Delphine Dardalhon-Cuménal1, Jérôme Deraze1, Camille A Dupont1, Valérie Ribeiro1, Anne Coléno-Costes1, Juliette Pouch2, Stéphane Le Crom2,3, Hélène Thomassin1, Vincent Debat4, Neel B Randsholt1, Frédérique Peronnet1. 1. Sorbonne Université, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Biologie Paris-Seine (IBPS), Laboratory of Developmental Biology (LBD), Paris, France. 2. Institut de biologie de l'Ecole normale supérieure (IBENS), Ecole normale supérieure, CNRS, INSERM, PSL Université Paris Paris, France. 3. Sorbonne Université, Univ Antilles, Univ Nice Sophia Antipolis, CNRS, Evolution Paris Seine-Institut de Biologie Paris Seine (EPS - IBPS), Paris, France. 4. Institut de Systematique, Evolution, Biodiversité ISYEB UMR 7205, MNHN, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, EPHE, Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Sorbonne Universités, Paris, France.
Abstract
In Drosophila, ubiquitous expression of a short Cyclin G isoform generates extreme developmental noise estimated by fluctuating asymmetry (FA), providing a model to tackle developmental stability. This transcriptional cyclin interacts with chromatin regulators of the Enhancer of Trithorax and Polycomb (ETP) and Polycomb families. This led us to investigate the importance of these interactions in developmental stability. Deregulation of Cyclin G highlights an organ intrinsic control of developmental noise, linked to the ETP-interacting domain, and enhanced by mutations in genes encoding members of the Polycomb Repressive complexes PRC1 and PR-DUB. Deep-sequencing of wing imaginal discs deregulating CycG reveals that high developmental noise correlates with up-regulation of genes involved in translation and down-regulation of genes involved in energy production. Most Cyclin G direct transcriptional targets are also direct targets of PRC1 and RNAPolII in the developing wing. Altogether, our results suggest that Cyclin G, PRC1 and PR-DUB cooperate for developmental stability.
In Drosophila, ubiquitous expression of a short Cyclin G isoform generates extreme developmental noise estimated by fluctuating asymmetry (FA), providing a model to tackle developmental stability. This transcriptional cyclin interacts with chromatin regulators of the Enhancer of Trithorax and Polycomb (ETP) and Polycomb families. This led us to investigate the importance of these interactions in developmental stability. Deregulation of Cyclin G highlights an organ intrinsic control of developmental noise, linked to the ETP-interacting domain, and enhanced by mutations in genes encoding members of the Polycomb Repressive complexes PRC1 and PR-DUB. Deep-sequencing of wing imaginal discs deregulating CycG reveals that high developmental noise correlates with up-regulation of genes involved in translation and down-regulation of genes involved in energy production. Most Cyclin G direct transcriptional targets are also direct targets of PRC1 and RNAPolII in the developing wing. Altogether, our results suggest that Cyclin G, PRC1 and PR-DUB cooperate for developmental stability.
Developmental stability has been described as the set of processes that buffer
disruption of developmental trajectories for a given genotype within a particular
environment [1]. In other
words, developmental stability compensates the random stochastic variation of
processes at play during development. Many mechanisms working from the molecular to
the whole organism levels contribute to developmental stability [2]. For example, chaperones,
such as heat-shock proteins, participate in developmental stability by protecting
misfolded proteins from denaturation in a large variety of processes [3-5]. In Drosophila, adjustment
of cell growth to cell proliferation is essential to developmental stability by
allowing to achieve a consistent organ size (e.g.
wing size) in spite of variation in cell size or cell number [6,7].Developmental noise, the “sum” of the stochastic part of each developmental process,
can be observed macroscopically for morphological traits. In bilaterians,
quantification of departure from perfect symmetry, the so-called fluctuating
asymmetry (FA), is the most commonly used parameter to estimate developmental noise
[8,9]. Indeed, the two sides of bilaterally
symmetrical traits are influenced by the same genotype and environmental conditions,
and differences between them are thus only due to developmental noise. The use of FA
as an estimator of developmental noise makes analysis of the mechanistic and genetic
bases of developmental stability compatible with custom genetic and molecular
approaches of developmental biology.The genetic bases of developmental stability remain unclear. Thus, its evolutionary
role is subject to many speculations (for reviews see [7,10,11]). Experiments showing the role of
Hsp90 in buffering genetic variation led to the idea that
developmental stability could be ensured by specific genes [12-15]. On the other hand, both theory and
experiments show that complex genetic networks can become intrinsically robust to
perturbations, notably through negative and positive feedbacks, suggesting that the
topology of gene networks is of paramount importance for developmental stability
[16]. Several authors
have further suggested that hubs, i.e. the most
connected genes in these networks, might be particularly important for developmental
stability [17,18].In Drosophila, mutants for dILP8 and
Lgr3 involved in the control of systemic growth, have been
reported to display high FA as compared to wild type flies, indicating that these
genes are important for developmental stability [19-23]. Two studies have scanned the
Drosophila genome for regions involved in developmental
stability [24,25]. Several deletions
increased FA but genes responsible for this effect inside the deletions were not
identified. Nevertheless, these studies confirm that the determinism of
developmental stability could be polygenic, as suggested by Quantitative Trait Loci
analyses in mouse ([11] and
references therein). Together, these data reinforce the idea that developmental
stability depends on gene networks.We have shown that the gene Cyclin G (CycG) of
D. melanogaster, which encodes a protein
involved in the cell cycle, is important for developmental stability [6,26,27]. Indeed, ubiquitous expression of a short
Cyclin G version lacking the C-terminal PEST-rich domain
(CycG) generates a very high
FA in several organs, notably in the wing. Interestingly, FA induced by
CycG expression is associated
with loss of correlation between cell size and cell number, suggesting that the
noisy process would somehow be connected to cell cycle related cell growth [6]. Hence,
CycG deregulation provides a convenient sensitized system to
tackle the impact of cell growth on developmental stability.CycG encodes a transcriptional cyclin and interacts with genes of
the Polycomb-group (PcG),
trithorax-group genes (trxG) and
Enhancer of Trithorax and Polycomb (ETP)
families [28]. These genes
encode evolutionary conserved proteins assembled into large multimeric complexes
that bind chromatin. They ensure maintenance of gene expression patterns during
development (for a recent review see [29]). PcG genes are involved
in long-term gene repression, whereas trxG genes maintain gene
activation and counteract PcG action. ETP genes
encode co-factors of both trxG and PcG genes, and
behave alternatively as repressors or activators of target genes (for a review see
[30]). More recently, we
discovered that CycG behaves as an Enhancer of
Polycomb regarding homeotic gene regulation suggesting that it is
involved in the silencing of these genes [31]. Importantly, Cyclin Gphysically interacts
with the ETP proteins Additional Sex Comb (Asx) and Corto via its
N-terminal ETP-interacting domain, and co-localizes with them on polytene
chromosomes at many sites. Hence, Cyclin G and these ETPs might share many
transcriptional targets and might in particular control cell growth
via epigenetic regulation of genes involved in growth
pathways.Here, we investigate in depth the role of CycG in developmental
stability. We first show that localized expression of
CycG in wing imaginal discs
is necessary to induce high FA of adult wings. Furthermore, this organ-autonomous
effect increases when the ETP-interacting domain of Cyclin G is removed. We show
that several mutations for PcG or ETP genes,
notably those encoding members of the PRC1 and PR-DUB complexes, substantially
increase CycG-induced FA. Next, we report analysis of the
transcriptome of wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG by RNA-seq and find that
transcriptional deregulation of genes involved in translation and energy production
correlates with high FA of adult wings. By ChIP-seq, we identify Cyclin G binding
sites on the whole genome in wing imaginal discs. Strikingly, we observe a
significant overlap with genes also bound by Asx, by the Polycomb Repressive complex
PRC1, and by RNAPolII in the same tissue. We identify a sub-network of 222 genes
centred on Cyclin G showing simultaneous up-regulation of genes involved in
translation and down-regulation of genes involved in mitochondrial activity and
metabolism. Taken together, our data suggest that Cyclin G and the Polycomb
complexes PRC1 and PR-DUB cooperate in sustaining developmental stability.
Coordinated regulation of genes involved in translation and energy production might
be important for developmental stability.
Results
Expression of CycG in wing
precursors is sufficient to induce high wing FA
We previously reported that expression of CycG deleted of the
PEST-rich C-terminal domain (amino-acids 541 to 566)
(CycG)—a domain
potentially involved in degradation of the protein [26,27]—under control of ubiquitous drivers
(da-Gal4 or Actin-Gal4), generated
extremely high FA, notably in wings [6]. The strength of this effect was
unprecedented in any system or trait. Expression of
CycG thus provides a
unique tool to investigate developmental stability in depth. To determine
whether wing FA was due to local or systemic expression of
CycG, we tested a panel
of Gal4 drivers specific for wing imaginal discs or neurons. A brain circuit
relaying information for bilateral growth synchronization was recently
identified [22]. It
notably involves a pair of neurons expressing the dILP8 receptor Lgr3 that
connects with the insulin-producing cells (IPCs) and the prothoracicotropic
hormone (PTTH) neurons. This circuit was particularly appropriate to test the
existence of a remote effect of
CycG expression in generating
high FA in the wing. Expression of
CycG in this neuronal circuit
(using dilp3-, NPF-, pdf-,
per-, phm-, ptth and
R19B09-Gal4 drivers) did not increase FA of adult wings
(Fig 1 and S1 and
S2
Tables). Furthermore, expression of
CycG in cells of the
future wing hinge using the ts-Gal4 driver did not affect wing
FA either. By contrast, expressing
CycG with 5 different wing
pouch drivers (nub-, omb-,
rn-, sd- and vg-Gal4)
induced high wing FA. We thus concluded that
CycG-induced wing FA was
due to an intrinsic response of the growing wing tissue.
Fig 1
Local deregulation of CycG induces high FA.
Wing length FA (FA10) of females bearing a Gal4 driver either associated
with UAS-CycG (dark
orange) or alone (light orange). Wing length was measured as the
distance between landmarks 3 and 13. (F-tests, *** p-value<0.001,
S1
Table). Source data are provided in S2
Table.
Local deregulation of CycG induces high FA.
Wing length FA (FA10) of females bearing a Gal4 driver either associated
with UAS-CycG (dark
orange) or alone (light orange). Wing length was measured as the
distance between landmarks 3 and 13. (F-tests, *** p-value<0.001,
S1
Table). Source data are provided in S2
Table.
The Cyclin G ETP interacting domain sustains developmental stability
The 566 amino-acid Cyclin G protein exhibits three structured domains: the
ETP-interacting domain (amino-acids 1 to 130) that physically interacts with the
ETPs Corto and Asx, a cyclin domain (amino-acids 287 to 360) that presents high
similarity with the cyclin domain of vertebrate G-type cyclins, and a PEST-rich
domain (amino-acids 541 to 566) [28,31]. To
test whether the interaction with ETPs, and thus transcriptional regulation by
Cyclin G, could be important to control FA, we generated new transgenic lines
enabling to express different versions of the CycG cDNA:
CycG (encoding the
full-length protein), CycG
(encoding an ETP-interacting domain deleted protein),
CycG (encoding a PEST
domain deleted protein), and
CycG (encoding an
ETP-interacting plus PEST domain deleted protein) (Fig 2A). In order to compare the amounts of
FA induced, all transgenes were integrated at the same site using the
PhiC31 integrase system. Globally, the different fusion
proteins were expressed at the same level (S1 Fig).
Contrarily to da-Gal4, the wing drivers used above induced not
only high FA but also few ectopic veins or small notches that prevented to
accurately measure wing centroid size. We then used da-Gal4 to
ubiquitously drive expression of the transgenic lines and focus on the FA
phenotype. We confirmed that expression of
CycG induced very high FA
as compared to + and da-Gal4/+ controls.
Furthermore, expression of CycG
also significantly increased FA, although to a much lesser extent.
Interestingly, expression of either
CycG or
CycG significantly
increased FA as compared to CycG
or CycG, respectively (Fig 2B and 2C, S3 and
S4
Tables). These results show that the ETP interacting domain tends to limit
CycG-induced FA and suggest
that the interaction between Cyclin G and chromatin regulators sustains
developmental stability.
Fig 2
The ETP interacting domain limits CycG-induced
FA.
A–Map of the 566 amino-acid Cyclin G protein showing the ETP
interacting and PEST domains. B–Wing centroid size FA
(FA10) of females da-Gal4/+ (+),
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+,
(CycG) and
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4,
(CycG).
C–Wing centroid size FA (FA10) of females
da-Gal4/+ (+), +/
UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+
(CycG) and
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+
(CycG). (F-tests,
*** p-value<0.001, S3 Table). Source data are provided
in S4
Table.
The ETP interacting domain limits CycG-induced
FA.
A–Map of the 566 amino-acid Cyclin G protein showing the ETP
interacting and PEST domains. B–Wing centroid size FA
(FA10) of females da-Gal4/+ (+),
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+,
(CycG) and
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4,
(CycG).
C–Wing centroid size FA (FA10) of females
da-Gal4/+ (+), +/
UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+
(CycG) and
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+
(CycG). (F-tests,
*** p-value<0.001, S3 Table). Source data are provided
in S4
Table.
CycG and PcG or ETP genes
interact for developmental stability
We next addressed genetic interactions between CycG and
PcG or ETP alleles (Table 1) for developmental stability. FA of
flies heterozygous for PcG and ETP loss of
function alleles was not significantly different from that of control flies.
However, when combined with da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG, many of these
mutations significantly increased wing FA as compared to
da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG flies (Fig 3, S5 and
S6
Tables). This was the case for alleles of the PRC1 and PR-DUB encoding genes
Sex comb extra
(Sce,
Sce and
Sce),
calypso (caly
and caly), Sex comb on
midleg (Scm),
Polycomb
(Pc), and
polyhomeotic
(ph-p and
ph-dph-p).
No modification of CycG-induced
FA was observed with the Psc
allele. However, this allele has been described as a complex mutation with loss
and gain of function features [32]. Opposite effects were observed for alleles of the ETPs
Asx and corto.
Asx increased
CycG FA whereas
Asx decreased it.
Asx behaves as a null
allele but has not been molecularly characterized [33], whereas the
Asx allele does not
produce any protein and thus reflects the effect of ASX loss [34]. Similarly, the
corto allele increased
CycG-induced FA whereas the
corto allele had no effect.
To characterize these alleles, we combined them with the
Df(3R)6-7 deficiency that uncovers the
corto locus, amplified the region by PCR and sequenced. The
corto allele corresponds to
a substitution of 14,209 nucleotides starting at position -59 upstream of the
corto Transcriptional Start Site (TSS) by a 30-nucleotide
sequence. Hence, this allele does not produce any truncated protein. By
contrast, corto corresponds to a
C towards T substitution that introduces a stop codon at position +73 downstream
the TSS, generating a 24 amino-acid polypeptide.
corto might then behave
as a dominant-negative mutation. Lastly, no modification of
CycG-induced FA was observed
for E(z) and
esc.
Table 1
Polycomb and Enhancer of Polycomb and Trithorax alleles used in this
study.
Class
Gene
Allele
Allele
class
Reference
ETP
Additional sex combs
Asx22P4
no protein detected
Scheuermann et al. 2010 [34]
AsxXF23
loss of function
Simon et al. 1992 [33]
corto
corto420
loss of function
Salvaing et al. 2008 [28]
cortoL1
amorphic
Salvaing et al. 2008 [28]
PcG
calypso
caly1
no protein detected
Gaytán de Ayala Alonso et al. 2007 [73];
Scheuermann et al. 2010 [34]
caly2
no protein detected
Gaytán de Ayala Alonso et al. 2007 [73];
Scheuermann et al. 2010 [34]
Enhancer of zeste
E(z)63
loss of function
Beuchle et al. 2001 [74]
extra sexcombs
esc21
amorphic
Gindhart and Kaufman 1995 [75]
Polycomb
Pc1
amorphic
Capdevila et al. 1986 [76]
polyhomeotic
ph-d401ph-p602
null
Dura et al. 1987 [77]
polyhomeotic proximal
ph-p410
loss of function
Dura et al. 1987 [77]
Posterior sex combs
Psc1
hypomorphic
Adler et al. 1989 [78]
Sex combs extra
Sce1
null
Gorfinkiel et al. 2004 [79]
Sce33M2
loss of function
Fritsch et al. 2003 [80]
SceKO4
null
Gutiérrez et al. 2012 [81]
Sex comb on midleg
ScmD1
amorphic
McKeon and Brock 1991 [82]
Fig 3
CycG interacts with several PcG and
ETP genes for developmental stability.
Centroid size FA (FA10) of ETP or PcG
heterozygous mutant females combined with da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG (dark
orange; da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG;
PcG/+ or da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG;
ETP/+) and ETP or
PcG heterozygous mutant females combined with
da-Gal4 (blue; da-Gal4/+; PcG/+ or
da-Gal4; ETP/+). The grey dashed
line shows FA of da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
females. (F-tests, *p-value<0.05; ** p-value<0.01; ***
p-value<0.001, S5 Table). Source data are provided
in S6
Table.
CycG interacts with several PcG and
ETP genes for developmental stability.
Centroid size FA (FA10) of ETP or PcG
heterozygous mutant females combined with da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG (dark
orange; da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG;
PcG/+ or da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG;
ETP/+) and ETP or
PcG heterozygous mutant females combined with
da-Gal4 (blue; da-Gal4/+; PcG/+ or
da-Gal4; ETP/+). The grey dashed
line shows FA of da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
females. (F-tests, *p-value<0.05; ** p-value<0.01; ***
p-value<0.001, S5 Table). Source data are provided
in S6
Table.Interestingly, Asx and caly encode proteins of
the PR-DUB complex whereas Pc, ph,
Sce and Scm encode proteins of PRC1, and
E(z) and esc encode proteins of PRC2.
Taken together, these results indicate that Cyclin G interacts with the Polycomb
complexes PRC1 and PR-DUB, but not with PRC2, for developmental stability.
Expression of CycG or
CycG does not modify global
H2AK118ub
Cyclin G binds polytene chromosomes at many sites and co-localizes extensively
with Ph and Asx suggesting a potential interaction with PRC1 and PR-DUB on
chromatin [28,31]. Sce
and caly encode antagonistic enzymes of the PRC1 and PR-DUB
complexes, respectively. Sce, aka dRing, ubiquitinates histone H2A on lysine 118
(H2AK118ub) whereas Calypso, aka dBap1, deubiquitinates the same H2A residue
[34,35]. To investigate whether
Cyclin G was related to these ubiquitin ligase/deubiquitinase activities, we
immunostained polytene chromosomes from
w larvae with
anti-Cyclin G and anti-humanH2AK119ub antibodies (homologous to
DrosophilaH2AK118ub) [36,37]. Cyclin G and H2AK118ub co-localized
extensively on chromosome arms suggesting that Cyclin G transcriptional activity
might somehow be connected to this histone mark (Fig 4A). Wing imaginal discs presented a
uniform pattern of H2AK118ub. When either
CycG or
CycG was expressed in the
posterior compartment of wing imaginal discs using the en-Gal4
driver, the global amount of H2AK118ub was not markedly modified (Fig 4B and 4C). Similarly,
clones expressing CycG or
CycG showed the same amount
of H2AK118ub than control GFP clones (Fig 4D, 4E and 4F). We thus concluded that
high FA was not related to a global perturbation of H2AK118 ubiquitination.
Fig 4
Cyclin G co-localizes with H2AK118ub at many sites on polytene
chromosomes but overexpression of CycG does not modify
global H2AK118ub.
A, A’, A”–Immunostaining of polytene chromosomes from
w third instar
larvae. H2AK118ub (red), Cyclin G (green), DAPI (blue).
A”‘–Close-up of the box showed in A”. B,
B’–Wing imaginal discs of 3rd instar larvae expressing
CycG in the posterior
compartment under control of the en-Gal4 driver,
stained with anti-Cyclin G (green) and anti-H2AK118ub (red). C,
C’–Wing imaginal discs of 3rd instar larvae
expressing CycG in the
posterior compartment under control of the en-Gal4
driver, stained with anti-Cyclin G (green) and anti-H2AK118ub (red).
D, D’, D”, D”’–GFP clones in wing imaginal discs
stained with anti-H2AK118ub (red). D’, D” and D”’ are close-up views of
the yellow rectangle shown in D. E, E’, E”,
E”’–CycG
clones marked by GFP in wing imaginal discs stained with anti-H2AK118ub
(red). E’, E” and E”’ are close-up views of the yellow rectangle shown
in E. F, F’, F”,
F”’–CycG
clones marked by GFP in wing imaginal discs stained with anti-H2AK118ub
(red). F’, F” and F”’ are close-up views of the yellow rectangle shown
in F. Scale bars: 50 μm.
Cyclin G co-localizes with H2AK118ub at many sites on polytene
chromosomes but overexpression of CycG does not modify
global H2AK118ub.
A, A’, A”–Immunostaining of polytene chromosomes from
w third instar
larvae. H2AK118ub (red), Cyclin G (green), DAPI (blue).
A”‘–Close-up of the box showed in A”. B,
B’–Wing imaginal discs of 3rd instar larvae expressing
CycG in the posterior
compartment under control of the en-Gal4 driver,
stained with anti-Cyclin G (green) and anti-H2AK118ub (red). C,
C’–Wing imaginal discs of 3rd instar larvae
expressing CycG in the
posterior compartment under control of the en-Gal4
driver, stained with anti-Cyclin G (green) and anti-H2AK118ub (red).
D, D’, D”, D”’–GFP clones in wing imaginal discs
stained with anti-H2AK118ub (red). D’, D” and D”’ are close-up views of
the yellow rectangle shown in D. E, E’, E”,
E”’–CycG
clones marked by GFP in wing imaginal discs stained with anti-H2AK118ub
(red). E’, E” and E”’ are close-up views of the yellow rectangle shown
in E. F, F’, F”,
F”’–CycG
clones marked by GFP in wing imaginal discs stained with anti-H2AK118ub
(red). F’, F” and F”’ are close-up views of the yellow rectangle shown
in F. Scale bars: 50 μm.
Cyclin G controls the expression of genes involved in translation and energy
production
Cyclin G controls transcription of the homeotic gene Abdominal-B and more
specifically behaves as an Enhancer of PcG gene for the regulation of homeotic
gene expression [31,38]. However, the high
number of Cyclin G binding sites on polytene chromosomes suggests that it has
many other transcriptional targets. We thus hypothesized that
CycG-induced FA might be
related to the deregulation of Cyclin G transcriptional targets. To further
address the role of Cyclin G in transcriptional regulation, we deep-sequenced
transcripts from da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
wing imaginal discs. Considering that the Gal4 transactivator might
unspecifically interfere with transcription of some genes, we deep-sequenced
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal disc transcripts as negative
control.Sequence reads were aligned with the D. melanogaster genome to
generate global gene expression profiles. With an adjusted p-value threshold of
0.05, we retrieved 530 genes whose expression was significantly different
between da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
and the da-Gal4/+ control (S7 Table).
Surprisingly, expression of CycG was only weakly induced in
da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
imaginal discs (1.3 fold). To test the hypothesis that Cyclin G could, directly
or not, regulate its own repression, we quantified expression of the endogenous
CycG gene by RT-qPCR using primers located in the 3’UTR
that were not present in the transgene. Indeed, expression of endogenous
CycG was significantly decreased upon
CycG induction,
suggesting that Cyclin G repressed its own expression (Fig 5A and S8 Table).
Among the 530 genes deregulated in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
imaginal discs, 216 were up-regulated and 314 down-regulated. Up-regulated genes
were enriched in the Gene Ontology categories cytoplasmic
translation and translational initiation whereas
down-regulated genes were enriched in the category mitochondrial
respiratory chain complex (Fig 5B and S9 Table).
By RT-qPCR, we verified that several ribosomal protein genes
(RpL15, RpL7 and Rack1)
were over-expressed in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
imaginal discs (Fig 5C and
S10
Table). In conclusion,
CycG-induced
FA correlates with activation of genes involved in translation and repression of
genes involved in energy production.
Fig 5
Genes deregulated in wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG.
A–RT-qPCR analysis of endogenous CycG
expression in
da-Gal4,UAS-CycG/+
and da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Expression of
CycG was normalized on the geometric mean of
Lam and rin (S8
Table). t-tests, ** p-value<0.01. Error bars correspond to
standard deviations. B–Ontology of up-regulated and
down-regulated genes in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+ vs
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Gene ontology analysis was
performed with DAVID (S9 Table). C–RT-qPCR
analysis of RPL15, RPL7 and
Rack1 expression in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
and da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Expression of
RPL15, RPL7 and
Rack1 were normalized on the geometric mean of
Lam and rin (S10
Table). t-tests, ** p-value<0.01. Error bars correspond to
standard deviations. t-tests, ** p-value<0.01; ***
p-value<0.001.
Genes deregulated in wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG.
A–RT-qPCR analysis of endogenous CycG
expression in
da-Gal4,UAS-CycG/+
and da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Expression of
CycG was normalized on the geometric mean of
Lam and rin (S8
Table). t-tests, ** p-value<0.01. Error bars correspond to
standard deviations. B–Ontology of up-regulated and
down-regulated genes in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+ vs
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Gene ontology analysis was
performed with DAVID (S9 Table). C–RT-qPCR
analysis of RPL15, RPL7 and
Rack1 expression in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
and da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs. Expression of
RPL15, RPL7 and
Rack1 were normalized on the geometric mean of
Lam and rin (S10
Table). t-tests, ** p-value<0.01. Error bars correspond to
standard deviations. t-tests, ** p-value<0.01; ***
p-value<0.001.
Cyclin G binds the TSS of genes involved in translation and protein
phosphorylation
We next sought to determine the direct transcriptional targets of Cyclin G by
ChIP-seq. To do this, we took advantage of the transgenic +/
UAS-CycG line in which Cyclin G was
fused to a Myc tag. We performed ChIP experiments with anti-Myc antibodies using
chromatin from +/
UAS-CycG; da-Gal4/+
wing imaginal discs or da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs (mock
ChIP). 3363 significant peaks were identified (IDR < 0.05) in +/
UAS-CycG; da-Gal4/+
wing imaginal discs. Among these peaks, 1045 were located on a subset of 889
genes, most of them corresponding to TSS (Fig 6A and 6B, and S11 and
S12
Tables). We could not formally exclude that there were differences in Myc-Cyclin
G binding and endogenous Cyclin G binding. However, the increase in
CycG mRNA being low (1.3 fold), we assumed that the midly
over-expressed exogenous CycG
would respect the binding pattern of the endogenous protein. Snapshots of some
TSS bound genes (RPL7, RPL5,
Rack1, CycG) are shown on Fig 7. ChIP-qPCR analysis of
these four genes confirmed that Cyclin G peaked on their TSS and decreased on
gene body (Fig 6C and S13 Table).
As endogenous CycG was down-regulated when
CycG was expressed and Cyclin
G bound its own TSS, this confirmed that Cyclin G represses its own
promoter.
Fig 6
Identification of Cyclin G genome-wide binding sites in wing imaginal
discs.
A–Repartition of feature types among the 3363 decile-ranked
Cyclin G peaks (S12 Table). Validated peaks were
ranked based on their height (highest number of overlapping reads), and
separated in ten bins before annotation. B–Average profile
of Cyclin G signal over these genes shown as an aggregation plot. The
standard error is represented as a shaded area over the curve.
C–ChIP-qPCR analysis of RPL7,
RPL5, Rack1 and
CycG. IPs were performed either with Myc antibody
(α-Myc) to reveal the presence of Cyclin G, or with rabbit IgG as
negative control (mock). qPCR were performed using oligonucleotide
primers located either at the TSS or in the gene body as indicated.
Error bars represent the coefficient of variation (CV) (S13
Table). D–Ontology of the 889 genes. Gene
ontology analysis was performed with DAVID.
Fig 7
Snapshots illustrated Cyclin G ChIP-seq.
Focus on RPL7 (A), RPL5 (B),
Rack1 (C) and CycG (D).
Identification of Cyclin G genome-wide binding sites in wing imaginal
discs.
A–Repartition of feature types among the 3363 decile-ranked
Cyclin G peaks (S12 Table). Validated peaks were
ranked based on their height (highest number of overlapping reads), and
separated in ten bins before annotation. B–Average profile
of Cyclin G signal over these genes shown as an aggregation plot. The
standard error is represented as a shaded area over the curve.
C–ChIP-qPCR analysis of RPL7,
RPL5, Rack1 and
CycG. IPs were performed either with Myc antibody
(α-Myc) to reveal the presence of Cyclin G, or with rabbit IgG as
negative control (mock). qPCR were performed using oligonucleotide
primers located either at the TSS or in the gene body as indicated.
Error bars represent the coefficient of variation (CV) (S13
Table). D–Ontology of the 889 genes. Gene
ontology analysis was performed with DAVID.
Snapshots illustrated Cyclin G ChIP-seq.
Focus on RPL7 (A), RPL5 (B),
Rack1 (C) and CycG (D).The 889 Cyclin G-bound genes were enriched in GO categories cytoplasmic
translation and protein phosphorylation (Fig 6D). Comparison of the 530
genes deregulated in wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG with these 889 genes
showed that only 62 genes were both deregulated (39 up- and 23 down-regulated)
and bound by Cyclin G (S14 Table), suggesting that most of the
effects on gene expression were indirect. Strikingly, the 39 up-regulated genes
were significantly enriched in the GO category translation
(GO:0002181~cytoplasmic translation, 14 genes, enrichment score: 12.31, adjusted
p-value 2.07E-16) and the 23 down-regulated ones in the GO category
cytochrome-c oxidase activity (GO:0004129~cytochrome-c
oxidase activity, 3 genes, enrichment score: 2.01, adjusted p-value
4.40E-02).
Cyclin G-bound genes are enriched in PRC1 and Asx
Using published datasets, we analysed the correlation between regions bound by
Cyclin G in +/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal/+ imaginal discs and those enriched in PRC1, or PR-DUB
components, RNAPolII, or H3K27me3 in wild type wing imaginal discs (S15 Table).
Cyclin G-bound regions were significantly exclusive from H3K27me3, corroborating
previous results [31].
The same comparisons were performed gene-wise and gave the same results (Fig 8). Importantly, 78% of
Cyclin G-bound genes were also bound by RNAPolII and Pc. We cannot exclude that
Cyclin G might co-localize with PRC1 in some cells and with RNAPolII in others.
Alternatively, Cyclin G-bound genes might be simultaneously bound by PRC1 and
RNAPolII. Considering RNAPolII as a proxy for transcriptional activity, and
given that PRC1 has the ability to block transcriptional initiation [39], these genes would be
most probably paused. Cyclin G also shared many target genes with Asx but,
though Asx and Calypso belong to the PR-DUB complex, Cyclin G did not share
binding sites with Calypso. This indicates either that the interaction between
Cyclin G and Asx destabilizes the PR-DUB complex or that it takes place outside
PR-DUB.
Fig 8
Cyclin G shares target genes with PRC1, Asx and RNAPolII but not with
Calypso.
Venn diagrams showing the intersection between Cyclin G-bound genes in
+/ UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs with Pc and RNAPlII (A), Asx
and Calypso (B), and K3K27me3 (C) in wild-type wing imaginal discs.
Cyclin G shares target genes with PRC1, Asx and RNAPolII but not with
Calypso.
Venn diagrams showing the intersection between Cyclin G-bound genes in
+/ UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs with Pc and RNAPlII (A), Asx
and Calypso (B), and K3K27me3 (C) in wild-type wing imaginal discs.
Cyclin G is a hub in the wing imaginal disc network
These genome-wide analyses indicate that Cyclin G coordinates the expression of
genes involved in translation and energy production. However, only a few Cyclin
G-bound genes were deregulated in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
imaginal discs. To better understand how Cyclin G orchestrates target gene
expression, we developed a systems biology approach. We first built an
interactome based on genes expressed in control da-Gal4/+ wing
imaginal discs (with a cutoff of 10 reads). Edges corresponding to
protein-protein interactions (PPI) and transcription factor-gene interactions
(PDI) were integrated into this interactome through DroID [40]. The resulting wing imaginal disc
interactome, further called the WID network, was composed of 9,966 nodes
(proteins or genes) connected via 56,133 edges (interactions)
(WID.xmml). We then examined the position of Cyclin G in this network.
Betweenness centrality—i.e. the total number
of non-redundant shortest paths going through a certain node–is a measure of
centrality in a network [41]. A node with a high betweenness centrality could control the
flow of information across the network [42]. With 8.32E-03, Cyclin G had one of the
highest value of betweenness centrality of the network, ranking at the
30th position among the 9,966 nodes. This suggests that Cyclin G
represents a hub in the WID network.In order to isolate a connected component of the WID network that showed
significant expression change when
CycG is expressed, we
introduced the expression matrix describing expression of the 530 significantly
deregulated genes in the WID network. We next used JactiveModules to identify
sub-networks of co-deregulated genes [43]. A significant sub-network of 222 nodes
and 1069 edges centred on Cyclin G was isolated (Z score 48.53). This
sub-network was laid out according to functional categories (Fig 9, CycG_subnetwork.xmml).
Four modules composed of genes respectively involved in transcription,
mitochondrial activity, translation, and metabolism, were found to be highly
connected to Cyclin G. Strikingly, the “translation” module was mainly composed
of genes up-regulated in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
wing imaginal discs. On the contrary, the “mitochondrion” and “metabolism”
modules were mainly composed of genes down-regulated in
da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
wing imaginal discs. Interestingly, Cyclin G-bound genes in this sub-network
were enriched in genes bound by the PRC1 proteins Pc, Ph and Psc, as well as by
RNAPolII, and to a lesser extent by Asx (Fig 10).
Fig 9
Functional subnetwork identified in wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG.
Schematic representation of a sub-network of 222 genes centred on Cyclin
G (CycG_subnetwork.xmml) and identified using JactiveModules (Z score
48.53). In this sub-network, 65 genes were up-regulated in
da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG
vs da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs (green gradient), 124
genes were down-regulated (red gradient), and 33 genes were not
significantly deregulated (grey). Genes bound by Cyclin G are circled in
blue. Transcription factor genes are represented by squares. Genes were
clustered depending on their function. Black edges correspond to
interactions discovered in the present study. Grey edges correspond to
interactions described in the literature and imported into the WID
network using DroID.
Fig 10
Genes bound by Asx, Calypso, Pc, Ph, Psc, or RNAPolII, or enriched in
H3K27me3 in the sub-network of 222 genes centred on Cyclin G.
Bound genes are represented in blue.
Functional subnetwork identified in wing imaginal discs expressing
CycG.
Schematic representation of a sub-network of 222 genes centred on Cyclin
G (CycG_subnetwork.xmml) and identified using JactiveModules (Z score
48.53). In this sub-network, 65 genes were up-regulated in
da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG
vs da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs (green gradient), 124
genes were down-regulated (red gradient), and 33 genes were not
significantly deregulated (grey). Genes bound by Cyclin G are circled in
blue. Transcription factor genes are represented by squares. Genes were
clustered depending on their function. Black edges correspond to
interactions discovered in the present study. Grey edges correspond to
interactions described in the literature and imported into the WID
network using DroID.
Genes bound by Asx, Calypso, Pc, Ph, Psc, or RNAPolII, or enriched in
H3K27me3 in the sub-network of 222 genes centred on Cyclin G.
Bound genes are represented in blue.
Discussion
The CycG gene of D. melanogaster
encodes a cyclin involved in transcriptional control, cell growth and the cell cycle
[26,28,38]. Mild overexpression of Cyclin G induces
high fluctuating asymmetry (FA), notably of wings, providing a unique tool to
investigate the genetic bases of developmental stability [6,7]. Cyclin G interacts physically with two
chromatin regulators of the Enhancers of Trithorax and Polycomb family (ETP), and
genetically with Polycomb-group (PcG) genes [31]. This prompted us to
examine the role of these interactions in developmental stability and to investigate
deeply the function of Cyclin G in transcriptional regulation.
Cyclin G maintains developmental stability through an organ-autonomous
process that involves the PRC1 and PR-DUB complexes
CycG-induced wing FA only occured when the deregulation was
local, i.e. in wing imaginal discs. Although
we cannot exclude that Cyclin G induces expression of a systemic factor that is
released into the haemolymph, our observations suggest that
CycG maintains developmental stability through an
organ-autonomous mechanism which would not involve the
Dilp8/Lgr3 pathway. Many Cyclin G targets in the wing
imaginal discs are also bound by PRC1, by Asx and by RNAPolII, but are not
enriched in H3K27me3. In agreement, mutations in PRC1 and PR-DUB, but not in
PRC2, strongly increase CycG-induced FA. We did not observe any
significant overlap between Cyclin G-bound genes and binding sites for Calypso,
the second component of PR-DUB. Yet, caly mutations also
strongly increase CycG-induced FA. Thus, the role of PR-DUB in
this context remains to be clarified. PRC1 and PR-DUB contain antagonistic
enzymes (Sce/dRing and Calypso) that respectively ubiquitinates and
deubiquitinates H2AK118. However, the global level of H2AK118 ubiquitination is
not modified in tissues where Cyclin G isoforms are overexpressed suggesting
that this epigenetic mark is not involved in developmental stability. Cyclin G
targets strikingly remind the neo-PRC1 targets described in [44]. Indeed, PRC1
components are redeployed during development and control these neo-PRC1 targets
that are robustly transcribed, not enriched in H2AK118ub, and on which PRC1 is
recruited independently of PRC2 [44]. It was proposed that PRC1 limits the expression of these
neo-PRC1 genes that are mainly involved in cell proliferation, cell signaling
and polarity, thus explaining its tumor suppressor role [44]. Hence, Cyclin G might participate with
PRC1 and PR-DUB in the control of these neo-PRC1 genes and this might be
important for developmental stability.
Deregulation of genes involved in translation, metabolism and mitochondrial
activity correlates with perturbation of developmental stability
DrosophilaCyclin G and the two vertebrate G-type cyclins, CCNG1
and CCNG2 exhibit a complex relationship to growth, on the one hand promoting
it, [45-48] and on the other hand,
slowing down or even blocking the cell cycle [26,49-52]. Accordingly, we found that Cyclin G
controls a small regulatory sub-network connecting genes involved in metabolism,
mitochondrial activity and translation. Notably, many genes involved in basic
metabolism, such as Gapdh1, Gapdh2 or
Jafrac1, are down-regulated in the
CycG context, which also
agrees with the small mean size of
CycG flies, organs and cells.
A large scale analysis of the Drosophila wing imaginal disc
proteome has recently shown that wing size correlates with some basic metabolic
functions, positively with glucose metabolism and negatively with mitochondrial
activity, but not with ribosome biogenesis [53]. However, in
CycG flies while
mitochondrial genes are negatively regulated, ribosomal biogenesis genes are
simultaneously positively regulated. Although transcriptome variations are
probably not a direct image of proteome variations, our data suggest that
robustness of wing size correlates with the fine-tuning of these key functions
relative to each other. Corroborating our study, a mutant for the AAA
mitochondrial protease FTSH4 in Arabidospsis thaliana displays
high variability of sepal size and shape associated with early ROS production
[54]. Furthermore, a
recent analysis of humanmesothelioma cells also points to a role of BAP1 and
the PR-DUB complex in mitochondrial function and ROS homeostasis [55]. It will be important
in the future to understand how epigenetic control of genes involved in
mitochondrial activity and control of growth impact developmental stability and
how deregulation of these processes might lead to cancer.
Materials and methods
Plasmids
The pPMW-attB plasmid was built as follows: the Gateway vector
pPMW [56] was linearized by digestion with NsiI; the
attB sequence was amplified from pUASTattB
[57] (using primers
attB-NsiIF and attB-NsiIR (S16 Table)
and the PCR product was digested with NsiI; the digested PCR
product and the linearized plasmid were ligated and sequenced. This plasmid was
deposited at Addgene (plasmid # 61814).The full-length CycG cDNA
(CycG, encoding the 566
amino-acid protein) was amplified from S2 cell cDNAs using primers
CycGnF and CycGnR. cDNAs encoding
truncated forms of Cyclin G
(CycG, Cyclin G deleted of the
putative PEST domain corresponding to amino-acids 542 to 566;
CycG, Cyclin G deleted of the
ETP-interacting domain corresponding to amino-acids 1 to 130;
CycG, Cyclin G deleted of
both domains) were amplified from the full-length CycG cDNA
using primers CycGnF and CycG541R,
CycG130F and CycGnR, and
CycG130F and CycG541R, respectively (S16 Table).
The PCR products were cloned into pENTR/D-TOPO (Invitrogen),
transferred into pPMW-attB and the resulting plasmids
pPMW-attB-CycG,
pPMW-attB-CycG,
pPMW-attB-CycG,
pPMW-attB-CycG were
sequenced.
Drosophila melanogaster strains and genetics
Flies were raised on standard yeast-cornmeal medium at 25°C.UAS-Myc-CycG transgenic lines were obtained by
PhiC31-integrase mediated insertion into strain
yM{vas-int.Dm}ZH-2Aw;M{3xP3-RFP.attP'}ZH-51C
(stock BL-24482). Plasmids
pPMW-attB-CycG,
pPMW-attB-CycG,
pPMW-attB-CycG and
pPMW-attB-CycG were
injected into embryos, G0 adults were back-crossed to yw, and
G1 transformants were crossed to yw again to obtain G2
transformants (BestGene Inc.). Transformants were individually crossed with
yw; Sp/CyO, and the curly wing siblings were crossed with
each other. Homozygous transgenic lines were then obtained by crossing 5 females
and 5 males. The resulting lines were named
UAS-CycG, UAS
-CycG,
UAS-CycG and UAS
-CycG.Gal4 drivers used were daughterless-Gal4
(da-Gal4), engrailed-Gal4
(en-Gal4, nubbin-Gal4
(nub-Gal4), optomotor-blind-Gal4
(omb-Gal4), rotund-Gal4
(rn-Gal4), scalloped-Gal4
(sd-Gal4), teashirt-Gal4
(tsh-Gal4), vestigial-Gal4
(vg-Gal4) (from the Bloomington Drosophila
stock center), and Insulin-like peptide 3-Gal4
(dILP3-Gal4), neuropeptide F-Gal4
(NPF-Gal4), Pigment-dispersing factor-Gal4
(Pdf-Gal4), period-Gal4
(per-Gal4), phantom-Gal4
(phm-Gal4), Prothoracicotropic
hormone-Gal4 (Ptth-Gal4),
R10B09-Gal4 (kind gifts from Dr M. Dominguez’s lab).To generate clones, the strain hs-flp; tub>stop>Gal4,
UAS-GFP/CyO (a kind gift of Dr. M. Gho) was crossed with
the UAS-CycG strains. After 24h of egg-laying, embryos were
allowed to develop 24h. Then, they were heat-shocked at 37°C during 1h, allowed
to develop 24h more, and heat-shocked a second time at 37°C during 1h.The da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG third chromosome,
obtained by recombination of da-Gal4 with the original
UAS-CycG transgene
(RCG76), was used to test genetic interactions between
CycG and several PcG or
ETP mutations [31]. PcG and
ETP alleles used are described in Table 1.For FA analyses, five replicate crosses were performed for each genotype, wherein
6 females carrying a Gal4 driver were mated with 5 males carrying a
CycG transgene. Parents were transferred into a new vial
every 48h (three times) then discarded. Thirty females were sampled from the
total offspring of the desired genotype. For genetic interactions with
PcG or ETP mutants, crosses were performed
similarly except that 6 PcG or ETP mutant
females were mated either with 5 da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG males, or with 5
da-Gal4 males as control.
Morphometrics
Right and left wings of 30 sampled females were mounted on slides, dorsal side
up, in Hoyer’s medium. Slides were scanned with a Hamamatsu Nanozoomer Digital
Slide scanner. Wing pictures were exported into tif format using NDP.view. All
wings were oriented with the hinge to the left. Image J was used to digitize
either landmarks 3 and 13 to measure wing length, or the 15 landmarks to measure
more accurately wing centroid size when indicated (S2 Fig).
All wings were measured twice. Analysis of wing size FA, the variance of the
difference between the left and the right wing in a population, was performed as
described previously [6].
The FA10 index was used to estimate FA, i.e.
FA corrected for measurement error, directional asymmetry and inter-individual
variation [9]. For all
genotypes, the interaction individual*side was significant, indicating that FA
was larger than measurement error. F-tests were performed to compare the
different genotypes.
Immunostaining of polytene chromosomes and wing imaginal discs
Immunostainings were performed as described in [31]. Primary anti-H2AK119ub antibodies
(Cell Signaling D27C4) were used at a 1:40 dilution.
RNA-seq experiments and RT-qPCR validations
Wing imaginal discs from
da-Gal4/UAS-CycG and
da-Gal4/+ third instar female larvae were dissected, and
total RNAs were extracted as previously described except that 150 discs
homogenized by pipetting were used for each extraction [58]. Three biological replicates (wing
imaginal discs dissected from three independent crosses) were generated for each
genotype. Library preparation and Illumina sequencing were performed at the ENS
Genomic Platform (Paris, France). PolyA RNAs were purified from 1 μg of total
RNA using oligo(dT). Libraries were prepared using the TruSeq Stranded mRNA kit
(Illumina). Libraries were multiplexed by 6 on 2 flowcell lanes. 50 bp single
read sequencing was performed on a HiSeq 1500 device (Illumina). Number of reads
are shown on S17
Table. Reads were aligned with the D.
melanogaster genome (dm6, r6.07) using TopHat 2 (v2.0.10)
[59]. Unambiguously
mapping reads were then assigned to genes and exons described by the Ensembl
BDGP5 v77 assembly, by using the “summarizeOverlaps” function from the
“GenomicAlignments” package (v 1.2.2) in “Union” mode [60]. Library size normalization and
differential expression analysis were both performed with DESeq 2 (v 1.6.3).
Genes with adjusted p-value below 0.05 were retained as differentially expressed
[61]. Gene Ontology
analysis was performed using DAVID [62].For RT-qPCR validations, RNAs were extracted from wing imaginal discs and treated
with Turbo DNAse (Ambion). cDNA were synthesized with SuperScript II Reverse
transcriptase (Invitrogen) using random primers. RT-qPCR experiments were
carried out in a CFX96 system (Bio-Rad) using SsoFast EvaGreen Supermix
(Bio-Rad). Two biological replicates (cDNA from wing imaginal discs of larvae
coming from independent crosses) and three technical replicates (same pool of
cDNA) per biological replicate were performed for each genotype. Expression
levels were quantified with the Pfaffl method [63]. The geometric mean of two reference
genes, Lamin (Lam) and
rasputin (rin), the expression of which
did not vary when CycG was
expressed, was used for normalization [64]. Sequences of primer couples are listed
in S16
Table.An interactome was built using Cytoscape (v 2.8.3) and the DroID plugin (v 1.5)
to introduce protein-protein and transcription factor-gene interactions [40]. The jActiveModules
plugin (v 2.23) was used to find sub-networks of co-deregulated genes in the
interactome by using “overlap threshold” 0.8, “score adjusted for size”, and
“regional scoring” [43].
ChIP-seq experiments and ChIP-qPCR validations
Wing imaginal discs from
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+ and da-Gal4/+ third instar female larvae
were used for ChIP-seq experiments. 600 wing imaginal discs were dissected
(taking one disc per larva) in Schneider medium and aliquoted per 50 on ice. The
12 microtubes were treated as described in [58] with minor modifications. Discs were
fixed at 22°C. 12 sonication cycles were performed (Diagenode Bioruptor
sonifier; cycles of 30'' ON, 30'' OFF, high power). After centrifugation, the 12
supernatants were pooled, homogenized, and 2% were kept (Input). The remaining
fragmented chromatin was redistributed into 12 tubes and each tube was adjusted
to 1 mL with 140 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HClpH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100,
0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% BSA, Roche complete EDTA-free protease inhibitor
cocktail. For immunoprecipitation, 3 μg of anti-Myc antibody (Abcam 9132) were
added per tube. Two biological replicates were performed for
+/UAS-CycG;
da-Gal4/+ and one for da-Gal4/+.Library preparation and Illumina sequencing were performed at the ENS Genomic
Platform (Paris, France). Libraries were prepared using NEXTflex ChIP-Seq Kit
(Bioo Scientific), using 38 ng of IP or Input DNA. Libraries were multiplexed by
10 on one flowcell run. 75 bp single read sequencing was performed on a NextSeq
500 device (Illumina). Reads were filtered by the "fastq_quality_filter" command
from the "fastx-Toolkit" package (http://hannonlab.cshl.edu/fastx_toolkit/), using a threshold of
90% bases with mapping quality ≥ 20. Reads are shown on S18 Table.
Those that successfully passed the filtering step were aligned to the
D. melanogaster genome (dm6, r6.07) using
Bowtie 2 (http://bowtie-bio.sourceforge.net/bowtie2/) (v 2.1.0) with
default parameters [65].
Peaks were called by MACS2 (v 2.1.0) by comparing each ChIP to its input
library, with fragment size fixed at 110 bp and otherwise default parameters
[66]. Peak
reproducibility between the two biological replicates was then analysed with the
IDR method (https://www.encodeproject.org/software/idr/) [67]. Briefly, an IDR score
was assigned to each peak by the "batch-consistency-analysis" function, using
the recommended parameters for MACS peaks (peak ranking based on p-value). Peaks
below the 0.05 threshold were considered reproducible. The overlapping
reproducible peaks from both replicates were fused using the BEDtools suite
"merge" function [68],
resulting in the final list of peaks kept for subsequent analysis. Cyclin
G-bound genes were defined as genes from the genome annotation file (dm6, r6.07)
which overlapped at least one of these Cyclin G peaks, as obtained by the
BEDtools suite "intersect" function.For ChIP-qPCR validations, ChIPs were performed similarly with the anti-Myc
antibody. Rabbit IgG (Diagenode) were used as negative control (mock). qPCR
experiments were carried out in a CFX96 system (Bio-Rad) using SsoFast EvaGreen
Supermix (Bio-Rad). Three biological replicates–three technical replicates per
biological replicate–were performed for each antibody and for the Input.
Sequences of primer couples are listed in S16 Table.
Data were normalized against Input chromatin.Heatmaps and aggregation plots of Cyclin G signal over gene bodies and TSS were
generated using the ngsplot package. (https://github.com/shenlab-sinai/ngsplot) [69]. Some genes with spurious signal (such
as genes from the histone complex) were excluded from the analysis based on
signal uniformity over the full length of the gene (cumulative derivative of
Cyclin G signal over gene length = 0).
Genomic association
Genomic loci enriched for Polycomb (Pc), Posterior Sex Comb (Psc), Polyhomeotic
(Ph), RNA Polymerase II (RNAPolII) and H3K27me3 in wild type imaginal discs of
third instar larvae were retrieved from GEO (GSE42106) [70-71] (H3K27me3_WholeWingDisc GSM1032567, PcRJ_AnteriorWingDisc GSM1032571, PcRJ_PosteriorWingDisc GSM1032574, Ph_WholeWingDisc GSM1032576, PolII_WholeWingDisc GSM1032577, Psc_WholeWingDisc GSM1032578. Binding sites for Pc in the whole
wing disc were defined as the overlap between Pc binding sites in the anterior
and posterior wing disc compartment, as obtained by the BEDtools "intersect"
function. For Asx and Calypso, the bed files were a kind gift from Dr. J. Müller
[34]. The mappability
file for dm6 genome with 25 nt reads (the smallest size in the compared data)
was generated using the Peakseq code (http://archive.gersteinlab.org/proj/PeakSeq/
Mappability_Map/Code). The overall size of the mappable genome
was used as the effective genome size for the GAT software (https://github.com/AndreasHeger/gat) to
assess the significance of the overlap between peaks of Cyclin G and other
factors [72]. As GAT
performs a two-tailed test, it displays low p-values both for significant
overlap and exclusion (as between Cyclin G and H3K27me3).Gene overlap significance assessment was made as follows: under the null
hypothesis, genes that are enriched for Asx, Calypso, Pc, Psc, Ph, RNAPolII or
H3K27me3 in wild type imaginal discs of third instar larvae should not exhibit
any bias towards Cyclin G targets. Thus, the overlap between n
enriched genes and K Cyclin G targets genes should be explained by
random sampling without replacement of n genes within the total
amount N of D. melanogaster
genes. The amount of overlap under the null hypothesis X follows a
hypergeometric law:
X~HY(K,N,n). The
significance of the observed overlap k was computed as the
probability of observing X higher or equal to k under
the null hypothesis: P(X ≥ k).
Accession numbers
The data discussed in this publication have been deposited in NCBI's Gene
Expression Omnibus [70]
and are accessible through GEO Series accession number GSE99462 for RNA-seq, and
GSE99461 for ChIP-seq.
Western blots showing the Myc tagged transgenic proteins.
Top: Membranes were stained with Ponceau red.Bottom: The same membranes were incubated first with the anti-Myc antibody
(left) or the anti-tubulin antibody (right), second with an HRP secondary
antibody, then revealed with the Pierce ECL western blotting substrate.20 μg of proteins from
da-Gal4>UAS-CycG,
da-Gal4>UAS-CycG,
da-Gal4>UAS-CycG,
da-Gal4>UAS-CycG, or
yw third instar larvae were loaded per track.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.
Acquisition of morphometric data.
Red dots show the 15 landmarks digitized on the wings. The coordinates of
these landmarks were obtained from the left and right wings of 30 females
randomly sampled from a population. FA was expressed using the FA10 index,
i.e. the variance of the difference
between the left and the right wings in the population, corrected for the
measurement error, directional asymmetry and inter-individual variances.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.
Wing length fluctuating asymmetry of flies expressing
CycG with different Gal4
drivers.
Wing length fluctuating asymmetry was estimated with the FA10 index using
landmarks 3 and 13 as described previously [6]. See source data in S2
Table. Standard F-tests were used to compare FA values between
genotypes. Df: degrees of freedom.
CycG: cDNA encoding
the protein deleted of the PEST domain. n: number of females measured.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Source data for S1 Table.
Length (from landmarks 3 to 13) of left (side 1) and right (side 2) wings.
Each wings were measured twice (sessions 1 and 2).(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Wing centroid size fluctuating asymmetry of flies expressing different
versions of Cyclin G.
Wing centroid size fluctuating asymmetry was estimated with the FA10 index
using the 15 landmarks as described previously [6]. See source data in S4
Table. Standard F-tests were used to compare FA values between
genotypes. Df: degrees of freedom. n: total number of females analysed.
CycG: cDNA encoding the
full-length protein; CycG:
cDNA encoding a protein deleted of the ETP-interacting domain;
CycG: cDNA encoding a
protein deleted of the PEST domain;
CycG: cDNA encoding
a protein deleted of both domains.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Source data for S3 Table.
Coordinates of the 15 landmarks of left (side 1) and right (side 2) wings.
Each wings were measured twice (sessions 1 and 2).(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Wing centroid size fluctuating asymmetry of flies expressing
CycG combined with
different PcG or ETP mutant
alleles.
Wing centroid size fluctuating asymmetry was estimated with the FA10 index
using the 15 landmarks as described previously [6]. See source data in S6
Table. Standard F-tests were used to compare FA values between
genotypes. Df: degrees of freedom.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Source data for S5 Table.
Coordinates of the 15 landmarks of left (side 1) and right (side 2) wings.
Each wing was measured twice (sessions 1 and 2).(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
List of the 530 genes deregulated in da-Gal4/+,
UAS- CycG wing imaginal
discs as compared to da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Measure of endogenous CycG expression by
RT-qPCR.
AE: amplification efficiency of the primer couples. Expression of
CycG was normalized on the geometric mean of
Lam and rin (chosen as reference genes
as their expression was not modified by
CycG expression). Two
biological replicates (called 1 and 2) and three technical replicates were
performed per experiment. t-tests were performed to compare expression of
CycG in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
and da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Ontology of genes deregulated in
UAS-CycG,
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs.
Gene ontology analyses were performed with DAVID (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/home.jsp).(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Validation of RNA-seq experiments by RT-qPCR.
AE: amplification efficiency of the primer couples. Expression of
RPL15, RPL7 and Rack1
were normalized on the geometric mean of Lam and
rin (chosen as reference genes as their expression was
not modified by CycG
expression). Two biological replicates (called 1 and 2) and three rechnical
replicates were performed per experiment. t-tests were performed to compare
expression of these genes in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+ and
da-Gal4/+ wing imaginal discs.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
List of the 889 genes which Transcriptional Start Site is bound by Cyclin
G in wing imaginal discs.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Repartition of feature types among decile-ranked peaks.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Validation of ChIP-seq experiments by RT-qPCR.
AE: amplification efficiency of the primer couples. Cq of the Input were
adjusted taking dilution into account. Results were normalized in comparison
to the Input. Three biological replicates (named 1, 2 and 3) and three
technical replicates per biological replicate were performed.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
List of the 62 genes deregulated in da-Gal4,
UAS-CycG/+
wing imaginal discs and bound by Cyclin G at the TSS.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Comparison of fragments bound by Cyclin G with fragments bound by Asx,
Calypso, Pc, Ph, Psc, RNAPolII, or enriched in H3K27me3 in 3rd larval instar
wing imaginal discs.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
Primers used in this study.
Coordinates on the Drosophila genome (dm6, r6.13). F:
forward primer, R: reverse primer.(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
RNA-seq of wing imaginal discs.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
ChIP-seq of wing imaginal discs.
(XLS)Click here for additional data file.
WID.zip file.
Wing imaginal disc (WID) network composed of 9,966 nodes connected
via 56,133 edges (WID.xmml).(ZIP)Click here for additional data file.
CycG_subnetwork.zip file.
Sub-network of 222 nodes and 1069 edges centred on Cyclin G
(CycG_subnetwork.xmml).(ZIP)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: Aruni S Arachchige Don; Robert F Dallapiazza; David A Bennin; Tiffany Brake; Colleen E Cowan; Mary C Horne Journal: Exp Cell Res Date: 2006-09-29 Impact factor: 3.905
Authors: Luis Gutiérrez; Katarzyna Oktaba; Johanna C Scheuermann; Maria Cristina Gambetta; Nga Ly-Hartig; Jürg Müller Journal: Development Date: 2011-11-17 Impact factor: 6.868