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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey A. Simon is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey A. Simon.


Cell | 2002

Histone Methyltransferase Activity of a Drosophila Polycomb Group Repressor Complex

Jürg Müller; Craig M. Hart; Nicole J. Francis; Marcus L. Vargas; Aditya K. Sengupta; Brigitte Wild; Ellen L. Miller; Michael B. O'Connor; Robert E. Kingston; Jeffrey A. Simon

Polycomb group (PcG) proteins maintain transcriptional repression during development, likely by creating repressive chromatin states. The Extra Sex Combs (ESC) and Enhancer of Zeste [E(Z)] proteins are partners in an essential PcG complex, but its full composition and biochemical activities are not known. A SET domain in E(Z) suggests this complex might methylate histones. We purified an ESC-E(Z) complex from Drosophila embryos and found four major subunits: ESC, E(Z), NURF-55, and the PcG repressor, SU(Z)12. A recombinant complex reconstituted from these four subunits methylates lysine-27 of histone H3. Mutations in the E(Z) SET domain disrupt methyltransferase activity in vitro and HOX gene repression in vivo. These results identify E(Z) as a PcG protein with enzymatic activity and implicate histone methylation in PcG-mediated silencing.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2009

Mechanisms of Polycomb gene silencing: knowns and unknowns

Jeffrey A. Simon; Robert E. Kingston

Polycomb proteins form chromatin-modifying complexes that implement transcriptional silencing in higher eukaryotes. Hundreds of genes are silenced by Polycomb proteins, including dozens of genes that encode crucial developmental regulators in organisms ranging from plants to humans. Two main families of complexes, called Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1) and PRC2, are targeted to repressed regions. Recent studies have advanced our understanding of these complexes, including their potential mechanisms of gene silencing, the roles of chromatin modifications, their means of delivery to target genes and the functional distinctions among variant complexes. Emerging concepts include the existence of a Polycomb barrier to transcription elongation and the involvement of non-coding RNAs in the targeting of Polycomb complexes. These findings have an impact on the epigenetic programming of gene expression in many biological systems.


Mutation Research | 2008

Roles of the EZH2 histone methyltransferase in cancer epigenetics

Jeffrey A. Simon; Carol A. Lange

EZH2 is the catalytic subunit of Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), which is a highly conserved histone methyltransferase that targets lysine-27 of histone H3. This methylated H3-K27 chromatin mark is commonly associated with silencing of differentiation genes in organisms ranging from plants to flies to humans. Studies on human tumors show that EZH2 is frequently over-expressed in a wide variety of cancerous tissue types, including prostate and breast. Although the mechanistic contributions of EZH2 to cancer progression are not yet determined, functional links between EZH2-mediated histone methylation and DNA methylation suggest partnership with the gene silencing machinery implicated in tumor suppressor loss. Here we review the basic molecular biology of EZH2 and the findings that implicate EZH2 in different cancers. We also discuss EZH2 connections to other silencing enzymes, such as DNA methyltransferases and histone deacetylases, and we consider progress on deciphering mechanistic consequences of EZH2 overabundance and its potential roles in tumorigenesis. Finally, we review recent findings that link EZH2 roles in stem cells and cancer, and we consider prospects for integrating EZH2 blockade into strategies for developing epigenetic therapies.


Cell | 1996

Requirement for PCNA in DNA Mismatch Repair at a Step Preceding DNA Resynthesis

Asad Umar; Andrew B. Buermeyer; Jeffrey A. Simon; David C. Thomas; Alan B. Clark; R. Michael Liskay; Thomas A. Kunkel

A two-hybrid system was used to screen yeast and human expression libraries for proteins that interact with mismatch repair proteins. PCNA was recovered from both libraries and shown in the case of yeast to interact with both MLH1 and MSH2. A yeast strain containing a mutation in the PCNA gene had a strongly elevated mutation rate in a dinucleotide repeat, and the rate was not further elevated in a strain also containing a mutation in MLH1. Mismatch repair activity was examined in human cell extracts using an assay that does not require DNA repair synthesis. Activity was inhibited by p21WAF1 or a p21 peptide, both of which bind to PCNA, and activity was restored to inhibited reactions by addition of PCNA. The data suggest a PCNA requirement in mismatch repair at a step preceding DNA resynthesis. The ability of PCNA to bind to MLH1 and MSH2 may reflect linkage between mismatch repair and replication and may be relevant to the roles of mismatch repair proteins in other DNA transactions.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Occupying Chromatin: Polycomb Mechanisms for Getting to Genomic Targets, Stopping Transcriptional Traffic, and Staying Put

Jeffrey A. Simon; Robert E. Kingston

Chromatin modification by Polycomb proteins provides an essential strategy for gene silencing in higher eukaryotes. Polycomb repressive complexes (PRCs) silence key developmental regulators and are centrally integrated in the transcriptional circuitry of stem cells. PRC2 trimethylates histone H3 on lysine 27 (H3K27me3), and PRC1-type complexes ubiquitylate histone H2A and compact polynucleosomes. How PRCs are deployed to select and silence genomic targets is the subject of intense investigation. We review advances on targeting, modulation, and functions of PRC1 and PRC2 and progress on defining the transcriptional steps they impact. Recent findings emphasize PRC1 targeting independent of H3K27me3, nonenzymatic PRC1-mediated compaction, and connections between PRCs and noncoding RNAs. Systematic analyses of Polycomb complexes and associated histone modifications during DNA replication and mitosis have also emerged. The stage is now set to reveal fundamental epigenetic mechanisms that determine how Polycomb target genes are silenced and how Polycomb silence is preserved through cell-cycle progression.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2002

Programming off and on states in chromatin: mechanisms of Polycomb and trithorax group complexes.

Jeffrey A. Simon; John W. Tamkun

Polycomb and trithorax group proteins are evolutionarily conserved chromatin components that maintain stable states of gene expression. Recent studies have identified and characterized several multiprotein complexes containing these transcriptional regulators. Advances in understanding molecular activities of these complexes in vitro, and functional domains present in their subunits, suggest that they control transcription through multistep mechanisms that involve nucleosome modification, chromatin remodeling, and interaction with general transcription factors.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 1995

Locking in stable states of gene expression: transcriptional control during Drosophila development

Jeffrey A. Simon

Cell fate decisions can be maintained during long periods of developmental time by stable states of gene expression. The Polycomb group and trithorax group proteins of Drosophila are key transcriptional regulators that maintain stable expression states during development. Recent advances in knowledge about individual Polycomb group and trithorax group proteins, their mechanisms of action, and potential homologs in mice and humans are contributing to a greater understanding of their roles in gene expression and development.


Current Biology | 2002

Purification and Functional Characterization of SET8, a Nucleosomal Histone H4-Lysine 20-Specific Methyltransferase

Jia Fang; Qin Feng; Carrie S. Ketel; Hengbin Wang; Ru Cao; Li Xia; Hediye Erdjument-Bromage; Paul Tempst; Jeffrey A. Simon; Yi Zhang

BACKGROUND Covalent modifications of histone N-terminal tails play fundamental roles in regulating chromatin structure and function. Extensive studies have established that acetylation of specific lysine residues in the histone tails plays an important role in transcriptional regulation. Besides acetylation, recent studies have revealed that histone methylation also has significant effects on heterochromatin formation and transcriptional regulation. Histone methylation occurs on specific arginine and lysine residues of histones H3 and H4. Thus far, only 2 residues on histone H4 are known to be methylated. While H4-arginine 3 (H4-R3) methylation is mediated by PRMT1, the enzyme(s) responsible for H4-lysine 20 (H4-K20) methylation is not known. RESULTS To gain insight into the function of H4-K20 methylation, we set out to identify the enzyme responsible for this modification. We purified and cloned a novel human SET domain-containing protein, named SET8, which specifically methylates H4 at K20. SET8 is a single subunit enzyme and prefers nucleosomal substrates. We find that H4-K20 methylation occurs in a wide range of higher eukaryotic organisms and that SET8 homologs exist in C. elegans and Drosophila. We demonstrate that the Drosophila SET8 homolog has the same substrate specificity as its human counterpart. Importantly, disruption of SET8 in Drosophila reduces levels of H4-K20 methylation in vivo and results in lethality. Although H4-K20 methylation does not correlate with gene activity, it appears to be regulated during the cell cycle. CONCLUSIONS We identified and characterized an evolutionarily conserved nucleosomal H4-K20-specific methyltransferase and demonstrated its essential role in Drosophila development.


Cell | 1983

New heat shock puffs and β=galactosidase activity resulting from transformation of Drosophila with an hsp70-lacZ hybrid gene

John T. Lis; Jeffrey A. Simon; Claudia A. Sutton

A hybrid gene that consists of the Drosophila heat shock gene, hsp70, fused to the E. coli beta-galactosidase gene has been introduced into the Drosophila germline by the P element microinjection method. This hybrid includes 194 bp of sequence upstream of the start of the hsp70 transcript. Three strains of transformed flies were isolated and characterized by DNA blotting experiments and by in situ hybridization to polytene chromosomes. Strain Bg61 has a single insert of the hybrid gene at the tip of chromosome 3L, site 61A, and the insert consists of a structure that is consistent with P-element-mediated transposition. Strain Bg9,61 has inserts at both 61A and 9E, while Bg64 has a single insert at 64D. Heat shock induces the formation of a large chromosomal puff at all three sites. These puffs appear and regress with kinetics indistinguishable from the puffing of the heat shock locus, 87C, from which the hsp70 gene, used in these studies, was isolated. The beta-galactosidase activity in the transformants is inducible by heat shock and shows a widespread distribution throughout the tissues of larvae and adults.


Nature Cell Biology | 2010

Cyclin-dependent kinases regulate epigenetic gene silencing through phosphorylation of EZH2

Shuai Chen; Laura R. Bohrer; Aswathy N. Rai; Yunqian Pan; Lu Gan; Xianzheng Zhou; Anindya Bagchi; Jeffrey A. Simon; Haojie Huang

The Polycomb group (PcG) protein, enhancer of zeste homologue 2 (EZH2), has an essential role in promoting histone H3 lysine 27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) and epigenetic gene silencing. This function of EZH2 is important for cell proliferation and inhibition of cell differentiation, and is implicated in cancer progression. Here, we demonstrate that under physiological conditions, cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1) and cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) phosphorylate EZH2 at Thr 350 in an evolutionarily conserved motif. Phosphorylation of Thr 350 is important for recruitment of EZH2 and maintenance of H3K27me3 levels at EZH2-target loci. Blockage of Thr 350 phosphorylation not only diminishes the global effect of EZH2 on gene silencing, it also mitigates EZH2-mediated cell proliferation and migration. These results demonstrate that CDK-mediated phosphorylation is a key mechanism governing EZH2 function and that there is a link between the cell-cycle machinery and epigenetic gene silencing.

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Liangjun Wang

Southern Methodist University

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Kelly Morgan

University of Minnesota

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