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Vol. 10, Issue 12, 4217-4230, December 1999
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, Illinois 60611-3008
Submitted June 24, 1999; Accepted September 21, 1999| |
ABSTRACT |
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In Euplotes crassus, most of the micronuclear genome is eliminated during formation of a transcriptionally active macronucleus. To understand how this is mediated throughout the genome, we have examined the chromatin structure of the macronucleus-destined sequences and Tec transposons, which are dispersed in 15,000 copies in the micronuclear genome and completely eliminated during formation of the macronuclear genome. Whereas the macronucleus-destined sequences show a typical pattern of nucleosomal repeats in micrococcal nuclease digests, the Tec element chromatin structure digests to a nucleosome-like repeat pattern that is not typical: the minimum digestion products are ~300-600 base pairs, or "subnucleosomal," in size. In addition, the excised, circular forms of the Tec elements are exceedingly resistant to nucleases. Nevertheless, an underlying nucleosomal structure of the Tec elements can be demonstrated from the size differences between repeats in partial micrococcal nuclease digests and by trypsin treatment of nuclei, which results in mononucleosome-sized products. Characterization of the most micrococcal nuclease-resistant DNA indicates that micronuclear telomeres are organized into a chromatin structure with digestion properties identical to those of the Tec elements in the developing macronucleus. Thus, these major repetitive sequence components of the micronuclear genome differ in their chromatin structure from the macronuclear-destined sequences during DNA elimination. The potential role of developmental stage-specific histone variants in this chromatin differentiation is discussed.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Like other ciliated protozoa, Euplotes crassus forms a
transcriptionally active macronucleus from a micronucleus during the sexual phase of its life cycle (reviewed by Klobutcher and Jahn, 1991
;
Prescott, 1994
). In the "hypotrichous" ciliates, such as Euplotes, Stylonychia, and Oxytricha,
as much as 95% of the genome is eliminated during the formation of a
macronucleus and the chromosomes are fragmented into gene-sized pieces
of DNA. Studies of genome organization and macronuclear development in
E. crassus indicate that DNA elimination occurs in multiple
phases and via multiple mechanisms (Klobutcher and Jahn, 1991
). In the
micronuclear genome, the sequences that are destined to become the
macronuclear linear DNA molecules (henceforth referred to as
mac-destined sequences) are clustered together (Figure
1). Within these clusters are short stretches of eliminated DNA that either (a) are internal to the mac-destined sequences (referred to as IES for "internal eliminated sequences") or (b) reside between two chromosome fragmentation sites
(referred to as "junction regions"). These sequences are eliminated
by a precise deletion process (IES excision) and chromosome fragmentation, respectively (Figure 1). We estimate that ~20% of the
E. crassus micronuclear genome is destined for the
macronucleus and that IES and junction regions account for ~10% of
the DNA, which means that as much as 70% of the eliminated DNA exists
outside of these mac-destined sequence clusters (Jahn et
al., 1988
). The majority of these eliminated sequences are
single-copy sequences.
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We have characterized two families of transposable elements, called
Tec1 and Tec2, that are highly dispersed in the E. crassus micronuclear genome and completely eliminated during macronuclear development (Jahn et al., 1988
, 1989
, 1993
; Baird et
al., 1989
; Krikau and Jahn, 1991
). Approximately one-third of the
7500 elements per haploid genome reside within the mac-destined
sequence clusters and interrupt genes as IES (Figure 1, Tec IES),
whereas the remainder are interspersed with the eliminated unique
sequences (Figure 1, non-IES Tec) (Jahn et al., 1988
). By
determining the copy number as a function of time of macronuclear
development for a large number of sequences that flank Tec elements, we
demonstrated that mac-destined sequence clusters are differentially
replicated compared with the bulk of the eliminated DNA during the
early stage of macronuclear development, when micronuclear chromosomes
are polytenized (Frels et al., 1996
). Mac-destined sequences
replicate during the two S phases of the polytene stage, whereas the
eliminated sequences that are not associated with the mac-destined
sequence clusters replicate during the second of the two S phases
(Frels and Jahn, 1995
; Frels et al., 1996
). Our studies also
demonstrated that the Tec elements within the mac-destined sequence
clusters (Tec IES) undergo precise excision during both S phases of the polytene stage (Figure 1). In contrast, the Tec elements within the
late replicating regions (non-IES Tecs) are eliminated along with
surrounding sequences at the time of chromosome fragmentation and may
or may not be specifically excised (Figure 1). Thus, the Tec elements
are eliminated at different times, and possibly by different
mechanisms, depending on their sequence environs. Because the primary
difference in environs for the Tec elements has to do with whether or
not they reside within genes (the mac-destined sequences), it seemed
possible that chromatin structural differences involved in
transcriptional activation of genes might be a controlling factor for
excision. Thus, the goal of the work described here was to determine
whether differences in chromatin structure could be defined for
eliminated versus retained (mac-destined) sequences or for Tec elements
within different environs.
We have investigated the chromatin structure of Tec elements and of
mac-destined sequences with the use of nuclease digestion of chromatin.
The enzymes micrococcal nuclease (MNase) and DNase I have differing
activities with respect to the nucleosomal structure of chromatin, but
both can be used to define differences in the accessibility of DNA
within the chromatin fiber (Igo-Kemenes et al., 1982
).
Hypersensitivity and increased sensitivity to DNase I have been widely
correlated with transcriptional activity or with a chromatin structure
that is accessible to transcriptional machinery (Gross and Garrard,
1988
). Heterochromatic sequences, such as genes located on an inactive
X chromosome or silenced in a given tissue type, are not as readily
digested. Although MNase has not been as widely used for comparisons of
active and inactive genes, heterochromatic sequences such as telomeres
can have nonnucleosomal structures that alter their MNase digestion properties (Gottschling and Cech, 1984
; Price, 1990
; Wright et al., 1992
). We demonstrate here that the Tec elements are packaged differently than the mac-destined sequences and become highly resistant
to nuclease digestion in conjunction with their excision.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Cell Culture, Nuclear Isolations, and Nuclease Treatments
E. crassus strains X1 and X2 were cultured and
harvested as described previously (Roth et al., 1985
; Krikau
and Jahn, 1991
). Nuclei were prepared by suspending the cells in 10 mM
Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 8, with protease inhibitors (defined below)
followed by the addition of Triton X-100 to 0.5% and homogenization in a Dounce homogenizer (vegetative or mated cells at time points up to
30 h) or by sonication (preparations of developing macronuclei at
30-60 h). Protease inhibitors (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) were as follows:
N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl
ketone, 100 µg/ml; N
-p-tosyl-L-lysine
chloromethyl ketone, 50 µg/ml; leupeptin, 2 µg/ml; aprotinin, 1 µg/ml. Mixtures of macronuclei and anlagen (the developing
macronuclei) were prepared by centrifugation at 1000 × g for 5 min, which does not pellet the micronuclei. When necessary, anlagen were further purified by progressive filtration through Nitex mesh (Tetko, Elmsford, NY) with 30-, 25-, and
20-µm pores and concentrated on 10-µm mesh followed by
centrifugation as described above. A preparation of "old macronuclei
and micronuclei" from 45-h mated cells was prepared by progressive
filtration of a homogenized sample through Nitex (anlagen were retained
at 30 µm, and the other nuclei passed through). Nuclei were suspended in digestion buffer (0.25 M sucrose, 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5, 15 mM
NaCl, 3 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mM
CaCl2) at a concentration of
106-107 nuclei/ml. MNase or
DNase I (Sigma) was added at concentrations ranging between 0.1 and 5 U/ml. Digestions were carried out at 37°C for varying periods of
time, typically 1, 3, 5, 10, 15, and 30 min. The most extensive
digestions were for 45 min. Digests were stopped by the addition of
EDTA to 10 mM and placement on ice. NaCl and SDS were added directly to
the EDTA-treated samples at 0.5 M and 0.5%, respectively, followed by
proteinase K (GIBCO-BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) digestion (200 µg/ml) at
65°C for 2-5 h. DNA was prepared by phenol-chloroform extraction.
Trypsin digestion of anlagen was carried out before the MNase treatment
by incubating the nuclei (106/ml) in PBS
containing trypsin (Sigma) at 10-fold dilutions ranging from 10 ng/ml
to 10 µg/ml for 10 min at 37°C. Reactions were stopped by the
addition of hen egg white trypsin inhibitor (Boehringer Mannheim,
Indianapolis, IN) at 1 mg/ml,
N
-p-tosyl-L-lysine
chloromethyl ketone at 50 µg/ml, and
N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl
ketone at 100 µg/ml, followed by pelleting and washing in the
presence of the same inhibitors. Nuclei were then suspended in
digestion buffer for MNase treatment (0.5 U/ml) as described above.
Under these conditions, gel electrophoresis of the histones indicated that the H2A and H2B histones were digested but that the H3 and H4
histones were intact.
Agarose Gels, Southern Blotting, Hybridizations, and Slot Blot Quantitation
DNA samples (0.1-1 µg of DNA) were prepared in TAE buffer
(0.04 M Tris, 0.02 M sodium acetate, 0.002 M EDTA, pH 7.0, with acetic
acid) and 10% Ficoll without loading dyes because the bromphenol blue
was found to interfere with blotting. Gels were typically 1.5% agarose
or 1.5 or 2% low-melting-point agarose (GIBCO-BRL) in TAE
buffer and were run at low voltage (25-30 V) overnight. Blotting was
carried out for 6-20 h with the use of 0.4 N NaOH, 1 M NaCl, and
ZetaBind (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA). DNA was cross-linked to the membrane
with a Stratagene (La Jolla, CA) UV cross-linker. Hybridization probes
consisted of DNA fragments in low-melting-point agarose labeled by the
random hexamer procedure (Feinberg and Vogelstein, 1983
). Gel lanes
containing the marker were blotted alongside the samples and then cut
off and hybridized with radiolabeled marker. The macronuclear sequence
probe was prepared by Bal31 treatment of 50 µg of total
E. crassus DNA with 1 U of Bal31 for 1 min (Jahn, 1988
),
which resulted in no size alteration of the DNA, as judged by agarose
gel electrophoresis. Hybridization and washing conditions were as
described previously (Krikau and Jahn, 1991
). Blots hybridized with the
smallest fragments used as probes (100-200 base pairs [bp]) were
washed only with 6× SSC (1× SSC is 0.15 M NaCl and 0.015 M Na
citrate), 0.5% SDS at 65°C. Restriction enzyme digestions were
carried out with the use of the buffers recommended by the
manufacturer of the enzyme (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD;
New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA).
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RESULTS |
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Developmental Changes in Nuclease Resistance of the Tec Element Chromatin Structure
We have previously demonstrated that the spacing of nucleosomes in
the developing macronucleus (referred to as anlagen) differs from that
of its micronuclear precursor and that the change in spacing correlates
with the first round of replication in the newly formed anlagen (Jahn
et al., 1997
). Comparison of MNase digestion products over a
range of MNase concentrations and times of digestion indicated that
additional changes in the Tec element chromatin structure were evident.
To determine how the Tec element chromatin structure in the anlagen
related to micronuclear and macronuclear chromatin structure and to the
mac-destined sequences, we used three types of hybridization probes in
consecutive hybridizations of the same Southern blots of DNA purified
from MNase- or DNase I-digested nuclei.
The hybridization probes are illustrated in Figure
2. The Tec element probes consisted of
internal restriction fragments (i.e., not including the inverted
repeats) from representatives of the Tec1 and Tec2 families (Figure
2A). Each probe recognizes all of the ~7500 Tec1 or Tec2 family
members; thus, we detected the overall nucleosomal or higher-order
packing of these highly dispersed, repeated sequences. The
"mac-specific" probe consists of size-fractionated, Bal31-treated
macronuclear DNA molecules (<4 kilobase [kb] in size). By size
selection, we have avoided inclusion of the macronuclear rDNA, which is
present at 100-fold higher copy number than the other macronuclear
genes. Because the average size of the macronuclear linear DNA
molecules is ~2 kb, this size-selected probe is representative of a
large number of different genes (~104). In the
selected size range, most of the molecules are similar in copy number
in the macronucleus; thus, we reasoned that it would be an ideal probe
to determine the overall chromatin organization of mac-destined
sequences in the developing macronucleus.
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Hybridization of this mac-specific probe to DNA from MNase digests of
vegetative macronuclei indicates that even though we treated the DNA
with Bal31 to remove telomeres, it detects a pattern of nucleosomes
that resembles the pattern that would be detected by a telomeric
sequence (Figure 2, B and D). The macronuclear telomeric sequences in
E. crassus are associated with a telomere-binding protein
that generates a structure that protects the first 100 bp of each
macronuclear linear DNA molecule from digestion with MNase (Gottschling
and Cech, 1984
; Price, 1990
). Internal to this 100-bp complex, the
molecules are associated with nucleosomes. Thus, when DNA from MNase
digests of macronuclei is hybridized with a telomeric probe (i.e.,
C4A4 repeats), a pattern of
multimeric fragments corresponding to the telomere complex plus each
multimer of a nucleosome is seen and each fragment size is 100 bp
larger than the expected size of each nucleosomal multimer (Gottschling and Cech, 1984
). In Figure 2, C and D, we compare the hybridization of
three probes (the mac-specific probe and two probes derived from the
cloned macronuclear rDNA) with native macronuclear DNA, which ranges in
size from 500 bp to 20 kb, and with DNA prepared from MNase-digested
macronuclei. The internal 0.8-kb EcoRI fragment from the
rDNA hybridizes to the rDNA molecule, 7 kb in size, in the native
macronuclear DNA and detects a nucleosomal repeat pattern of ~200-,
400-, and 600-bp fragments in the MNase digests. In contrast, the
0.3-kb XbaI-BamHI fragment from the terminus of the rDNA, which contains the
C4A4 telomeric repeat
sequences, detects both the 7-kb rDNA molecule and a smear of
hybridization to other macronuclear sequences. The mac-specific probe
also hybridizes to a smear of macronuclear molecules, which would be
expected regardless of whether it detected the telomeric repeat
sequences. Because the probe primarily detects a size range of
molecules corresponding to what was size selected and does not
hybridize to the macronuclear rDNA molecule, it clearly detects
sequences internal to the telomeric
C4A4 repeats and not just
the C4A4 repeats. However,
both the 0.3-kb terminal rDNA probe and the mac-specific probe detect
the alternative spacing of nucleosomes at ~300, 500, and 700 bp that
results from the 100-bp complex at macronuclear telomeres (Figure 2B).
We interpret the hybridization of the mac-specific probe as follows. In
the size fraction that we are detecting, the chromatin fragments
produced with telomeric ends are more abundant than the fragments
without telomeric ends; thus, the predominant pattern seen is that of
the telomeric complex. This situation could arise if the accessibility
to nuclease digestion decreases in the vicinity of telomeres such that
the ends of the molecules (including the first three or four
nucleosomes) digest to the "telomere-plus-nucleosome" products
while the middle of the macronuclear molecules digest to the
nucleosomal multimers. We have noted that the sizes of MNase digestion
products that are visible by ethidium bromide staining (rather than
hybridization) change dramatically during digestion. The multimeric
repeats that we detect with the 0.8-kb EcoRI fragment from
the macronuclear rDNA are visible by ethidium bromide staining only at
early time points of digestion. Later in the digestion, the ethidium
bromide-stained DNA is only slightly larger than what we see with the
mac-specific hybridization probe. Similar size changes are apparent in
MNase digests of E. crassus macronuclear chromatin described
previously (Price, 1990
). Thus, we suspect that nucleosomal spacing and
accessibility differ across a macronuclear DNA molecule and that the
"telomere effect" seen with the mac-specific probe may involve
chromatin structure differences arising from both the telomeric complex
and a more MNase-resistant nucleosomal structure in the
telomere-adjacent DNA.
As seen below, when the mac-specific probe is used with MNase-digested anlagen samples before the time of fragmentation and telomere addition, it shows a typical multimeric nucleosomal repeat pattern of ~200, 400, and 600 bp. After telomere addition (52 h), it shows the telomere-like pattern of ~300-, 500-, and 700-bp repeats. Thus, for the purpose of detecting the overall chromatin organization of mac-destined sequences, the probe behaves as if it detects a wide range of macronuclear sequences: when telomeres are present, it detects the "telomeric pattern" of sequences adjacent to telomeres, and when they are not present, it detects a more typical nucleosomal repeat pattern.
The differences between the Tec element chromatin structure of the
anlagen and that in the micronucleus are illustrated in Figure
3. Total nuclei (macronuclei and
micronuclei) from vegetative cells and the combined sample of
developing macronuclei and "old" macronuclei from mated cells at
43 h of development were digested under identical conditions with
MNase. (Macronuclear development is referred to in hours after mixing
of two different mating types; macronuclear development begins at ~16
h). At 43 h of development, the two phases of DNA replication to
form polytene chromosomes are completed, but fragmentation has not
started. In the nuclease-digested samples from cells at 43 h, the
digestion pattern of the Tec elements present in the anlagen can be
compared with the digestion pattern of the sequences in the old
macronuclei that are coisolated and nuclease treated together with the
developing macronucleus. Because the copy number of mac-destined
sequences in the anlagen is a maximum of 64 times their micronuclear
copy number at this stage, and the macronuclear sequences in the old
macronucleus are ~1000-fold amplified, the mac-specific probe
predominantly detects sequences from the old macronucleus.
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These MNase digests showed two unusual results with the Tec element
probes. First is the change in the spacing of nucleosomal repeats from
150 bp average to 185 bp average, as described previously (Jahn
et al., 1997
). Second, the smallest size seen for the Tec element chromatin digestion products in the anlagen is 300-600 bp,
which is larger than the digestion product expected for a sequence
protected by a nucleosome. Other Tec1 hybridization probes and the Tec2
probe (see Figure 2) show the same change in structure; thus, the
alterations observed are generalizable to both families of elements
(our unpublished data). Comparison of the blots for the vegetative
sample and the 43-h sample by hybridization to the mac-specific probe
and the rDNA probe shows that the time course of digestion was similar
for these two samples. These hybridizations show that the digestion
kinetics for the macronuclear sequences are much more rapid than those
seen for the Tec elements in either the micronucleus or the anlagen.
This might be expected for a comparison between a transcriptionally
active nucleus (the macronucleus) and a nucleus or chromatin structure
that is silent. The difference between the "mac sequence" probe and
the rDNA probe further demonstrates the different behavior of the
"telomere-associated" chromatin in the macronucleus. The internal
sequences of the macronuclear rDNA that are detected with the 0.8-kb
EcoRI fragment are rapidly digested to a dimer and "core
monomer" size (i.e., 146 bp) under the conditions we used to generate
the partial digestion products of micronuclear or
micronuclear-limited sequences. Under these conditions, the
mac-specific probe detects primarily the 250- to 300-bp "telomeric"
complex, which must be more stable than the monomer- and dimer-sized
products produced at internal sites.
We also digested nuclei with DNase I to determine if the differences in
chromatin structure would be apparent. In general, DNase I has a
greater accessibility to DNA in chromatin and digests DNA in a
nucleosomal core to a greater extent than MNase (Igo-Kemenes et
al., 1982
). Digests of mixtures of developing and old macronuclei at 17, 22, and 26 h of development are shown in Figure
4. The DNase I digests did not produce a
"nucleosome-like" pattern of repeats. However, as observed for the
MNase digests, the smallest product of DNase digestion is 300-600 bp
in size. These three time points encompass the first period of Tec
element excision, and the circular products of excision can be seen.
These excised circular forms are especially resistant to DNase I
digestion. In numerous experiments, we have digested nuclei isolated
over a wide range of developmental time points with MNase and DNase I. At all time points later than 20 h of development, and in many cases as early as 17 h, the minimal digestion products seen with the Tec element probes are larger than a typical mononucleosome fraction. Given that there is some variability in the synchrony of
mating, such that the overall synchrony of developmental events can
differ by 2-4 h for a mass mating, the detection of this altered chromatin structure at 17-20 h indicates that it is assembled during
the first S phase of DNA replication to form the polytene chromosomes
(Figure 1). With the E. crassus strains we used, the excision of Tec elements occurs at 20-22 h. In all of the MNase and
DNase I digests, whenever Tec element extrachromosomal circular excision products are present, they are highly resistant to digestion by either nuclease.
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To determine whether the slow rate of digestion of Tec elements in the micronucleus and anlagen relative to macronuclear sequences meant that neither DNase I nor MNase had reached an extent of digestion that would give rise to a true "mononucleosome," we incubated nuclei with high concentrations of the enzymes for 30 or 45 min (Figure 4B). Both enzymes predominantly showed the same pattern of fragments > 300 bp in size. Thus, this size range of DNA must correspond to the most nuclease-resistant structure in the Tec element chromatin.
Comparison of the Chromatin Structure of Mac-destined Sequences and Tec Elements at the Late Polytene Stage
In the experiments described above, we compared the Tec element chromatin with the macronuclear chromatin, i.e., two different types of nuclei that we coisolated. To compare the chromatin structure of the mac-destined sequences with the Tec element chromatin in the same nucleus, we isolated anlagen at the end of the polytene stage (40-45 h). We used sonication to break open the cells and disrupt the old macronuclei; this yielded anlagen that were completely free of macronuclear contamination, as judged by Southern blotting of the DNA and hybridization with the macronuclear rDNA gene. Comparison of the Tec element chromatin structure seen with sonicated nuclei prepared from the same cells as a "homogenized" sample (which contains old macronuclei) demonstrated that the sonication did not disrupt the Tec element chromatin structure, because the MNase digestion pattern was unaltered.
When DNA samples from MNase-digested, sonicated, and purified anlagen
are hybridized consecutively with the Tec element and mac-specific
probes, differences in the pattern of digestion of the two sequence
classes are apparent. As seen in Figure
5A, at 45 h, which is immediately
before chromosome fragmentation, the pattern of products for Tec
element chromatin is shifted toward a higher molecular weight than that
for the mac-destined sequences. These anlagen MNase digestion samples
were electrophoresed side by side with MNase digestion products from a
mixture of old macronuclei and micronuclei prepared from the same
cells. This demonstrates that the mac sequence probe detects the
mac-destined sequences in the anlagen without contamination by old
macronuclear sequences. In addition, it demonstrates that the
multimeric repeats for the Tec element chromatin in the anlagen are
more similar in size to the "telomere" repeat pattern of the old
macronucleus than to the multimeric products of the mac-destined
sequences in the anlagen. This is again apparent in the blots of the
42-h samples shown in Figure 5B and in the densitometric scans of the
42-h samples shown in Figure 5C, where the peaks observed with the Tec
probe do not align with the peaks seen with the mac-specific probe even
when different extents of digestion are compared. Thus, these digests
clearly show that the multimeric repeat sizes and the size of the
minimal digestion product differ for the Tec element chromatin.
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In the 42- and 45-h samples, telomeres are not present on the sequences
detected by the mac-specific probe, and the pattern of nucleosomes is
typical of a repeat of 180- to 200-bp nucleosomal units. We have
previously shown that chromosome fragmentation in the E. crassus strains used in these experiments occurs at 46-48 h of
development (Frels and Jahn, 1995
; Frels et al., 1996
). Thus, in the 52-h anlagen (Figure 5B), chromosome fragmentation and
telomere addition to the mac-destined sequences has occurred. In these
samples, the mac-specific probe once again shows a nucleosomal repeat
pattern typical of the telomere complex repeat pattern, indicating that
telomere addition has occurred.
The pattern of digestion of the mac-destined sequences more closely
resembles a "typical" MNase digestion of nuclei from other organisms than the pattern from the Tec elements. In a typical digestion, multimers of nucleosomal repeats are reduced to a monomer size (~150-200 bp), the monomer size reduces to a core size (146 bp), and then smaller fragments are produced (Noll, 1974
; Axel, 1975
;
Sollner-Webb and Felsenfeld, 1975
). The monomer and core represent
"pauses" in the digestion process. For the mac-destined sequences
(Figure 5), the monomer size is the primary pause in the digestion
process and becomes a broad smear from 150 to 200 bp. As a result of
our methods of blotting and hybridization, the hybridization to small
fragment sizes (<150 bp) is greatly reduced and we do not see the
accumulation of fragments that are smaller than the core monomer size
unless we alter the stringency of hybridization (see below). In
contrast to findings with the mac-destined sequences, we never see
accumulation of the monomer sizes (150-200 bp) in the hybridizations
with Tec element probes. All of the accumulation occurs at the 300- to
600-bp size range, with a minority of the hybridization occurring at
150 bp and smaller sizes (see densitometric scans in Figure 5C). Thus,
for these sequences, the structure that is most protected from
digestion corresponds to a structure larger than a single nucleosome
and most likely related to a dimer of nucleosomes (see DISCUSSION). Presumably, these sequences are converted from this more stable structure to the smallest fragment sizes, which are not as readily detected by hybridization (see experiments described below). Prolonged digestion with either MNase or DNase I at high enzyme concentrations does not result in the accumulation of a monomer-sized product for the
Tec element sequences in the sonicated nuclear samples. In contrast,
under a wide range of enzyme concentrations and digestion times and
with varying extents of sonication of the nuclei, we have always seen a
typical monomer, dimer, trimer relationship for the mac-destined
sequences before fragmentation and telomere addition.
We have previously shown that Tec element excision occurs in two
discrete periods: the first at 20-22 h and the second at 40-42 h
(Frels and Jahn, 1995
; Frels et al., 1996
). Thus, at 42 h, a second group of Tec elements excises as extrachromosomal circles.
As observed at the earlier time points, the Tec element circular forms
produced at 42 h are highly resistant to MNase (Figure 5B). At
52 h, circular forms of the Tec elements are not as abundant.
Tec Elements Are Organized into Nucleosomes in the Developing Macronucleus
Our finding that the majority of the digestion products for the
Tec elements are larger than the size of a nucleosomal monomer suggests
that some nonnucleosomal structure may be forming. Nevertheless, several other results indicate that this higher-order structure of the
Tec elements forms from a typical nucleosomal substructure. For
instance, throughout development, the Tec elements in the anlagen can
be detected in a nucleosome-like repeat spacing that is distinct from
the spacing seen in the micronucleus (Jahn et al., 1997
)
(Figures 3 and 5), even when monomer-sized fragments are not produced.
Calculation of the spacing between multimers from the scans shown in
Figure 5C indicates that the spacing of repeats in the Tec elements is
190.2 (mean) ± 28.9 (SD) bp, which is close to what we measured
as the spacing visible at the beginning of macronuclear development,
when a change in spacing (relative to the micronucleus) is first
visible (187 ± 27 bp) (Jahn et al., 1997
). The spacing
measured from the same gels of the 42-h samples for the mac-destined
sequences is 191.5 ± 25.2 bp, which is somewhat larger than the
size measured for vegetative macronuclear sequences with the use of the
rDNA as a hybridization probe (175 ± 27 and 181 ± 29 bp)
(Jahn et al., 1997
). Thus, even though the sizes of the
multimers released for the Tec element sequences do not correspond to
the sizes of the multimers released for the mac-destined sequences in
the 42-h samples (i.e., the peaks do not align in the densitometric
scans shown in Figure 5C), the spacing of nucleosomes appears the same.
This suggests that the preferred cutting sites for digestion to release
the multimers differ between these two types of sequences.
Second, we have considered the possibility that the pattern of repeats
we detected for the Tec element chromatin is related to the telomeric
complex pattern seen when the mac-specific probe is hybridized to MNase
digests of macronuclei. That is, the pattern would arise from an
unusual structure at one site within the element. This seemed unlikely
given the fact that two different probes encompassing 1.0 and 1.6 kb of
the element behaved identically. Nevertheless, to test this
possibility, we hybridized 11 different small probes (80-250 bp) from
sites scattered throughout the Tec1 element to MNase digestion products
(Figure 6). The most
extensive digestions were chosen for analysis to determine what size
range of products was most abundant. Because we used small probes, our hybridization conditions were of low stringency to optimize
hybridization with small fragments. All of these probes hybridized to
the unusual minimum digestion size of ~300 bp and higher multimers,
i.e., all of these probes show a pattern of hybridization that is
identical to the larger Tec element probes. None of the probes
hybridize to a nucleosome monomer-sized product. Under the lower
hybridization stringencies used, most of these small probes hybridized
to fragments that were "submonomer" in size, in addition to the
unusual minimum digest products. The smallest fragments detected by
these probes migrate between the 100- and 123-bp bands in the marker
lanes, and the largest size is equivalent to a core monomer (146 bp). As discussed below, this suggests that the Tec element chromatin digests directly from a structure that is larger than a single nucleosome to something that is equivalent to or smaller than a core
monomer. Together, these hybridizations with numerous small probes
demonstrate that the unusual minimum digestion products and the unusual
multimeric repeats arise throughout the element and thus are not due to
a "terminal" complex. Furthermore, because we cannot identify any
region within the element that digests to a typical mononucleosomal
product, the chromatin structure of the Tec elements must be uniform
and cannot be a mixture of two types of nucleosomal structures.
|
To further elucidate whether the subunit structure of the Tec element
chromatin is nucleosomal, we treated purified anlagen with increasing
amounts of trypsin followed by MNase digestion. Trypsin is known to
digest histone termini without disrupting the core nucleosome structure
(Allan et al., 1982
; Ausio et al., 1989
; Hayes
et al., 1991
); thus, it should increase the accessibility of
spacer regions between nucleosomes to MNase. As seen in Figure 6C, the
trypsin treatment converts the structure of the Tec element chromatin
from the unusual minimum digestion product and higher-order repeats to
a nucleosomal monomer-sized protected fragment. The size range of this
"monomer" fraction is 150-250 bp. The nucleosomal spacing
determined from the trypsin-treated samples is 185 ± 25 bp; thus,
the overall chromatin structure does not appear to be disrupted by the
treatment. Therefore, it appears that the unusual behavior of the Tec
element sequences arises from an underlying nucleosomal structure.
Are the Tec Elements Representative of Other Eliminated Sequences?
We have not tested cloned eliminated or retained unique sequences
as hybridization probes because the amounts of the MNase or DNase
digestions that we subjected to Southern blotting are not sufficient to
detect single-copy sequences. However, we carried out several
experiments to define (a) what sequences are most resistant to MNase
and (b) whether these sequences behave like the Tec elements with
respect to MNase digestion. We found that when MNase-digested nuclei
(45-h anlagen) are treated with EDTA and then centrifuged, nucleosomal
monomers and smaller submonomer fragments are released from the nuclei
and larger nucleosomal multimers are pelleted. This is illustrated in
Figure 7A, in which the monomers that
hybridize to the mac-specific probe are shown to fractionate into the
supernatant after treatment of MNase-digested nuclei with EDTA; the Tec
hybridization indicates that none of the Tec element chromatin is
within the size range to be released. By carrying out this
fractionation after extensive MNase digestion, we derived a fraction
that contains very few remaining Tec elements or mac-destined sequences
(equivalent to the highest extent of digestion shown in Figure 4B).
Even though 50% of the starting DNA remains in this nuclear pellet
fraction after EDTA addition (as determined from the UV absorbance of
the pellet samples), the hybridization of the Tec element probes or the
macronuclear sequence probe to this fraction was reduced 100-fold
relative to the starting DNA. Thus, we reasoned that the DNA remaining in the pellet fraction must be composed primarily of other classes of
eliminated sequences. To determine whether this fraction showed a
chromatin organization resembling that of the Tec elements, we
radiolabeled the pellet fraction and hybridized it to the samples from
MNase-digested anlagen. As seen in Figure 7B, this pellet fraction
behaves like the Tec element probes. Thus, the most MNase-resistant fraction of the DNA shows a digestion pattern that is identical to that
of the Tec elements.
|
We proceeded to characterize the sequence content of this MNase-resistant pellet fraction. We reasoned that the pellet fraction consisted primarily of non-Tec element-eliminated sequences; therefore, when used as a hybridization probe to genomic or cloned DNA, it might behave either as a repetitive sequence probe that would identify non-Tec element repetitive sequences or as a "bulk" unique sequence probe for eliminated unique sequence DNA (similar to our mac-sequence probe). Because of the high sequence representation of this fraction (50% of the starting nuclear DNA), these hybridizations are unlikely to detect single-copy sequences. Initial experiments demonstrated that the probe hybridized only to high-molecular-weight (>20 kb) DNA in total vegetative DNA samples (macronuclear plus micronuclear), indicating that no hybridization to macronuclear DNA (linear molecules < 20 kb in size) was detectable, thus verifying that the probe was specific for only micronucleus-limited sequences (i.e., eliminated DNA).
To determine whether the micronucleus-specific nature of this probe
could be due to a class of repeated DNA that we have not previously
characterized, we used the "pellet" fraction as a hybridization probe to Southern-blotted, restriction enzyme-digested micronuclear DNA (Figure 7C). Whereas the bulk of the eliminated unique sequence DNA
should be detectable as a smear of fragment sizes, repetitive sequences
can give rise to discrete bands because of the occurrence of the
identical restriction enzyme cleavage sequences in multiple copies of
the repeats. The blot of the genomic digests was stripped and
hybridized with probes from the Tec1 and Tec2 elements to determine to
what extent the pellet probe hybridized to known consensus fragment
sizes for these two element families (Figure 7C). As expected from our
quantitation of hybridization of Tec elements to this fraction, the
hybridization of the pellet fraction to the genomic digests
demonstrated only weak hybridization to Tec element sequences, in that
it did not detect the major EcoRI, HindIII, or
XbaI fragments that arise from the conserved sites within
these two families of elements (Figure 7C). Surprisingly, the DNA that
is most readily detected with the pellet probe did not digest with
EcoRI, HindIII, or XbaI. We performed
similar hybridizations to micronuclear DNA digested with enzymes that cut more frequently (EcoRV, HhaI,
HincII, and MseI) and again observed no digestion
of the sequences (Figure 7D); however, hybridization of the same blots
with Tec element probes indicated that the digestions were complete.
This lack of restriction enzyme digestion is similar to findings with
micronuclear telomeric sequences that have been characterized in other
hypotrichous ciliates (Dawson and Herrick, 1984
; Jahn, 1988
). The
micronuclear telomeres are composed of long stretches of
C4A4 repeats that are
resistant to restriction enzyme digestion because of their sequence composition.
To determine whether the pellet probe was detecting telomeric sequences, we hybridized it to digests of the cloned macronuclear rDNA molecule (Figure 7E). This demonstrated that the probe hybridized only to fragments known to contain the telomeric repeats (Figure 7F). The smallest of these fragments is 90 bp and contains 42 bp of C4A4 repeats and 30 bp of the vector polylinker. Similar results were obtained with blotted digests of two other cloned macronuclear DNA molecules. Thus, we conclude that the "pellet" fraction detects the micronuclear telomeric sequences and that the chromatin structure of these sequences in the anlagen behaves similar to the Tec element sequences.
| |
DISCUSSION |
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|
|
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The results described above have documented several alterations of
chromatin structure in the E. crassus anlagen. We have demonstrated a dramatic difference between the Tec element chromatin structure and the chromatin structure of the mac-destined sequences. Furthermore, we have presented evidence that the micronuclear telomeres
have a chromatin structure in the anlagen that behaves like the Tec
elements. Analysis of the MNase and DNase I digestion products
indicates that there may be two types of altered chromatin structure
associated with Tec elements. The circular excision products are highly
resistant to both MNase and DNase I, whereas the rest of the Tec
element sequences are organized into a structure that is more
accessible but does not accumulate as typical nucleosomal digestion
products. This contrasts with the mac-destined sequences in the
anlagen, which readily digest and accumulate as a nucleosomal monomer
and higher multimer fragments before chromosome fragmentation and
telomere addition. Thus, we appear to be detecting three types of
chromatin structure: (1) a typical nucleosome structure of the
mac-destined sequences, (2) an unusual nucleosomal structure of Tec
elements (in their nonexcised state) and the micronuclear telomeres
that we believe involves some degree of inaccessibility of DNA between
two nucleosomes, and (3) a highly compacted structure for the excised
Tec element circular forms. The nuclease insensitivity of the circular
forms and the unusual nucleosomal products are more dramatic
alterations of chromatin structure than the nuclease digestion patterns
obtained for sequences subject to transcriptional repression by
heterochromatin at position effect-variegating loci in
Drosophila (Wallrath and Elgin, 1995
) or the silent mating type loci in yeast (Nasmyth, 1982
). The extreme resistance of the
extrachromosomal circular Tec elements resembles the lack of
digestibility seen for male-specific sequences in mealybugs, in which
the paternal chromosome set is heterochromatic (Khosla et
al., 1996
). Thus, we believe that the Tec elements form a unique type of heterochromatin structure.
We have provided evidence that the unusual multimeric MNase products
seen for Tec element chromatin arise from an underlying nucleosomal
repeat. The fact that we can detect "subnucleosomal" fragments and
the unusual minimum digestion products without any typical monomer
products, even though a nucleosomal repeat is present, suggests that we
are detecting a chromatin structure that does not allow digestion
within the "linker" or "spacer" regions. Precedence for an
alternative cutting pattern for a nucleosomal array comes from studies
of DNase II digestion of chromatin in which a 100-bp ladder was
produced by cutting both within the spacer region and at sites within
the core-associated DNA (Horz et al., 1980
; Horz and Zachau,
1980
). The 100-bp alternative was produced by cutting at sites that
were 100 bp apart within the 147-bp core-associated DNA and was
sensitive to ionic conditions that altered higher-order chromatin
structure. Based on this pattern, we suggest the following scenario
(Figure 8). If the MNase digestion pattern of Tec elements were altered such that cutting within the
spacer region was completely suppressed, multimers could arise via
digestion at multiple sites within the nucleosomal core-associated DNA
and the digestion products would go directly from a size corresponding to two partial nucleosomes with one intact nucleosome and two spacers
(i.e., the unusual minimal digestion product) to the submonomer sizes,
essentially as we observe. Depending on the spacing of the preferred
cutting sites within the core DNA, the predicted sizes of nucleosomal
multimers could resemble the telomeric pattern seen for E. crassus telomere-associated mac sequences (as observed for the Tec
element in the anlagen) and would be displaced by ~100 bp from the
typical nucleosomal pattern (see Figure 8). Furthermore, the difference
in size between these multimers would be the same as the difference in
size between multimers seen by cutting only in the spacer region, i.e.,
the apparent nucleosomal spacing would be the same (Figure 8, compare A
and B).
|
At present, we have not found a means of releasing the multimers or
minimal digestion products of the Tec element chromatin from the
anlagen. This has hindered our ability to identify the proteins
responsible for the chromatin structural change. The unusually
resistant structure of the anlagen (alluded to in RESULTS) prevents
dissociation of the Tec element chromatin under any conditions that
leave the nucleosomes intact (Jahn and Sharp, unpublished observations). This behavior is similar to that of sea urchin sperm
nuclei, in which histone H1, H2B, and H2A variants have been
characterized (Simpson and Bergman, 1980
). The sperm nuclei were
resistant to any form of homogenization or sonication, as well as to
EDTA or
-mercaptoethanol, that would normally release nucleosomes
and their multimers after MNase treatment.
As in the sea urchin sperm nuclei, the complement of histones that are
found in the E. crassus developing macronucleus could play a
role in forming the unusual Tec element chromatin structure. We have
previously described a histone H3 variant that is specific to the
polytene chromatin stage of macronuclear development (Jahn et
al., 1997
). In addition, we have recently sequenced cDNA clones for an H2A variant that is transcribed only in conjunction with polytene chromosome DNA replications (C. Jahn, unpublished
observations). The H3(P) variant is 15 amino acids longer at its amino
terminus (Jahn et al., 1997
), and the H2A histone is longer
at its carboxyl terminus (Jahn, unpublished observations). The x-ray
crystallographic structure of a nucleosome indicates that the histone
H3 amino terminus and the histone H2A carboxyl terminus could interact with DNA in the spacer region between nucleosomes and with each other
(Luger et al., 1997
). Thus, the anlagen-specific core
histone variants in E. crassus may alter the accessibility
of DNA in the spacer region or provide an interaction between two
nucleosomes that help generate a higher-order structure. Because these
histone variants are abundant and appear to be incorporated into the
chromatin structure of both eliminated and retained sequences, it seems unlikely that they are the sole determinants of this altered chromatin structure. However, it is also possible that some type of differential modification of core histones occurs within the eliminated versus the
retained sequence classes. The fact that the retained macronuclear chromosomes are essentially individual transcription units with very
little noncoding DNA suggests that their chromatin structure might be
differentially modified during macronuclear development as the
transcription machinery is put into place.
We would expect that histone H1 would play a role in determining the
accessibility of the linker region, but the E. crassus anlagen does not appear to have a typical linker histone.
Characterization of histone H1 proteins and genes in E. crassus has identified two genes. One has been shown to be the
major histone H1 present in the vegetative macronucleus (Ray et
al., 1999
). The other gene most likely corresponds to a second
perchloric acid-soluble histone that is in much lower abundance in
vegetative cells. Neither of these proteins (or any other smaller
histone H1-like protein) can be isolated from the anlagen (Jahn,
unpublished observations). Thus, histone H1 most likely does not play a
role in this chromatin structure differentiation. However, we have
recently found an abundant, lysine-rich, perchloric acid-soluble (and
sulfuric acid-soluble) protein that migrates at 85 kDa in SDS-PAGE and
thus is much larger than a histone (Sharp and Jahn, unpublished
observations). Antibodies to this protein indicate that it is specific
to the anlagen and is not uniformly distributed in chromatin. Thus,
this protein may be a "specialized" linker histone that has a
specific subchromosomal distribution. We are in the process of
determining whether this protein is associated with the Tec elements,
micronuclear telomeres, or other eliminated DNA.
Despite the large size of the Tec element repetitive sequence families (7500 copies per haploid genome in each family), the elements appear to be uniform in their chromatin organization. The results of MNase and DNase I digestion of nuclei during the first replication and excision period (17-22 h), when the replication is restricted to regions of the genome where Tec elements are primarily in the mac-destined sequence environs (i.e., as IES), suggest that nuclease resistance develops before excision. In this period, preferential replication of the mac-destined sequence clusters would lead to a higher copy number of the Tec IES, and they would represent approximately one-half to two-thirds of the sequences we would detect with our probes. Thus, the Tec IES most likely become organized into a structure that differs from the mac-destined sequences before their excision. The only evidence for two distinct classes of elements (in which the Tec IES would behave differently from the non-IES Tecs) is the increased resistance of the Tec IES after their excision. It seems likely that the excision mechanism, which produces circular molecules that are supercoiled, may increase the compaction of the chromatin in the process of forming the circles.
Although we do not detect a difference in Tec element chromatin structure that can be attributed to a difference in environs for the IES and non-IES elements, we do detect a difference between the mac-destined sequence chromatin and the Tec element chromatin before the time of fragmentation. Thus, the environs of the Tec IES differ from that of the Tec element. This suggests that Tec elements constitute a discrete chromatin domain even when they interrupt the mac-destined sequences as IES. The ability of the DNA-processing machinery to excise the Tec IES may depend on the juxtaposition of the more typical nucleosomal structure of the mac-destined sequences with the unusual chromatin structure of the Tec elements. We suspect that most of the eliminated DNA may be organized into a chromatin structure resembling that of the Tec element. Thus, the environs of a non-IES Tec may not differ from that of the Tec element; therefore, DNA-processing machinery would not specifically recognize the boundaries of the non-IES Tec element.
The chromatin structure of the Tec elements and the mac-destined
sequences we have defined by nuclease treatment of the E. crassus anlagen may be directly related to two fiber types seen by
electron microscopy of chromatin in the Stylonychia polytene anlagen (Meyer and Lipps, 1980
, 1981
). These studies revealed large
loops of 30-nm-wide fibers with strands of 12-nm fibers in between
(Meyer and Lipps, 1980
, 1981
). During elimination, the loops were
released as dense chromatin circles that disappeared from the nucleus,
leaving behind the 12-nm fibers that became the short linear molecules
organized as nucleosomes. To date, the proteins involved in organizing
these structures and the specific distribution of DNA sequences
relative to the structures have not been determined. The nuclease
digestion properties of the E. crassus mac-destined
sequences parallel the finding that the sequences organized as 12-nm
fibers were retained in the late-stage (postelimination) developing
macronucleus and were recognizably nucleosomal fibers. The unusual
nucleosomal organization we see for E. crassus Tec elements
could represent the organization of nucleosomes into a higher-order
structure corresponding to the loops of 30-nm fibers seen by Meyer and
Lipps (1980
, 1981
), although the distribution of loop sizes seen in
Stylonychia was substantially larger than that of Tec
elements. Because Stylonychia does not have Tec elements and
these two organisms are evolutionarily quite distant (despite
similarities in their macronuclear development), it is difficult to
determine what types of eliminated sequences were represented in the
heterochromatic loops seen in Stylonychia. However, it will
be interesting to determine if Stylonychia has histone
variants related to those found in E. crassus.
Although it is somewhat counterintuitive that DNA that is going to be
degraded would become packaged in a nuclease-resistant chromatin
structure, this actually appears to be a common theme in DNA
elimination. Heterochromatization and compaction of chromatin is
associated with elimination of chromosomes in Sciara
(Rieffel and Crouse, 1966
), with elimination of interstitial blocks of DNA in nematodes (Muller et al., 1996
), and with pyknosis
and elimination of nuclei during erythropoiesis in mammals and during apoptosis in many organisms (Kerr et al., 1972
;
Papayannopoulou and Abkowitz, 1991
). In addition to the
"heterochromatic" fibers seen in Stylonychia and
referred to above, recent studies of the Pdd1 protein in
Tetrahymena thermophila have generated another link between
heterochromatin formation and DNA elimination in ciliates (Madireddi
et al., 1994
, 1996
). Pdd1p is a chromodomain protein, i.e.,
it shares an amino acid sequence domain with proteins that are
associated with heterochromatin in Drosophila, yeast, and
mammals (Paro and Hogness, 1991
; Koonin et al., 1995
). Pdd1p forms heterochromatic "vesicle" structures resembling nucleoli that
colocalize with eliminated DNA; hence, the Pdd1 protein and heterochromatin formation are assumed to be involved in the process of
DNA elimination or degradation in Tetrahymena (Madireddi
et al., 1996
). To date, it is unclear whether the formation
of heterochromatin during elimination is due to a repression of
transcription that accompanies sequence elimination or whether
condensation or compaction has other effects. The Tec elements do not
appear to be forming the type of vesicle structure seen with the Pdd1
protein in Tetrahymena. In E. crassus, a distinct
chromosomal architecture is apparent in the developing anlagen
throughout the stages we examined here, and in situ hybridization with
Tec elements does not indicate any coalescence of the eliminated DNA
(Sharp and Jahn, unpublished observations). The mechanisms of
heterochromatin formation in eliminated DNA may be quite different for
different ciliated protozoans, but the end result could be similar.
Condensation of the chromatin could facilitate its recognition by
machinery that either partitions the sequences to an intranuclear
compartment that degrades the DNA or allows transport of the sequences
out of the nucleus to be degraded. Further studies of the histone
variants and the unusual lysine-rich, 85-kDa protein from E. crassus may elucidate the role of chromatin differentiation in DNA elimination.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported in part by National Science Foundation grant MCB-9319009 and by Northwestern University.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. E-mail address: jahn{at}casbah.acns.nuw.edu.
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REFERENCES |
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