assay. In an M context, this insertion is strongly expressed in the nurse cells and in the oocyte (Cantony, Fig 3A). G1 females from the crosses between Lk-P(1A) females and BQ16 males strongly repressed lacZ activity in the germline (Fig 3B). However, weak staining in follicle cells (due to BQ16) is still detected. Such a restriction of Lk-P(1A) repression ability to germline tissue has previously been shown (![]()
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(d) Repression of various P-lacZ insertions: We tested whether germline silencing by the T-1 line is restricted to the BQ16 insertion or whether it can be extended to other transgenes. We tested four other P-lacZ insertions that are expressed in the germline. ABOO, BC69, and P-1039 are located on the second chromosome and R3-29 is located on the X chromosome. The expression pattern of each insertion was determined in the ovaries of female progeny from crosses between males from lines bearing these insertions and Cantony females (Fig 4A, Fig C, Fig E, and Fig G). In parallel, the same males were crossed with T-1 females (Fig 4B, Fig D, Fig F, and Fig H). In each case, the T-1 cluster completely repressed the activity of the P-lacZ in the nurse cells. T-1 did not show any repression of ABOO and P-1039 expression in somatic follicle cells (Fig 4D and Fig H).
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Finally, we used a different construct as a target to test whether the proximity of the promoter driving LacZ expression and P sequences is a necessary condition for silencing to occur. The P-Co-1 line contains a transgene named P-Co (see MATERIALS AND METHODS and Fig 5E) in which lacZ is not fused in frame with the 5' P sequence but is driven by the otu promoter. In this construct, the otu promoter is located at a central position between white and lacZ, i.e., >3 kb away from the P sequences. Because of the otu promoter, LacZ is strongly expressed in the germline (Fig 5A). The transgene is completely repressed by P-1152 and T-1 (Fig 5B and Fig C). However, P-Co-1 is not repressed by the full-sized P elements of Lk-P(1A) (Fig 5D).
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Taken together, these results show that the T-1 cluster located at 50C on the second chromosome can repress germline expression of another P-lacZ, located either on the same chromosome at a different site (BC69 in 35C) or on a different chromosome (R3-29, on the X chromosome; P-Co-1 on chromosome 3). Therefore, the T-1 cluster causes homologous transgene silencing on a target located at a nonallelic position. In fact, silencing was found with all the targets tested, regardless of their insertion site (and therefore the neighboring enhancer) and regardless of their structure with respect to the position of the promoter driving LacZ expression. This last point suggests that this silencing can result not only from the P-element sequences shared by the silencer and the target, but also from the shared lacZ sequences. Such a mechanism is consistent with the lack of significant repression of P-Co-1 by Lk-P(1A) P elements, which have no lacZ sequences.
Maternal effect of the trans-silencing:
The regulatory properties of the naturally occurring autonomous P elements at 1A show a strong maternal effect for both the repression of dysgenic sterility (![]()
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Assay of the Su(var)205 mutant allele effect on the T-1 repressive properties:
We have tested whether the trans-silencing induced by T-1 is affected by the dose of Su(var)205 that encodes HP1. Indeed, it is known that the variegating phenotype of the clusters is suppressed by reducing the dose of HP1 (![]()
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| DISCUSSION |
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Repression of P-induced dysgenic sterility in the absence of a repressor-encoding P element:
The P-element family is able to establish the conditions for repression of its own activity. Transformation of an M genome with P elements can induce the development of P repression over generations (![]()
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It appears also that the genomic location of the P element is crucial with regard to its repression capacity. Two copies of autonomous P elements at the X chromosome telomere exhibit strong repression ability, as strong as that of a P strain carrying 50 P elements scattered throughout the genome (![]()
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The clusters of P-lac-w transgenes analyzed here were suspected to share some properties with telomeric transgenes because they are also heterochromatinized due to their repeated structure (![]()
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Comparison between BX2 and T-1:
Both the T-1 and BX2 clusters have repressive properties in the occurrence of dysgenic sterility when combined with the telomeric P-lacZ transgene in the P-1152 line. However, T-1 has stronger abilities than BX2. In particular, T-1 induces strong trans-silencing of a P-lacZ transgene in the germline, whereas BX2 does not. The T-1 line was derived upon X-ray treatment of the BX2 line (![]()
If we compare the variegating eye color phenotype of the T-1 and BX2 lines in flies, the T-1 cluster appears to be much more heterochromatinized than the BX2 cluster. Although the in situ hybridization label indicates that the T-1 cluster is not close to a centromere, it remains possible that the X-ray mutagenesis performed on BX2 flies resulted in the translocation of a heterochromatic block in the vicinity of the cluster of transgenes. Precedence for this exists in the case of a translocation resembling that which occurred at the brownD allele, which was generated upon insertion of a large block (1 Mb) of centric heterochromatin inside the brown gene on the second chromosome (![]()
What is the mechanism of P repression by transgene clusters?
Does the repression ability of T-1 involve a diffusible product of the cluster, an altered structure of the chromatin, or both? Under the diffusible product hypothesis, this product is probably RNA rather than protein since the T-1 cluster has no detectable expression in the nurse cells (Fig 3L). RNA interference may occur in Drosophila (![]()
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However, it remains possible that a change in the chromatin at the level of the cluster contributes to the system. In such a model, telomeric sequences and the cluster could pair with homologous sequences in the genome and inactivate them in trans, either by trans-heterochromatinization or by relocalization of the sequences to another compartment of the nucleus. Alternatively, altered chromatin structure could be responsible for the production of aberrant RNAs with the ability to induce RNA interference (![]()
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Trans-silencing effect: toward a general homology-dependent phenomenon:
We have previously shown that the ability of a telomeric P insertion to repress the expression of a P transgene in the germline requires some length of homology between the two P sequences (![]()
3 kb), suggesting that this kind of suppression can be induced by a non-P-element sequence. We are currently investigating whether a hobo-lacZ transgene, expressed in the germline, can be repressed by a telomeric P-lacZ, due simply to the lacZ sequence homology. Trans-silencing induced by telomeric sequences could in fact represent a general phenomenon involved in some cellular functions of the germline. Such a suppression might have been adopted by the P-element family after its recent invasion of natural D. melanogaster populations, allowing its own regulation.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Doug Dorer, Manika Pal-Bhadra, Utpal Bhadra, and James Birchler for personal communications. We thank J. L. Couderc for providing P-lacZ lines. We thank A. M. Pret and S. Charlat for their help in the preparation of the manuscript. We thank the communicating editor M. J. Simmons and an anonymous reviewer for their valuable comments and suggestions on the manuscript. S.R. thanks Jocelyne Besombe for helpful suggestions. We thank the Bloomington and Umea Stock centers for providing stocks and FlyBase for helpful informations. This work was supported by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (UMR 7592), by the program Génome, by the Association pour le Recherche sur le Cancer, and by the Universités Paris 6-Pierre et Marie Curie and Paris 7-Denis Diderot (Institut Jacques Monod-UMR7592, Dynamique du Génome et Evolution). This work was carried out in compliance with the current laws governing genetic experimentation in France and in the United States.
Manuscript received December 12, 2000; Accepted for publication September 24, 2001.
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