Identifier

etd-06262008-142201

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Department

Biological Sciences

Document Type

Dissertation

Abstract

RNA Polymerase III transcribed tRNA genes are implicated in a wide variety of chromosome organizational functions that includes the ability to act as a boundary to heterochromatic silencing. A tRNA gene has been shown to be a major component of the barrier that prevents spreading of silencing from the HMR locus to the downstream GIT1 gene on chromosome III in S.cerevisiae. Our results suggest that additional proteins are involved in maintaining the boundary function of this tRNA gene. Mutations or deletions of the genes coding for these additional proteins have been shown to either weaken the boundary or enhance silencing. This mutational analysis identified YTA7, a novel bromodomain containing gene, as being required for full barrier activity of the HMR tRNA gene. This provided some of the first evidence demonstrating a role for bromodomain proteins in boundary function. RPD3, a histone deacetylase gene was also identified by our mutational analysis, as when deleted caused an increase in the spread of silencing downstream of the boundary tRNA gene. Our results suggest that this spreading of heterochromatic silencing occurs in spite of this tRNA gene remaining transcriptionally active. This suggests that heterochromatic silencing can bypass active regions along a chromosome to silence downstream genes.

Date

2008

Document Availability at the Time of Submission

Release the entire work immediately for access worldwide.

Committee Chair

Donze, David

DOI

10.31390/gradschool_dissertations.491

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