Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jian-Min Sun is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jian-Min Sun.


Cell | 1997

Histone deacetylases associated with the mSin3 corepressor mediate mad transcriptional repression.

Carol D. Laherty; Wen-Ming Yang; Jian-Min Sun; James R. Davie; Edward Seto; Robert N. Eisenman

Transcriptional repression by Mad-Max heterodimers requires interaction of Mad with the corepressors mSin3A/B. Sin3p, the S. cerevisiae homolog of mSin3, functions in the same pathway as Rpd3p, a protein related to two recently identified mammalian histone deacetylases, HDAC1 and HDAC2. Here, we demonstrate that mSin3A and HDAC1/2 are associated in vivo. HDAC2 binding requires a conserved region of mSin3A capable of mediating transcriptional repression. In addition, Mad1 forms a complex with mSin3 and HDAC2 that contains histone deacetylase activity. Trichostatin A, an inhibitor of histone deacetylases, abolishes Mad repression. We propose that Mad-Max functions by recruiting the mSin3-HDAC corepressor complex that deacetylates nucleosomal histones, producing alterations in chromatin structure that block transcription.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Isolation and Characterization of cDNAs Corresponding to an Additional Member of the Human Histone Deacetylase Gene Family

Wen-Ming Yang; Ya-Li Yao; Jian-Min Sun; James R. Davie; Edward Seto

Several human cDNAs encoding a histone deacetylase protein, HDAC3, have been isolated. Analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence of HDAC3 revealed an open reading frame of 428 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 49 kDa. The HDAC3 protein is 50% identical in DNA sequence and 53% identical in protein sequence compared with the previously cloned human HDAC1. Comparison of the HDAC3 sequence with human HDAC2 also yielded similar results, with 51% identity in DNA sequence and 52% identity in protein sequence. The expressed HDAC3 protein is functionally active because it possesses histone deacetylase activity, represses transcription when tethered to a promoter, and binds transcription factor YY1. Similar to HDAC1 and HDAC2, HDAC3 is ubiquitously expressed in many different cell types.


Methods | 2003

Chromatin immunoprecipitation: a tool for studying histone acetylation and transcription factor binding

Virginia A. Spencer; Jian-Min Sun; Lin Li; James R. Davie

The function of a protein in gene expression can often be explained, in part, by the location of that protein along a specific gene sequence. In recent years, the chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay has been developed to study the association of proteins located within 2 A of DNA such as transcription factors and modified histones. Numerous important findings have been published using the ChIP assay and many questions about transcription have been answered. In this article, we present the ChIP assay currently used in our lab and discuss the various ways to optimize this assay for ones own use.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Histone Acetylation Is Required to Maintain the Unfolded Nucleosome Structure Associated with Transcribing DNA

Harminder Walia; Hou Yu Chen; Jian-Min Sun; Laurel T. Holth; James R. Davie

Nucleosomes associated with transcribing chromatin of mammalian cells have an unfolded structure in which the normally buried cysteinyl-thiol group of histone H3 is exposed. In this study we analyzed transcriptionally active/competent DNA-enriched chromatin fractions from chicken mature and immature erythrocytes for the presence of thiol-reactive nucleosomes using organomercury-agarose column chromatography and hydroxylapatite dissociation chromatography of chromatin fractions labeled with [3H]iodoacetate. In mature and immature erythrocytes, the active DNA-enriched chromatin fractions are associated with histones that are rapidly highly acetylated and rapidly deacetylated. When histone deacetylation was prevented by incubating cells with histone deacetylase inhibitors, sodium butyrate or trichostatin A, thiol-reactive H3 of unfolded nucleosomes was detected in the soluble chromatin and nuclear skeleton-associated chromatin of immature, but not mature, erythrocytes. We did not find thiol-reactive nucleosomes in active DNA-enriched chromatin fractions of untreated immature erythrocytes that had low levels of highly acetylated histones H3 and H4 or in chromatin of immature cells incubated with inhibitors of transcription elongation. This study shows that transcription elongation is required to form, and histone acetylation is needed to maintain, the unfolded structure of transcribing nucleosomes.


Advances in Enzyme Regulation | 2008

Nuclear organization and chromatin dynamics--Sp1, Sp3 and histone deacetylases.

James R. Davie; Shihua He; Lin Li; Anoushe Sekhavat; Paula S. Espino; Bojan Drobic; Katherine L. Dunn; Jian-Min Sun; Hou Yu Chen; Jenny Yu; Susan Pritchard; Xuemei Wang

Regulation of gene expression involves the coordinated activities and interplay between chromatin remodeling factors and transcription factor recruitment. Histone acetyltransferases, histone deacetylases, histone kinases, histone phosphatases, histone methyltransferases, histone demethylases and ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes mediate chromatin remodeling and are components of a complex epigenetic network regulating gene expression during development and differentiation. Transcription factors play key roles in the recruitment of histone modifying enzymes and chromatin remodeling complexes to specific gene promoters. Sp1 and Sp3 are two transcription factors that are expressed in all mammalian cells and are involved in the regulation of genes involved in most cellular processes. Remodeling of chromatin is a necessary event in preparing the gene for transcription. In this review we will cover the organization and remodeling of chromatin, with a focus on dynamic histone acetylation and the histone deacetylase enzymes. The structure and function of transcription factors Sp1 and Sp3 will be presented. The role of these factors in the regulation of the estrogen responsive trefoil factor 1 gene will be highlighted. In the analyses of the factors involved in the regulation of the expression of a specific gene, the chromatin immunoprecipitation assay in which the protein factor of interest is cross-linked to DNA with formaldehyde is an essential tool. The limitations of this assay in cancer cells in which genomic instability is rampant are discussed.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2008

Chromatin organization and nuclear microenvironments in cancer cells

Shihua He; Katherine L. Dunn; Paula S. Espino; Bojan Drobic; Lin Li; Jenny Yu; Jian-Min Sun; Hou Yu Chen; Susan Pritchard; James R. Davie

Nuclear morphometric descriptors such as nuclear size, shape, DNA content and chromatin organization are used by pathologists as diagnostic markers for cancer. However, our knowledge of events resulting in changes in nuclear shape and chromatin organization in cancer cells is limited. Nuclear matrix proteins, which include lamins, transcription factors (Sp1) and histone modifying enzymes (histone deacetylases), and histone modifications (histone H3 phosphorylation) have roles in organizing chromatin in the interphase nucleus, regulating gene expression programs and determining nuclear shape. Histone H3 phosphorylation, a downstream target of the Ras‐mitogen activated protein kinase pathway, is involved in neoplastic transformation. This article will review genetic and epigenetic events that alter chromatin organization in cancer cells and the role of the nuclear matrix in determining nuclear morphology. J. Cell. Biochem. 104: 2004–2015, 2008.


Biochemistry and Cell Biology | 1999

Organization of chromatin in cancer cells: role of signalling pathways

James R. Davie; S K Samuel; V A Spencer; L T Holth; Deborah N. Chadee; Cheryl P. Peltier; Jian-Min Sun; Hou Yu Chen; James Wright

The role of mechanical and chemical signalling pathways in the organization and function of chromatin is the subject of this review. The mechanical signalling pathway consists of the tissue matrix system that links together the three-dimensional skeletal networks, the extracellular matrix, cytoskeleton, and nuclear matrix. Intermediate filament proteins are associated with nuclear DNA, suggesting that intermediate filaments may have a role in the organization of chromatin. In human hormone-dependent breast cancer cells, the interaction between cytokeratins and chromatin is regulated by estrogens. Transcription factors, histone acetyltransferases, and histone deacetylases, which are associated with the nuclear matrix, are components of the mechanical signalling pathway. Recently, we reported that nuclear matrix-bound human and chicken histone deacetylase 1 is associated with nuclear DNA in situ, suggesting that histone deacetylase has a role in the organization of nuclear DNA. Chemical signalling pathways such as the Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (Ras/MAPK) pathway stimulate the activity of kinases that modify transcription factors, nonhistone chromosomal proteins, and histones. The levels of phosphorylated histones are increased in mouse fibroblasts transformed with oncogenes, the products of which stimulate the Ras/MAPK pathway. Histone phosphorylation may lead to decondensation of chromatin, resulting in aberrant gene expression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Differential Distribution of Unmodified and Phosphorylated Histone Deacetylase 2 in Chromatin

Jian-Min Sun; Hou Yu Chen; James R. Davie

Histone deacetylase 2 (HDAC2) is one of the histone-modifying enzymes that regulate gene expression by remodeling chromatin structure. Along with HDAC1, HDAC2 is found in the Sin3 and NuRD multiprotein complexes, which are recruited to promoters by DNA-binding proteins. In this study, we show that the majority of HDAC2 in human breast cancer cells is not phosphorylated. However, the minor population of HDAC2, preferentially cross-linked to DNA by cisplatin, is mono-, di-, or tri-phosphorylated. Furthermore, HDAC2 phosphorylation is required for formation of Sin3 and NuRD complexes and recruitment to promoters by transcription factors including p53, Rb, YY1, NF-κB, Sp1, and Sp3. Unmodified HDAC2 requires linker DNA to associate with chromatin but is not cross-linked to DNA by formaldehyde. We provide evidence that unmodified HDAC2 is associated with the coding region of transcribed genes, whereas phosphorylated HDAC2 is primarily recruited to promoters.


Methods | 2003

MEASUREMENT OF HISTONE ACETYLTRANSFERASE AND HISTONE DEACETYLASE ACTIVITIES AND KINETICS OF HISTONE ACETYLATION

Jian-Min Sun; Virginia A. Spencer; Hou Yu Chen; Lin Li; James R. Davie

Dynamic histone acetylation has a role in chromatin remodeling and in the regulation of transcription. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) and histone acetyltransferases (HATs) catalyze reversible histone acetylation. HATs and HDACs exist as multiprotein complexes that have coactivator and corepressor activities, respectively. The steady-state level of acetylation at a chromatin site is determined by the local net activities of these enzymes. Here we describe methods to isolate different subcellular fractions (cytosol, nuclei, tightly bound nuclear, loosely bound nuclear, immunoprecipitated multiprotein complexes, and nuclear matrix) to determine the subcellular distribution of HAT and HDAC activities. Procedures to assay the activities of these enzymes and to measure the kinetics of histone acetylation and deacetylation are presented.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Phosphorylated serine 28 of histone H3 is associated with destabilized nucleosomes in transcribed chromatin

Jian-Min Sun; Hou Yu Chen; Paula S. Espino; James R. Davie

Histone modifications and variants have key roles in the activation and silencing of genes. Phosphorylation of histone H3 at serine 10 and serine 28 is involved in transcriptional activation of genes responding to stress or mitogen-stimulated signaling pathways. The distribution of H3-modified isoforms in G0 phase chicken erythrocyte chromatin was investigated. H3 phosphorylated at serine 28 was found highly enriched in the active/competent gene fractions, as was H3 di- and trimethylated at lysine 4. The H3 variant H3.3 in this chromatin fraction was preferentially phosphorylated at serine 28. Conversely, H3 phosphorylated at serine 10 was present in all chromatin fractions, while H3 dimethylated at lysine 9 was associated with the chromatin-containing repressed genes. H3 phosphorylated at serine 28 was located at the promoter region of the transcriptionally active, but not competent, histone H5 and β-globin genes. We provide evidence that H3.3 phosphorylated at serine 28 was present in labile nucleosomes. We propose that destabilized nucleosomes containing H3.3 phosphorylated at serine 28 aid in the dynamic disassembly–assembly of nucleosomes in active promoters.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jian-Min Sun's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hou Yu Chen

University of Manitoba

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shihua He

University of Manitoba

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lin Li

University of Manitoba

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hou Yu Chen

University of Manitoba

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jenny Yu

University of Manitoba

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge