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. 2016 Jun 30;534(7609):625-6.
doi: 10.1038/534625a.

Physiology: Stressed-out chromatin promotes longevity

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Physiology: Stressed-out chromatin promotes longevity

Siu Sylvia Lee et al. Nature. .

Abstract

Two studies reveal that early-life malfunction in organelles called mitochondria brings about lasting changes in how DNA is packaged. These alterations have consequences for cellular stress responses and organismal longevity.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Coordinated responses to mitochondrial stress
Gene expression can be inhibited by the tight packaging of DNA as chromatin around histone proteins that are decorated with methyl groups at specific amino-acid residues. Two such repressive modifications are dubbed H3K9me2 and H3K27me3. Two studies, reveal that mitochondrial stress triggers the unpackaging and expression of genes involved in a stress response called the UPRmt. Tian et al. find that movement of the protein LIN-65 from the cytoplasm to the nucleus triggers nuclear migration of the transcription factor DVE-1. The enzyme MET2 mediates the addition of H3K9me2 modifications to histones in the cytoplasm; these histones move to the nucleus, restricting the unpackaged regions where DVE-1 can bind to promote transcription. Merkwirth et al. show that JMJD-1.2 and JMJD-3.1 enzymes are upregulated in response to mitochondrial stress and remove methyl groups from H3K27me3 to form the transcription-promoting modification H3K27me1 in the vicinity of UPRmt genes.

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