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Role of interactions between the origin recognition complex and SIR1 in transcriptional silencing

Abstract

TRANSCRIPTIONAL silencing of the HM mating-type loci in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is caused by the localized formation of an altered chromatin structure, analogous to heterochromatin in higher eukaryotes. Silencing depends on cis-acting sequences, termed silencers, as well as several trans-acting factors, including histones H4 and H3, proteins RAP1 and ABF1, and the four SIR proteins (SIR1–4)1. Each of the four HM silencers contains an autonomously replicating sequence (ARS) to which the origin replication complex (ORC)2 binds. This six-protein complex is required for initiation of DNA replication, as well as for silencing3–7. Efficient establishment of the silenced state requires both passage through the S phase of the cell cycle8 and SIR1 protein9,10. Previous experiments suggested that SIR1 might be localized to the silencers by binding to ORC and/or RAP1 (ref. 11). Here we report that SIR1 can bind directly to ORC1, the largest of the ORC subunits, and that targeting of SIR1 to ORC1 at a silencer is sufficient to establish a silenced state.

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Triolo, T., Sternglanz, R. Role of interactions between the origin recognition complex and SIR1 in transcriptional silencing. Nature 381, 251–253 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1038/381251a0

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