Identification of Mutant Versions of the Spt16 Histone Chaperone That Are Defective for Transcription-Coupled Nucleosome Occupancy in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

The highly conserved FACT (Facilitates Chromatin Transactions) complex performs essential functions in eukaryotic cells through the reorganization of nucleosomes. During transcription, FACT reorganizes nucleosomes to allow passage of RNA Polymerase II and then assists in restoring these nucleosomes after RNA Polymerase II has passed. We have previously shown, consistent with this function, that Spt16 facilitates repression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae SER3 gene by maintaining nucleosome occupancy over the promoter of this gene as a consequence of intergenic transcription of SRG1 noncoding DNA. In this study, we report the results of a genetic screen to identify mutations in SPT16 that derepress SER3. Twenty-five spt16 mutant alleles were found to derepress SER3 without causing significant reductions in either SRG1 RNA levels or Spt16 protein levels. Additional phenotypic assays indicate that these mutants have general transcription defects related to altered chromatin structure. Our analyses of a subset of these spt16 mutants reveal defects in SRG1 transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy over the SER3 promoter. We provide evidence that these mutants broadly impair transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy at highly transcribed genes but not at lowly transcribed genes. Finally, we show that one consequence shared by these mutations is the reduced binding of mutant Spt16 proteins across SRG1 and other highly transcribed genes. Taken together, our results highlight an important role for Spt16 in orchestrating transcription-coupled nucleosome assembly at highly transcribed regions of the genome, possibly by facilitating the association of Spt16 during this process.

]. Its role in transcription elongation has been particularly well supported by both genetic and biochemical experiments involving yeast and mammalian systems (Formosa 2011). These include the sensitivity of yeast FACT mutants to the transcription elongation inhibitor 6-azauracil, the genetic interaction of these mutants with other known elongation factors, the colocalization of FACT with RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) across transcribed regions of eukaryotic genomes, the physical association of FACT with other transcription elongation factors, and the requirement of human FACT to allow RNA Pol II to transcribe a nucleosomal DNA template in vitro (Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003;Formosa et al. 2001Formosa et al. , 2002Krogan et al. 2002;Orphanides et al. 1998;Simic et al. 2003;Squazzo et al. 2002). Although the precise molecular functions of FACT in transcription elongation remain under investigation, several studies have strongly implicated FACT in facilitating the nucleosome dynamics that occur during transcription elongation. These studies suggest that FACT associates with a nucleosome in front of RNA Pol II resulting in the reorganization of histones that eventually lead to the displacement of H2A-H2B dimers and the passage of RNA Pol II (Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003;McCullough et al. 2011;Orphanides et al. 1998). Once RNA Pol II has passed, FACT is also required to assist in the reassembly of nucleosomes to protect recently transcribed DNA from spurious transcription from cryptic intragenic promoters (Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003;Formosa et al. 2002;Jamai et al. 2009;Orphanides et al. 1999;Schwabish and Struhl 2004;Stuwe et al. 2008;VanDemark et al. 2008).
Although a role for FACT in facilitating transcription-dependent nucleosome dynamics has been well documented, less is known concerning the precise contribution of the individual FACT subunits. Yeast FACT is composed of two proteins, Spt16 and Pob3, that are essential for viability and can bind nucleosomes in vitro when aided by a third protein, the HMG box-containing protein Nhp6 (Formosa et al. 2001;Wittmeyer and Formosa 1997). Pob3 consists of three separate domains defined by limited proteolysis: an N-terminal (NT/D) domain that is thought to be involved in dimerization with Spt16, a middle (M) domain that contains a double pleckstrin homology motif, and an acidic C-terminal (C) domain (Liu et al. 2010;VanDemark et al. 2006). The pleckstrin homology motif has been implicated in assisting the interactions between FACT and RPA, an essential protein involved in DNA replication and repair (VanDemark et al. 2006). Spt16 has been characterized as having four distinct domains, referred to as the N-terminal (NTD), dimerization (D), middle (M), and C-terminal (C) domains (VanDemark et al. 2006(VanDemark et al. , 2008. Structures of Spt16-NTD, the one domain that is dispensable for viability, from both S. cerevisiae and S. pombe have recently been solved by X-ray crystallography, revealing a motif that is structurally similar to bacterial aminopeptidases (Stuwe et al. 2008;VanDemark et al. 2008). Although interactions between the Spt16-NTD and histones H2A, H3, and H4 have been reported, the fact that this domain is expendable for Spt16 functions in vivo suggests that there are likely to be other regions of Spt16 that functionally and physically interact with histones (O'Donnell et al. 2004;VanDemark et al. 2008). The Spt16-D domain is thought to interface with the NT/D domain of Pob3 to form the FACT dimer (VanDemark et al. 2006). Although molecular functions of the Spt16-M domain are not known, mutations altering residues within this domain have resulted in phenotypes indicative of transcription initiation and elongation defects, defects in replication, and defects in cell wall integrity, indicating the functional significance of this domain (Myers et al. 2011;O'Donnell et al. 2009;Stevens et al. 2011). Spt16-C is an acidic domain that is essential for viability whose most 39 end has recently been shown to functionally interact with histone H3 (Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003;Evans et al. 1998). Recent in vitro analysis of the human Spt16-C domain has implicated this domain in the active displacement of nucleosomal DNA during nucleosome reorganization .
We have recently provided evidence that FACT contributes to a new mechanism of gene regulation operating at the S. cerevisiae SER3 gene based on its ability to promote transcription-coupled nucleosome dynamics Martens et al. 2004). In the presence of serine, transcription of intergenic SRG1 DNA initiates 59 of the adjacent SER3 gene, which encodes an enzyme for serine biosynthesis (Martens et al. 2004(Martens et al. , 2005. As a consequence of SRG1 transcription across the SER3 promoter, FACT assists in the assembly and maintenance of nucleosomes over this region that is otherwise depleted of nucleosomes . The presence of these nucleosomes at the SER3 promoter inhibits the binding of transcription factors required to induce SER3 transcription. In this report, we present the results of an unbiased genetic screen to identify mutations of SPT16 that derepress SER3 transcription. Our analyses of these mutants indicate that the integrity of both the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains not only are required for SRG1 transcription-dependent nucleosome assembly and SER3 repression but also are more broadly required for transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy at highly transcribed genes. We provide evidence suggesting a possible role for the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains in promoting the association of FACT to genes being actively transcribed.
Screen for spt16 mutants that derepress SER3 Using a previously described strategy (Myers et al. 2011), two regions of SPT16, from +764 to +2044 (region B) and from +1430 to +3521 (region C), were amplified from pAO01 plasmid (gift from A. Duina) using GoTaq polymerase (Invitrogen) and standard PCR conditions. Amplified DNA was cotransformed into YJ1089 with pAO01 plasmid that had been digested with either Eag1 and SnaB1 (region B) or SnaB1 and XbaI (region C). Transformants containing gap-repaired plasmids were selected on SC medium lacking leucine and then replica-plated onto medium containing 5-FOA to select for cells that lost the URA3-marked plasmid carrying a wild-type copy of SPT16 (pSPT16-URA3). The resulting colonies were then replica-plated to SC medium lacking histidine and leucine that was supplemented with 5 mM 3-AT. Candidate plasmids were recovered from strains resistant to 5 mM 3-AT, retransformed into YJ1089, and retested for their ability to confer 3-AT resistance. The region of SPT16 that was subjected to PCR mutagenesis was first subcloned into a new copy of pAO01 before retransformation. For each plasmid that retested for 3-AT resistance, both strands of the entire SPT16 gene were sequenced and compared with the wild-type gene.

Northern analysis
Cells were grown to approximately 2 · 10 7 cells/ml in YPD at 30°. Total RNA isolation and Northern analysis was performed as previously described (Collart and Oliviero 2001). Radiolabeled DNA probes to SRG1 (2454 to 2123 relative to SER3 ATG), SER3 (+111 to +1342), and SCR1 (2163 to +284) were generated by random-primed labeling of PCR fragments amplified from genomic DNA. RNA levels were quantified using a PhosphorImager (FLA-5000) and ImageJ software.

Western analysis
Whole cell extracts (WCE) were prepared from cells grown in YPD at 30°to approximately 3 · 10 7 cells/ml using trichloroacetic acid as previously described (Cox et al. 1997;Zheng et al. 2010). Equal amounts of WCE were separated by 10% acrylamide SDS-PAGE, transferred to Protean nitrocellulose (Whatman), and assayed by immunoblotting. The antibodies used to detect Spt16, Pob3, and G6PDH were as follows: anti-Spt16 (1:500; gift from T. Formosa), anti-Pob3 (1:2000; gift from T. Formosa), anti-G6PDH (1:50,000; Sigma). After incubation with HRP-conjugated IgG secondary antibody (1:5000; GE Healthcare), the immunoreactive proteins were visualized by enhanced chemiluminescence detection (PerkinElmer) using a Kodak image station 440CF. Spt16 and Pob3 protein levels were calculated by measuring their signal intensities in these Western blots using Kodak ID 3.6 software and normalizing these values to those obtained for the G6PDH control.

Dilution growth assays
Cells were grown at 30°overnight to saturation then washed twice with water. Starting at 1 · 10 8 cells/ml, cultures were serially diluted 10-fold. Three microliters of each dilution was spotted onto indicated media and incubated at 30°for the indicated number of days.
Nucleosome scanning assay Cells were grown at 30°to approximately 2 · 10 7 cells/ml in YPD and subjected to a nucleosome-scanning assay, as previously described . For each of the 38 SER3 primer pairs, the amount of template protected from digestion by micrococcal nuclease (MNase) was calculated as a ratio between MNase-digested and MNase-undigested samples and then normalized to the amount of MNase-protected control template (GAL1 NB) that is located within a well-positioned nucleosome in the GAL1 promoter (Brickner et al. 2007;Floer et al. 2010).
Quantitative PCR (qPCR) All qPCR data for the nucleosome scanning and ChIP assays were obtained by using an ABI StepOne Plus Real-time system using SYBR green reagents (Fermentas) and the indicated primers . Calculations were performed using Pfaffl methodology (Pfaffl 2001).

Identification of spt16 mutants that derepress SER3
We recently described a new mechanism of gene regulation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae whereby transcription of SRG1 ncDNA assembles nucleosomes over the promoter of the adjacent SER3 gene to maintain SER3 repression . Furthermore, we provided evidence that the histone chaperones, Spt6 and Spt16, are required to maintain this nucleosome occupancy, and repress SER3, likely through their ability to disassemble and reassemble nucleosomes during active transcription (Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003;. To investigate the role of Spt16 in this mechanism, we performed an unbiased genetic screen to identify novel mutations in SPT16 that derepress SER3 during SRG1 transcription. A PCR-based strategy that has been previously described [see Materials and Methods; Myers et al. (2011)] was used to target mutagenesis of the 39 half of SPT16 that excludes most of the N-terminal domain (NTD), which is dispensable for SER3 repression (S. J. Hainer, unpublished data). These PCR fragments were cotransformed with a gapped LEU2marked plasmid that contained homology to the PCR fragments into an spt16Δ his3Δ strain containing an integrated SER3pr-HIS3 reporter ( Figure 1A) and expressing a wild-type copy of SPT16 from a URA3marked plasmid (YJ1089). Following gap-repair and loss of the URA3marked plasmid expressing SPT16, we screened for spt16 mutants that derepress the SER3pr-HIS3 reporter by their ability to confer growth in the presence of 3-AT, a competitive inhibitor of the HIS3 gene product ( Figure 1).
With this screen, we initially identified 522 mutants that permit growth on medium containing 5 mM 3-AT. Forty SPT16-containing plasmids were then recovered from strains that conferred resistance up to 40 mM 3-AT to enrich for mutations that most strongly derepress SER3. The remaining 482 plasmids have not yet been examined. After retesting for their ability to derepress the SER3pr-HIS3 reporter, the entire SPT16 gene contained on each of these plasmids was sequenced. Sequencing of the 38 plasmids that successfully retested identified 25 unique spt16 mutants harboring nucleotide changes that result in either single (12), double (11), or triple (2) amino acid substitutions. For the 12 single amino acid substitution mutants, the location of the altered amino acids varies: 3 are located at the very 39 end of the Spt16-NTD, 3 are found in Spt16-D, and the remaining 6 are found in Spt16-M, including 3 residues that are within 13 amino acids of each other ( Figure 1B). Interestingly, 9 of the 13 double or triple mutants contain 1 of the single amino acid substitutions, indicating that the effect on the SER3 reporter from these mutation combinations is likely through the isolated single substitution. Interestingly, only one of these mutations, spt16-E857K, has been previously reported (O'Donnell et al. 2009;Stevens et al. 2011). In these studies, spt16-E857K was isolated as a dominant suppressor of a transcription defect caused by the insertion of a d element 59 of the LYS2 and HIS4 genes (Spt 2 phenotype) and was found to genetically interact with mutations in other transcription elongation factors.
Phenotypic analysis of the spt16 mutants To further characterize these mutants, we tested the strains for temperature sensitivities and growth defects on YPD medium supplemented with cyclohexamide (CHX), hydroxyurea (HU), mycophenolic acid (MPA), and caffeine. Surprisingly, we found that not one of the spt16 mutants that we isolated confers a growth defect at elevated temperatures (39°) or in the presence of HU (Figure 2A), phenotypes that have been previously described for other spt16 alleles, including spt16-G132D ( Figure 2A, row 2) and spt16-T828I/P859S ( Figure 2A, row 3) (Formosa et al. 2001). Interestingly, one mutant, spt16-S715G/D718G, confers cold sensitivity at 15°, and a number of the mutants cause varying sensitivities to CHX (Figure 2A). No detectable growth defects were observed when strains expressing any one of the isolated spt16 mutants were exposed to MPA or caffeine (S. B. Cohen, unpublished data).
We also tested whether the spt16 mutants that we isolated are dominant for repression of the SER3pr-HIS3 reporter. YJ1090 cells containing wild-type SPT16 at its genomic location, SER3pr-HIS3, and a plasmid expressing either wild-type or mutant version of Spt16 were spotted onto media containing 3-AT to test for expression of the SER3pr-HIS3 reporter. One mutant allele, spt16-E857K, is dominant for derepression of the SER3 reporter gene, suggesting that it may be a gain-of-function mutation ( Figure 2B). Interestingly, our analysis of the more complex mutants identified amino acid substitutions at I626T and one or both of T651A and H471Y as intragenic suppressors of the dominant effect of this E857K substitution. Additionally, our analysis revealed that whereas the mutant spt16-S765P allele alone does not confer dominance, it is synthetically dominant for SER3 derepression with either a K800E or L865P substitution mutation.
spt16 mutants derepress endogenous SER3 We next determined the effect of these spt16 mutants on endogenous SER3 and SRG1 RNA levels. We transformed plasmids containing either wild-type SPT16, a previously characterized spt16-G132D mutant (Malone et al. 1991), or one of our newly isolated spt16 mutants into YJ1091 and YJ1092 strains and performed Northern assays on these strains (Figure 3, A and B). For these and subsequent experiments, we limited our analysis to the 12 spt16 mutants having single amino acid substitutions. All of the spt16 mutants tested derepress Figure 1 Identification of spt16 mutants that derepress an ectopically expressed SER3pr-HIS3 reporter gene. (A) Diagram of SER3pr-HIS3 reporter. The LYP1 ORF was replaced by SER3 intergenic sequence from 2713 to 21, including SRG1 and its promoter, fused to the HIS3 ORF. Block arrows beneath the diagram indicate the expected SRG1 and SER3-HIS3 transcripts in wild-type and mutant strains grown in serine-rich media (YPD). The expected growth of these strains on SC-His-Leu plates containing 3-AT is indicated on the right. (B) Growth assays indicating that newly isolated spt16 mutants derepress SER3pr-HIS3 reporter. spt16D cells (YJ1089) containing LEU2-marked plasmids expressing either wild-type or mutant Spt16 protein, as indicated, were grown to saturation in YPD, diluted to 10 8 and then spotted in a 10-fold serial dilution series on SC-His-Leu (control) and SC-His-Leu + 10 mM 3-AT plates. Plates were incubated at 30°for three days. Results were obtained for two independent growth assays in which each plate contained control strains and five to six mutants. Shown are representative dilutions for the control strains and each spt16 mutant strain. Each Spt16 mutant protein is named to describe the location and nature of the amino acid substitution. The locations of the amino acid substitutions in each of these mutants are also indicated (marked by stars) in diagrams of Spt16; gray ovals indicate the N-terminal (NTD), dimerization (D), middle (M) domains, and the C-terminal acidic tail region (C). Note that the five mutants marked by an asterisk each have an additional silent mutation.
SER3 with effects ranging from very strong (30-fold increase for spt16-E857K) to milder (2-fold increase for spt16-Y297H, spt16-N580D, spt16-E671G, and spt16-S765P) that are similar to what we had previously observed for spt16-G132D ). Although we did observe some variability in SRG1 RNA levels between experiments, average results from four independent experiments indicate that these spt16 mutants do not significantly alter SRG1 RNA levels. Consistent with these Northern data, we found equivalent levels of RNA Pol II localized across the SRG1 transcription unit in strains expressing either wild-type or mutant versions of Spt16 ( Figure 6B). Moreover, Western analyses showed that these newly isolated spt16 mutants do not alter the levels of Spt16 or its interacting partner, Pob3 (Figure 3, C and D). Taken together, these data identify amino acids in Spt16 that are critical for SER3 repression.
Effect of spt16 mutants on nucleosome occupancy over the SER3 promoter To examine the effect of a subset of the spt16 mutants on nucleosome occupancy at SER3, we performed nucleosome-scanning assays on six of the single amino acid substitutions that most strongly derepress SER3 ( Figure 4). As previously described , MNase protection across SER3 was normalized to the protection of a wellstudied, nucleosome-bound region of the GAL1 promoter whose digestion by MNase is unaffected by these spt16 mutants (S. J. Hainer, unpublished data; see Materials and Methods for details). Compared with strains containing wild-type control plasmids, protection from MNase digestion was reduced across the SRG1-transcribed region in all the spt16 mutants examined to degrees approximately equal to or exceeding that of spt16-G132D (Figure 4), which we had previously shown to decrease nucleosome occupancy across the SER3 locus . MNase protection across the SER3 promoter region was most dramatically reduced in the spt16-E857K mutant ( Figure 4H), which is consistent with the strong derepression of SER3 that is observed in this mutant. The other six mutants that displayed more modest defects in SER3 repression also had more modest reductions in the MNase protection across the SER3 promoter. However, we did observe subtle differences in the MNase protection patterns between these mutants. Two of the spt16 mutants resulted in greater sensitivity to MNase toward the 59 of SRG1 relative to the 39 of SRG1 (spt16-K579E and spt16-L669S), compared with the other mutants that had increases in MNase sensitivity that were more evenly distributed across the SRG1 transcription unit (Figure 4, compare 2400 and 2200 regions in panels D and F with panels E and G).
To confirm that the changes in MNase protection across the SRG1 transcription unit caused by these spt16 mutants reflect changes in nucleosome occupancy, we measured histone occupancy across this region by ChIP. For the most part, histone H3 occupancy across the SRG1 transcription unit was reduced in the spt16 mutants to degrees that correlate with the results of our MNase experiments ( Figure 4I). Taken together, these data identify Spt16 residues whose integrity is required to maintain SER3 repression by facilitating SRG1 transcriptiondependent nucleosome occupancy across the SER3 promoter.
Effect of spt16 mutations on phenotypes associated with defects in transcription and chromatin structure Having shown a role for at least six of the spt16 single mutants in regulating chromatin structure at SER3, we tested whether all 12 single mutants confer other phenotypes indicative of chromatin-related transcriptional defects. We first determined whether these spt16 mutants can confer an Spt 2 phenotype (suppressor of Ty d element insertion), Figure 2 Phenotypic characterization of newly isolated spt16 mutants. (A) Temperature, cyclohexamide (CHX), and hydroxyurea (HU) sensitivity of spt16 mutants. spt16D cells (YJ1091) expressing either wild-type or the indicated mutant alleles of SPT16 from a LEU2-marked plasmid were grown to saturation in YPD at 30°, diluted to 10 8 , spotted in 10-fold serial dilutions, and incubated for the indicated number of days on solid media. Cells spotted on YPD were incubated at 30°, 39°, or 15°, and cells spotted on YPD+CHX or YPD+HU were grown at 30°. Results are a representative of two biological replicates. (B) Dominance test. Cells expressing wild-type SPT16 from its genomic location and the SER3pr-HIS3 reporter (YJ1090) were transformed with plasmids containing either wild-type or the indicated mutant SPT16 alleles. Transformants were grown to saturation in YPD at 30°and spotted on SC-His-Leu (control) and SC-His-Leu + 10 mM solid medium, which were then incubated at 30°for three days. Results are representative of two biological replicates.
which is caused by defects in chromatin and aberrant transcription initiation (Clark-Adams et al. 1988). spt16D strains containing the lys2-128d allele were transformed with plasmids containing either wild-type SPT16 or mutant spt16 alleles and assayed for their ability to grow on medium lacking lysine ( Figure 5A). As a control, we also introduced a plasmid expressing the spt16-G132D allele, which has been previously shown to have an Spt 2 phenotype (Evans et al. 1998). Compared with the cells expressing wild-type SPT16, most of the spt16 mutants grew robustly in the absence of lysine, similar to what was observed for the spt16-G132D control, indicating that these mutants confer a strong Spt 2 phenotype ( Figure 5A). In contrast, the two spt16 mutants that most weakly derepress SER3, spt16-E671G and spt16-E679G, had no detectable Spt 2 phenotype.
Next, we tested whether these spt16 mutants permit the production of aberrant intragenic transcripts, a phenotype that has been associ-ated with defects in transcription-coupled nucleosome reassembly (Carrozza et al. 2005;Kaplan et al. 2003). For these experiments, we employed a previously described GALpr-FLO8-HIS3 reporter gene in which HIS3 gene expression is dependent on transcription initiation from a cryptic promoter within the FLO8 coding sequence (Cheung et al. 2008). Therefore, cryptic intragenic transcription can be measured by the growth of his3D cells containing this reporter construct on medium lacking histidine. For this assay, strains expressing plasmid-borne SPT16 or the indicated spt16 mutant alleles were monitored for growth on medium lacking histidine. When grown in galactose-containing medium, all but two of the spt16 mutants allowed cells to grow in the absence of histidine, indicative of robust transcription initiation from the cryptic promoter within the FLO8 coding sequence ( Figure 5B). For the most part, these data correlate well with the Spt 2 phenotypic data, suggesting that the molecular defects Figure 3 Single amino acid substitutions in Spt16 strongly derepress endogenous SER3. (A) Northern blot analysis examining the effect of spt16 mutants on SER3, SRG1, and SCR1 (loading control). Total RNA was isolated from spt16D cells (YJ1091) carrying plasmid-borne wild-type or mutant SPT16 alleles that were grown to a density of 2 · 10 7 cells/ml in YPD at 30°. Note that there are two independent strains with the spt16-L669S mutation. (B) Quantitation of Northern data. SRG1 (gray bars) and SER3 (white bars) RNA levels for the spt16 mutants are normalized to the level of the SCR1 loading control and are relative to strains expressing wild-type SPT16 (arbitrarily set to 1). Each bar indicates the mean RNA level 6 SEM from four independent experiments using two transformations each of YJ1091 and YJ1092. (C) Western analysis examining the effect of spt16 mutant alleles on mutant Spt16 and Pob3 protein levels. Whole cell extracts were prepared from the same set of strains described in panel A grown to 3 · 10 7 cells/ml in YPD at 30°and subjected to Western analysis using anti-Spt6 and anti-Pob3 antibodies (kindly provided by T. Formosa). Blots were reprobed with anti-G6PDH antibody as a loading control. Note that there are two independent spt16-L669S mutants. (D) Quantitation of Western data. Spt16 (gray bars) and Pob3 (white bars) protein levels are normalized to the G6PDH loading control and are relative to strains expressing wild-type SPT16 (arbitrarily set to 1). Each bar indicates the mean protein level 6 SEM from three independent experiments using the same set of strains as in panel B.
resulting in these two phenotypes are likely related. Interestingly, only those mutations within the N-terminal domain of Spt16 allowed cells to grow in glucose-containing medium lacking histidine, suggesting that these mutants permit cryptic transcription initiation even in the absence of significant levels of transcription across this region.
Finally, we tested the spt16 mutants for their ability to suppress a cold-sensitive (cs) phenotype of a histone mutant, H3 L61W, a phenotype that has been previously described for a distinct class of mutations located within the Spt16 M-domain (Myers et al. 2011). For this assay, spt16D cells containing the H3 L61W mutant as the sole source Nucleosome scanning assays were performed on spt16D cells (YJ1091 and YJ1092) carrying plasmids expressing either wildtype SPT16 or mutant spt16 alleles as indicated. Mononucleosomesized DNA fragments were generated by micrococcal nuclease (MNase) digestion of formaldeyde-treated chromatin that was isolated from cells grown to 2 · 10 7 cells/mL in YPD media at 30°. MNase protection across the SER3 locus relative to a positioned nucleosome within the GAL1 promoter was determined by qPCR. For each PCR amplicon, the mean MNase protection 6 SEM from three independent experiments is plotted at its midpoint. Shown below each graph is a diagram of the SER3 locus indicating the positions of nucleosomes (gray ovals) extrapolated from the MNase protection data for each spt16 mutant. The lightgray ovals are indicative of less dramatic reductions in MNase protections compared with the wild-type control shown in panel A. (I) Histone H3 ChIP was performed on chromatin isolated from the same strains used in panels B-H. The amount of immunoprecipitated DNA was determined by qPCR as a fraction of the input that was then normalized to a control region in chromosome V and made relative to strains expressing wild-type SPT16 (arbitrarily set to 1). Each bar represents the mean 6 SEM of three independent experiments. Below the graph is a schematic of SER3 with black bars corresponding to the regions amplified by qPCR.
of histone H3 (YADP50) and plasmid-borne copies of wild-type or mutant versions of SPT16 were monitored for growth on YPD at 15°( Figure 5C). When compared with the spt16-E735G control (kindly provided by A. Duina), none of our identified spt16 mutants suppressed the cold sensitivity of H3 L61W. Therefore, the spt16 mutants we isolated as being defective for SER3 repression represent a distinct class of mutants from those that suppress the cs phenotype of the H3 L61W mutant and may define functionally distinct regions of the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains.
Occupancy of mutant versions of Spt16 is reduced across SRG1 and the SER3 promoter region We next considered the possibility that these mutant versions of Spt16 fail to be recruited normally to transcribed regions, which may account for their multiple phenotypes related to defects in transcriptioncoupled nucleosome occupancy. Therefore, we performed ChIP experiments to assess the binding of selected Spt16 mutant proteins across the SRG1 transcription unit ( Figure 6A). In general, we detected reduced binding of most of the mutant versions of Spt16 that parallels the loss of histone H3 occupancy across this region that we observed in these mutant versions (compare Figure 6A with Figure 4I). The lone exception is the spt16-K579E mutant where we detected a stronger decrease in the occupancy of the mutant protein expressed from this allele than expected based on a relatively modest decrease in histone H3 occupancy. Because Spt16 strongly colocalizes with RNA Pol II across transcribed genes, we tested whether the decrease in the occupancy of the mutant versions of Spt16 might be indirect due to a decrease in RNA Pol II occupancy at SER3. To this end, we performed ChIP analysis of Rpb3, a subunit of RNA Pol II, over SRG1 ( Figure  6B). Consistent with our Northern analysis (Figure 3), we found that all but one of these spt16 mutants did not cause a decrease in RNA Pol II occupancy compared with cells expressing wild-type SPT16. Interestingly, the spt16-L669S mutant did cause a slight but significant decrease (P , 0.05) in Rpb3 binding across SRG1. However, by normalizing the binding of this mutant version of Spt16 to Rpb3 binding, it is clear that this minor decrease in Rpb3 binding alone cannot account for the reduced binding of this mutant version of Spt16 across SRG1 ( Figure 6C). Taken together, these data indicate that the amino acids defined by these mutants are required to maintain Spt16 colocalization with RNA Pol II across SRG1.
Effect of spt16 mutants on histone H3, Spt16, and RNA Pol II occupancy at other genes To investigate whether the spt16 mutants that reduce nucleosome occupancy across SRG1 have a general defect in transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy, we measured histone H3 occupancy across the coding sequences of a subset of yeast genes by ChIP ( Figure 7A). At three highly transcribed genes, PMA1 (100 mRNA/hr), PYK1 (95 mRNA/hr), and ADH1 (125 mRNA/hr) (Holstege et al. 1998), histone H3 levels were reduced in all of the mutants to a similar extent as we observed across SRG1. Conversely, histone H3 occupancy at three lowly transcribed genes, GAL1 (repressed), TUB2 (12 mRNA/hr), and CYC1 (10 mRNA/hr) (Holstege et al. 1998), was unaffected in the mutants.
We next examined the occupancy of these mutant derivatives of Spt16 across the coding sequence of this subset of yeast genes ( Figure  7B). Consistent with our results at SRG1, we found that at the highly transcribed genes, PMA1, PYK1, and ADH1, the binding of the mutant Spt16 proteins were generally reduced in accordance with the decrease in histone H3 levels across these regions. Interestingly, the decrease in the occupancy of these mutant Spt16 proteins was greater at the 59 end of these genes compared with regions toward the 39 end. For the most part, these changes in Spt16 binding occurred in the absence of any change in RNA Pol II binding to these regions ( Figure  7C). Interestingly, a small but significant decrease in Rpb3 levels in the spt16-L669S mutant (P , 0.05) was detected at these highly transcribed genes, comparable to what we observed at SRG1. In contrast to what we observed at highly transcribed genes, occupancy of the mutant Spt16 proteins and Rpb3 at three lowly transcribed genes, GAL1, TUB2, and CYC1, were largely unaffected. Importantly, we Figure 5 Analysis of spt16 mutants for phenotypes associated with defects in transcription and chromatin. (A) Assay for Spt 2 phenotype. spt16Δ cells containing the lys2-128d allele and plasmids that express either wild-type or mutant Spt16, as indicated, were grown to saturation in YPD at 30°, diluted to 10 8 , and spotted in 10-fold serial dilutions onto solid synthetic complete medium (SC) and synthetic complete medium lacking lysine (SC-Lys). Plates were incubated at 30°for 3 days. Results are representative of two independent assays using transformations of YJ1091. (B) Assay for cryptic transcription initiation. spt16Δ cells containing the FLO8-HIS3 reporter and plasmids that express either wild-type or mutant Spt16, as indicated, were grown to saturation in YPD at 30°. Serial diluted cells were spotted onto solid synthetic complete medium with or without histidine containing either glucose (SC and SC-His) or galactose (SC/Gal and SC/Gal-His) as a carbon source. Plates were incubated at 30°f or either 3 days (SC, SC/Gal, and SC/Gal-His) or 6 days (SC-His). Results are representative of two independent assays using transformants of YJ1092. (C) Assay for suppression of histone H3 L61W mutant. spt16Δ cells expressing the H3-L61W mutant as its sole source of histone H3 and plasmids expressing either wild-type or mutant Spt16, as indicated, were grown to saturation in YPD at 30°. Serial diluted cells were spotted onto solid YPD medium as described in panel A and grown at 30°(3 days) or 15°(17 days). Results were generated with strains derived from YADP50 (kindly provided by A. Duina) and are representative of two independent assays.
show that when these mutants are grown in galactose-containing medium to induce high levels of GAL1 expression, we detected reduced occupancy of both H3 and the mutant Spt16 proteins to the GAL1 coding sequence similar to what we observed for SRG1 and other highly transcribed genes ( Figure S1). Thus, we have identified mutant spt16 alleles that cause reduced occupancy of both the mutant version of Spt16 encoded by these alleles and histones specifically over highly transcribed regions of the genome. Taken together, our studies suggest that the integrity of the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains is generally required to maintain nucleosome occupancy at highly transcribed genes, possibly by facilitating Spt16 recruitment to those genes.

DISCUSSION
Spt16 is an essential, highly conserved component of the FACT elongation complex with a dual role in transcription elongation-the disassembly of nucleosomes to allow the passage of RNA Pol II and their reassembly in the wake of RNA Pol II [reviewed in Duina (2011), Formosa (2011, Reinberg and Sims (2006), and . In this work, we provide evidence indicating that the integrity of both the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains are required to support the histone chaperone activities of Spt16 during transcription elongation. We utilized a previously characterized system in which this activity of Spt16 is required for SRG1 transcription-dependent repression of the S. cerevisiae SER3 gene  to identify a largely novel class of mutations in SPT16 that derepress SER3. Six mutations that most strongly derepress SER3 contain single amino acid substitutions in either the Spt16-D or Spt16-M domain. For this subset of mutants, SRG1 transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy over the SER3 promoter is reduced to degrees that generally correlate with SER3 derepression. Moreover, we provide evidence that these mutations broadly disrupt transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy at highly transcribed regions of the yeast genome. Finally, we show that while these mutant versions of Spt16 are expressed at wild-type levels, their association with highly transcribed genes is significantly reduced. These data suggest that the integrity of the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains are required for transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy, possibly by promoting or maintaining FACT association with transcribed regions of the genome.
With one exception (spt16-E857K), the spt16 mutants that we identified in this work are distinct from those that have been previously identified by other genetic approaches (Formosa et al. 2002;Malone et al. 1991;Myers et al. 2011;O'Donnell et al. 2009;Stevens et al. 2011). Although most of this new class of spt16 mutants confers an Spt 2 phenotype similar to many previously characterized spt16 mutants, additional phenotypic studies indicate that there are important functional differences between these mutants. First, these mutants do not confer lethality at elevated temperature as is common for many previously characterized spt16 mutant alleles (Formosa et al. 2002;Myers et al. 2011;O'Donnell et al. 2009). This result suggests that the amino acid substitutions caused by these mutations are not likely to affect the general stability of the Spt16 protein. Furthermore, these results indicate that the ability of Spt16 to promote nucleosome assembly during transcription is not essential for viability. Second, these mutants do not confer a growth defect in the presence of hydroxyurea, a phenotype conferred by other spt16 mutants (Formosa et al. 2002;Myers et al. 2011;O'Donnell et al. 2009) that is indicative of a defect in DNA replication and/or DNA repair (Hampsey 1997). Therefore, this new group of spt16 mutants may define an activity for Spt16 that is specific to its role in transcription elongation rather than a histone chaperone activity that may be generally required for all of Spt16 functions. Third, these spt16 mutants do not suppress a cold-sensitive growth defect conferred by a histone H3 L61W as has been recently described for a distinct set of spt16 mutant alleles (Myers et al. 2011). This is somewhat surprising given that both groups of spt16 mutants have amino acid substitutions within the Spt16-M domain. Moreover, Figure 6 Relative occupancy of Spt16 and RNA Pol II across SER3 in spt16 mutants. Spt16 (A) and Rpb3 (B) ChIP experiments were performed on chromatin prepared from spt16D strains expressing either wild-type or mutant Spt16, as indicated, that were grown in YPD at 30°. The amount of immunoprecipitated DNA at four locations across SER3 (indicated by black bars in the diagram of SER3 below the graphs) was determined by qPCR as a fraction of the input material and normalized to a control region in chromosome V. Each bar represents the mean 6 SEM of three independent experiments using strains derived from YJ1091 and YJ1092. Occupancy of these factors in the strains expressing wild-type Spt16 was arbitrarily set to 1 at each SER3 location. (C) Occupancy of Spt16 across SER3 was recalculated relative to Rpb3 occupancy.

Figure 7
Relative occupancy of histone H3, Spt16, and Rpb3 across the coding regions of a subset of yeast genes. Histone H3 (A), Spt16 (B), and Rpb3 (C) was measured by ChIP within the coding region of three highly transcribed genes: PMA1, PYK1, and ADH1 (top panels in A, B, and C) and over three lowly transcribed genes: GAL1, TUB2, and CYC1 (bottom panels in A, B, and C) as described in Figure 6. The regions assayed by qPCR are marked with the black bars in the diagram provided for each gene. All values represent the mean 6 SEM of three independent experiments.
one of the spt16 mutants isolated as a suppressor of the cold sensitivity of the histone H3 L61W mutant contains a glutamine substitution of glutamic acid residue at position 847, the same residue that, when substituted for a lysine, confers strong SER3 derepression and transcription-coupled nucleosome assembly defects. However, the lysine substitution did not suppress the cold sensitivity of the H3 L61W mutation. Taken together, these data show that we have identified a new class of spt16 mutants that interferes with Spt16 activity specific to its role in transcription-coupled nucleosome assembly rather than its generally required functions in transcription, cell viability, and/or DNA replication/DNA repair.
During our phenotypic analyses, we found that most of the spt16 mutants that were isolated based on their ability to derepress SER3 also confer sensitivity to cyclohexamide, a phenotype that has not been previously described for spt16 mutant alleles. Cyclohexamide is a potent inhibitor of eukaryotic protein synthesis that is normally toxic to yeast cells (Mccusker and Haber 1988). However, at low doses, a sensitivity to this drug has been shown to reveal mutations that reduce protein synthesis or impair cell-cycle progression (Hampsey 1997). Therefore, although the identification of this phenotype may be interesting, the interpretation of the data are unclear. We hypothesize that the subset of spt16 mutants causing cyclohexamide sensitivity do so as a result of the misregulation of one or more genes encoding proteins that are essential for viability, regulate protein synthesis, or regulate intracellular levels of cyclohexamide.
Interestingly, the spt16-E857K allele, which we found to confer a dominant negative effect on SER3 repression, was previously isolated as a dominant suppressor of the transcription defects of d element insertions just 59 of both the LYS2 and HIS4 genes (O'Donnell et al. 2009;Stevens et al. 2011). This is not surprising given the striking similarities between SER3 repression by SRG1 transcription and LYS2 and HIS4 repression by the d element insertions (Clark-Adams and Winston 1987;Martens et al. 2004;Winston et al. 1984). Both SRG1 and the d element insertion promote transcription across the promoters of their adjacent genes, SER3 and either LYS2 or HIS4, respectively. Our finding that SER3 derepression in the spt16-E857K mutant is the result of reduced SRG1 transcription-dependent nucleosome assembly at the SER3 promoter suggests that a similar transcription defect in nucleosome occupancy may play a role in alleviating repression of LYS2 and HIS4 caused by these d element insertions. Interestingly, we found that whereas three of the five double mutants containing the E857K substitution also act in a dominant manner, two of these combinations, spt16-I626T/E857K and spt16-T651A/H741Y/ E857K, do not. Moreover, we found that the level of SER3 derepression in these two mutant alleles to be significantly lower to that caused by the E857K substitution alone (B. A. Charsar, unpublished data). Therefore, I626T and one or both of T651A and H741Y substitutions appear to suppress the negative effects of the E857K substitution.
Our analysis of the single amino acid substitutions in the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains revealed a strong correlation between defective transcription-dependent nucleosome assembly and reduced association of these mutant versions of Spt16 at highly transcribed regions of the yeast genome. Several possible models could account for these observations. First, these mutant versions of Spt16 may interfere with the normal recruitment of FACT to transcribed DNA. In this model, the reduced recruitment of FACT would be the cause of the defect in transcription-coupled nucleosome assembly. Although several studies have determined that FACT physically associates with DNA that is being transcribed (Duina et al. 2007;Kim et al. 2004;Mason and Struhl 2003;Mayer et al. 2010), the molecular mechanism of this association is not known. Previous studies have implicated a number of factors that may facilitate Spt16 association with transcribed DNA, including the Chd1 chromatin-remodeling factor, the Paf1 elongation complex, RNA Pol II, and histone proteins (Adelman et al. 2006;Biswas et al. 2007;Formosa et al. 2001;Mason and Struhl 2003;Pruneski et al. 2011;Simic et al. 2003;. It is conceivable that the amino acid substitutions within the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains that interfere with transcriptioncoupled nucleosome assembly do so by altering FACT interactions with one or more of these factors. Second, the reduction in Spt16 association with transcribed regions may be a consequence of the reduced nucleosome occupancy due to a defect in transcriptioncoupled nucleosome assembly. In this model, the amino acid substitutions in the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains would not alter initial Spt16 recruitment to transcribed DNA or its ability to associate with nucleosomal DNA but, rather, interfere with its nucleosome remodeling activity that leads to disassembly and/or reassembly of nucleosomes during transcription. Additional molecular and biochemical experiments to investigate the affect of these mutants on FACT interactions with other proteins and the nucleosome remodeling activity of Spt16 will be necessary to distinguish between these models.
Although the possibility that the Spt16-D and Spt16-M domains may directly mediate protein-protein interactions or FACT nucleosome remodeling activity is intriguing, we cannot rule out a more indirect role for these domains. For example, it is possible that the three mutations in the Spt16-D domain may simply disrupt the Spt16-Pob3 interface (VanDemark et al. 2006(VanDemark et al. , 2008. However, if this were the case, we would expect any changes in the Spt16-Pob3 dimer interface to be subtle, specifically affecting the activity of FACT in transcription-dependent nucleosome assembly rather than in a more general histone chaperone role. Large perturbations in the Spt6-Pob3 interaction would most likely lead to more broad defects in cell growth and DNA replication/repair, which were not detected in these mutants by our phenotypic assays.
In summary, we have identified a novel class of spt16 mutants that specifically impairs transcription-coupled nucleosome occupancy across highly transcribed regions of the S. cerevisiae genome and results in reduced association of the mutant Spt16 proteins to these regions. These mutants are likely to be useful molecular tools to further elucidate the dynamic function of Spt16 in maintaining chromatin architecture during transcription.