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Featured researches published by Peter Meister.


Cell | 2012

Step-Wise Methylation of Histone H3K9 Positions Heterochromatin at the Nuclear Periphery

Benjamin D. Towbin; Cristina González-Aguilera; Ragna Sack; Dimos Gaidatzis; Véronique Kalck; Peter Meister; Peter Askjaer; Susan M. Gasser

The factors that sequester transcriptionally repressed heterochromatin at the nuclear periphery are currently unknown. In a genome-wide RNAi screen, we found that depletion of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) synthetase reduces histone methylation globally and causes derepression and release of heterochromatin from the nuclear periphery in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos. Analysis of histone methyltransferases (HMTs) showed that elimination of two HMTs, MET-2 and SET-25, mimics the loss of SAM synthetase, abrogating the perinuclear attachment of heterochromatic transgenes and of native chromosomal arms rich in histone H3 lysine 9 methylation. The two HMTs target H3K9 in a consecutive fashion: MET-2, a SETDB1 homolog, mediates mono- and dimethylation, and SET-25, a previously uncharacterized HMT, deposits H3K9me3. SET-25 colocalizes with its own product in perinuclear foci, in a manner dependent on H3K9me3, but not on its catalytic domain. This colocalization suggests an autonomous, self-reinforcing mechanism for the establishment and propagation of repeat-rich heterochromatin.


Genes & Development | 2010

The spatial dynamics of tissue-specific promoters during C. elegans development

Peter Meister; Benjamin D. Towbin; Brietta L. Pike; Aaron Ponti; Susan M. Gasser

To understand whether the spatial organization of the genome reflects the cells differentiated state, we examined whether genes assume specific subnuclear positions during Caenorhabditis elegans development. Monitoring the radial position of developmentally controlled promoters in embryos and larval tissues, we found that small integrated arrays bearing three different tissue-specific promoters have no preferential position in nuclei of undifferentiated embryos. However, in differentiated cells, they shifted stably toward the nuclear lumen when activated, or to the nuclear envelope when silent. In contrast, large integrated arrays bearing the same promoters became heterochromatic and nuclear envelope-bound in embryos. Tissue-specific activation of promoters in these large arrays in larvae overrode the perinuclear anchorage. For transgenes that carry both active and inactive promoters, the inward shift of the active promoter was dominant. Finally, induction of master regulator HLH-1 prematurely induced internalization of a muscle-specific promoter array in embryos. Fluorescence in situ hybridization confirmed analogous results for the endogenous endoderm-determining gene pha-4. We propose that, in differentiated cells, subnuclear organization arises from the selective positioning of active and inactive developmentally regulated promoters. We characterize two forces that lead to tissue-specific subnuclear organization of the worm genome: large repeat-induced heterochromatin, which associates with the nuclear envelope like repressed genes in differentiated cells, and tissue-specific promoters that shift inward in a dominant fashion over silent promoters, when they are activated.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2009

The nuclear envelope ― a scaffold for silencing?

Benjamin D. Towbin; Peter Meister; Susan M. Gasser

An increasing number of studies indicate that chromosomes are spatially organized in the interphase nucleus and that some genes tend to occupy characteristic zones of the nuclear volume. FISH studies in mammalian cells suggest a differential localization of active and inactive loci, with inactive heterochromatin being largely perinuclear. Recent genome-wide mapping techniques confirm that the nuclear lamina, which lies beneath the nuclear envelope, interacts preferentially with silent genes. To address the functional significance of spatial compartmentation, gain-of-function assays in which chromatin is targeted to the nuclear periphery have now been carried out. Such experiments yielded coherent models in yeast; however, conflicting results in mammalian cells leave it unclear whether these concepts apply to higher organisms. Nevertheless, the recent discovery that evolutionarily conserved inner nuclear membrane proteins support the peripheral anchoring of yeast heterochromatin suggests that certain principles of nuclear organization may hold true from yeast to man.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Temporal separation of replication and recombination requires the intra-S checkpoint.

Peter Meister; Angela Taddei; Laurence Vernis; Mickaël Poidevin; Susan M. Gasser; Giuseppe Baldacci

In response to DNA damage and replication pausing, eukaryotes activate checkpoint pathways that prevent genomic instability by coordinating cell cycle progression with DNA repair. The intra-S-phase checkpoint has been proposed to protect stalled replication forks from pathological rearrangements that could result from unscheduled recombination. On the other hand, recombination may be needed to cope with either stalled forks or double-strand breaks resulting from hydroxyurea treatment. We have exploited fission yeast to elucidate the relationship between replication fork stalling, loading of replication and recombination proteins onto DNA, and the intra-S checkpoint. Here, we show that a functional recombination machinery is not essential for recovery from replication fork arrest and instead can lead to nonfunctional fork structures. We find that Rad22-containing foci are rare in S-phase cells, but peak in G2 phase cells after a perturbed S phase. Importantly, we find that the intra-S checkpoint is necessary to avoid aberrant strand-exchange events during a hydroxyurea block.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2011

Locking the genome: nuclear organization and cell fate

Peter Meister; Susan E. Mango; Susan M. Gasser

The differentiation of pluripotent or totipotent cells into various differentiated cell types is accompanied by a restriction of gene expression patterns, alteration in histone and DNA methylation, and changes in the gross nuclear organization of eu- and heterochromatic domains. Several recent studies have coupled genome-wide mapping of histone modifications with changes in gene expression. Other studies have examined changes in the subnuclear positioning of tissue-specific genes upon transcriptional induction or repression. Here we summarize intriguing correlations of the three phenomena, which suggest that in some cases causal relationships may exist.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Replication foci dynamics: replication patterns are modulated by S-phase checkpoint kinases in fission yeast

Peter Meister; Angela Taddei; Aaron Ponti; Giuseppe Baldacci; Susan M. Gasser

Although the molecular enzymology of DNA replication is well characterised, how and why it occurs in discrete nuclear foci is unclear. Using fission yeast, we show that replication takes place in a limited number of replication foci, whose distribution changes with progression through S phase. These sites define replication factories which contain on average 14 replication forks. We show for the first time that entire foci are mobile, able both to fuse and re‐segregate. These foci form distinguishable patterns during S phase, whose succession is reproducible, defining early‐, mid‐ and late‐S phase. In wild‐type cells, this same temporal sequence can be detected in the presence of hydroxyurea (HU), despite the reduced rate of replication. In cells lacking the intra‐S checkpoint kinase Cds1, replication factories dismantle on HU. Intriguingly, even in the absence of DNA damage, the replication foci in cds1 cells assume a novel distribution that is not present in wild‐type cells, arguing that Cds1 kinase activity contributes to the spatio‐temporal organisation of replication during normal cell growth.


Current Biology | 2011

Nuclear Geometry and Rapid Mitosis Ensure Asymmetric Episome Segregation in Yeast

Lutz R. Gehlen; Shigeki Nagai; Kenji Shimada; Peter Meister; Angela Taddei; Susan M. Gasser

BACKGROUND Asymmetric cell division drives the generation of differentiated cells and maintenance of stem cells. In budding yeast, autonomously replicating sequence (ARS) plasmids lacking centromere elements are asymmetrically segregated into the mother cell, where they are thought to contribute to cellular senescence. This phenomenon has been proposed to result from the active retention of plasmids through an interaction with nuclear pores. RESULTS To investigate the mother-daughter segregation bias of plasmids, we used live-cell imaging to follow the behavior of extrachromosomal DNA. We show that both an excised DNA ring and a centromere-deficient ARS plasmid move freely in the nucleoplasm yet show a strong segregation bias for the mother cell. Computational modeling shows that the geometrical shape of the dividing yeast nucleus and length of mitosis severely restrict the passive diffusion of episomes into daughter nuclei. Predictions based on simulated nuclear division were tested with mutants that extend the length of mitosis. Finally, explaining how various anchors can improve mitotic segregation, we show that plasmid partitioning is improved by tethering the plasmid to segregating structures, such as the nuclear envelope and telomeres. CONCLUSIONS The morphology and brevity of mitotic division in budding yeast impose physical constraints on the diffusion of material into the daughter, obviating the need for a retention mechanism to generate rejuvenated offspring.


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2010

Repetitive Transgenes in C. elegans Accumulate Heterochromatic Marks and Are Sequestered at the Nuclear Envelope in a Copy-Number- and Lamin-Dependent Manner

Benjamin D. Towbin; Peter Meister; Brietta L. Pike; Susan M. Gasser

Chromatin is nonrandomly distributed in nuclear space, yet the functional significance of this remains unclear. Here, we make use of transgenes carrying developmentally regulated promoters to study subnuclear gene positioning during the development of Caenorhabditis elegans. We found that small transgenes (copy number ≤50) are randomly distributed in early embryonic nuclei, independent of promoter activity. However, in differentiated tissues, these same transgenes occupied specific subnuclear positions: When promoters are repressed, transgenes are found at the nuclear periphery, whereas active, developmentally regulated promoters are enriched in the nuclear core. The absence of specific transgene positioning in embryonic nuclei does not reflect an absence of proteins that mediate perinuclear sequestration: Embryonic nuclei are able to sequester much larger transgene arrays (copy number 300-500) at the periphery. This size-dependent peripheral positioning of gene arrays in early embryos correlates with the accumulation of heterochromatic marks (H3K9me3 and H3K27me3) on large arrays. Interestingly, depletion of nuclear lamina components caused release of arrays from the nuclear envelope and interfered with their efficient silencing. Our results suggest that developmentally silenced chromatin binds the nuclear lamina in a manner correlated with the deposition of heterochromatic marks. Peripheral sequestration of chromatin may, in turn, support the maintenance of silencing.


Methods in Enzymology | 2010

Visualizing yeast chromosomes and nuclear architecture.

Peter Meister; Lutz R. Gehlen; Elisa Varela; Véronique Kalck; Susan M. Gasser

We describe here optimized protocols for tagging genomic DNA sequences with bacterial operator sites to enable visualization of specific loci in living budding yeast cells. Quantitative methods for the analysis of locus position relative to the nuclear center or nuclear pores, the analysis of chromatin dynamics and the relative position of tagged loci to other nuclear landmarks are described. Methods for accurate immunolocalization of nuclear proteins without loss of three-dimensional structure, in combination with fluorescence in situ hybridization, are also presented. These methods allow a robust analysis of subnuclear organization of both proteins and DNA in intact yeast cells.


Yeast | 2008

Modules for cloning‐free chromatin tagging in Saccharomyces cerevisae

Sabine Rohner; Susan M. Gasser; Peter Meister

We describe a straightforward two‐step PCR‐based method to insert arrays of lac or tet operators (lacO or tetO) at specific loci in the budding yeast genome. The method entails insertion of a marker generated by PCR with classical long primers recognizing the locus of interest, followed by the replacement of this marker by a linearized plasmid bearing an array of lacI‐ or tetR‐binding motifs. Using this technique, loci located either in the yeast genome or on yeast artificial chromosomes can be efficiently tagged. We provide a set of plasmids with different markers for cloning‐free integration of lacO or tetO repeats into the yeast genome. Copyright

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Susan M. Gasser

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Benjamin D. Towbin

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Peter Askjaer

Pablo de Olavide University

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Angela Taddei

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Brietta L. Pike

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Sabine Rohner

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Véronique Kalck

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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Aaron Ponti

Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research

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