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Myc Dynamically and Preferentially Relocates to a Transcription Factory Occupied by Igh

  • Cameron S Osborne ,

    To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cameron.osborne@bbsrc.ac.uk

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Lyubomira Chakalova,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Jennifer A Mitchell,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Alice Horton,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Andrew L Wood,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Daniel J Bolland,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Anne E Corcoran,

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Peter Fraser

    Affiliation Laboratory of Chromatin and Gene Expression, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom

Abstract

Transcription in mammalian nuclei is highly compartmentalized in RNA polymerase II-enriched nuclear foci known as transcription factories. Genes in cis and trans can share the same factory, suggesting that genes migrate to preassembled transcription sites. We used fluorescent in situ hybridization to investigate the dynamics of gene association with transcription factories during immediate early (IE) gene induction in mouse B lymphocytes. Here, we show that induction involves rapid gene relocation to transcription factories. Importantly, we find that the Myc proto-oncogene on Chromosome 15 is preferentially recruited to the same transcription factory as the highly transcribed Igh gene located on Chromosome 12. Myc and Igh are the most frequent translocation partners in plasmacytoma and Burkitt lymphoma. Our results show that transcriptional activation of IE genes involves rapid relocation to preassembled transcription factories. Furthermore, the data imply a direct link between the nonrandom interchromosomal organization of transcribed genes at transcription factories and the incidence of specific chromosomal translocations.

Author Summary

Many different types of cancer result from gene translocations. Specifically, two different chromosomes can be joined that fuse growth control genes with powerful regulatory elements, leading to unrestricted control of cell growth. Translocation partner genes must physically encounter each other in the nucleus to undergo a translocation; how they find each other in the crowded nucleus is unknown. We showed previously that gene transcription occurs at a few hundred discrete nuclear sites called transcription factories. In the current study we investigated the effects of activation of the Myc proto-oncogene and examined its location with respect to transcription factories and its common translocation partner, the immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) gene. We found that switching on the Myc gene leads to its rapid relocation to a transcription factory. Surprisingly, we found that the activated Myc frequently chooses the same transcription factory as the highly transcribing Igh gene. This close juxtaposition of translocation partner genes at a shared transcription factory may provide the opportunity for a chromosomal translocation, and thus may be the first step in the genesis of several types of cancers.

Introduction

Interphase chromosomes are organized in tissue-specific arrangements in nuclei, suggesting that chromosomal position and juxtaposition play a role in gene expression [15]. Nonrandom chromosome positioning has also been implicated in the frequency of specific chromosomal translocations. For example, Chromosomes 12 and 15, which contain the frequent B cell translocation partners immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) and the proto-oncogene Myc, are preferred neighbors in mouse splenic lymphocytes [3]. Similarly, in human lymphoid cells MYC and IGH are found in the same vicinity in about one-third of nuclei [6]. Any process that brings these genes together would obviously be expected to increase the risk of a translocation between them; however, almost nothing is known about the forces that organize chromosomes in the nucleus.

Nascent transcription occurs at RNA polymerase II (RNAPII)-rich nuclear foci known as transcription factories [711]. These sites are highly enriched in the hyperphosphoryated forms of RNAPII involved in transcription initiation and elongation [7,11]. Previous findings suggest that active mammalian genes are transcribed in bursts of activity punctuated by long periods of relative inactivity [9,1214]. This concept is supported by recent live-cell studies showing that gene expression [15,16], and in particular gene transcription [17], occur in discrete pulses. We and others [9,10] have observed a virtually absolute correspondence between transcriptional activity at individual gene alleles and their positioning within transcription factories, whereas identical inactive alleles, often in the same cell, are clearly positioned away from factories. Collectively, these data could be interpreted to imply that the engagement of genes at factories is dynamic; however, they could equally be construed to indicate that a transcription factory nucleates around an individual gene during a transcriptional burst. Arguing against the latter interpretation is the finding that multiple genes in cis and trans can frequently share the same factory, which strongly suggests that genes migrate to preassembled transcription sites for transcription [9].

In this study, we investigated the positioning of immediate early (IE) genes relative to transcription factories and other B cell expressed genes during IE induction. We found that before activation the majority of IE alleles are not associated with transcription factories, whereas upon induction, IE genes rapidly relocate to preformed transcription factories. Remarkably, we observed preferential recruitment of the proto-oncogene Myc to the same transcription factory that is occupied by its frequent translocation partner, Igh. Our results suggest that this frequent and preferential juxtaposition may provide the opportunity for a chromosomal translocation, and may in part dictate the incidence with which specific chromosomal translocations occur.

Results

Transcriptional Frequencies of IE Gene Alleles Vary during Induction

Resting B cells can be stimulated through the B cell receptor signaling pathway to rapidly increase transcription and mRNA expression of the IE genes Fos and Myc [18]. We used RNA fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with gene-specific intron probes to investigate the transcriptional activity of several genes during IE gene induction in mouse B lymphocytes (Figure 1). We found that transcription frequencies vary for several genes in B cells, similar to our previous observations in erythroid cells [9]. Transcription signals for the B cell-specific gene Igh are present at approximately 90% of alleles both before and after induction (Figure 1A). In the vast majority of cells both alleles are actively transcribed (>80% of cells), whereas a smaller percentage of cells have only single signals, consistent with our previous findings [19]. The immunoglobulin light chain genes Igk and Igl also have transcription signals at approximately 90% of alleles, with approximately 80% of cells having two transcription signals (Figure 1B and 1C). These data show constitutive transcriptional activity at nearly all alleles that is unchanged upon IE induction. In contrast, transcription of the IE proto-oncogenes Fos and Myc is significantly lower in unstimulated cells, with 20% and 26% of alleles, respectively, displaying transcription signals (Figure 1D and 1E). Most cells (~60%) have two silent alleles, some cells have one active allele (~30%), and a minority of cells have two active alleles (<10%). Upon induction, the percentage of loci with transcription signals for Fos and Myc rises dramatically within 5 min to 53% and 75%, respectively. This rise is the result of a dramatic increase in the percentage of cells with two active alleles and, to a lesser extent, an increase in cells with one active allele. The fold increases in the percentage of active alleles are in precise agreement with run-on transcription studies in mouse B cells that demonstrated a 2- to 3-fold induction of Fos and Myc transcription in stimulated cells [18]. These results suggested the possibility that increased IE expression could be accounted for by transcriptional recruitment of additional IE alleles rather than an increase in the “basal” rate of transcription at all IE alleles.

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Figure 1. RNA FISH and Transcription Analysis in Unstimulated and Stimulated B Cells

RNA FISH in splenic B cells for Igh (red) (A), Igk (red) (B), Igl (green) (C), Fos (green) (D), and Myc (green) (E) gene transcription. DAPI staining is blue. Scale bar, 2 μm. We have shown nuclei in which both signals are in the same optical plane. The graphs show the percentage of cells with zero (white), one (grey), or two (black) transcription signals by RNA FISH in B cells, unstimulated and stimulated for the times indicated (in minutes). Results shown are from a single experiment, which was repeated three times, with similar results in every case. One hundred nuclei were assessed for each time point. The percentage of transcribing alleles was significantly different between unstimulated and stimulated cells for both Fos (0 min versus 5 min, p = 4.0 × 10−12; versus 10 min, p = 1.3 × 10−7; and versus 15 min, p = 6.3 × 10−7) and Myc (0 min versus 5 min, 3.9 × 10−23; versus 10 min, 1.1 × 10−22; and versus 15 min, 1.1 × 10−22).

(F) RT-PCR analysis with serial dilutions of spiked competitor to determine absolute nascent transcript numbers for Igh and Fos in unstimulated and stimulated B cells. The amount of competitor RNA spiked into each RNA extraction is shown above. The – lane is the no-DNA PCR control.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g001

IE Gene Induction Results from Activation of Previously Inactive Alleles

We questioned whether the increase in nascent transcription levels seen in run-ons could be accounted for solely by the transcriptional recruitment of additional IE alleles. We used a sensitive reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) technique capable of quantitating the average absolute number of primary transcripts per cell [20]. In this method serial dilutions of a known amount of a spiked competitor RNA that contains a small internal deletion is compared to the amount of endogenous primary transcript in total RNA preps from a known number of cells. We adapted this method by using PCR primers that flank a 5′ splice donor site. Cleavage of the primary transcript at the 5′ donor site occurs soon after the RNA polymerase has passed the 3′ splice acceptor site, at the end of the intron sequence [21]. Quantitative detection of RT-PCR products from this part of the primary transcript provides an extremely sensitive measure of the number of transcripts being synthesized over that intron. An estimate of the average number of primary transcripts per gene can be calculated by extrapolating to the full size of the transcription unit.

We found that the average number of Igh primary transcripts does not change during B cell induction (Figure 1F; Table 1), consistent with our FISH data, which indicate that Igh transcription is unaffected by stimulation. We detected approximately 4.3 and 4.5 unspliced primary transcripts on the Igh intron per cell in unstimulated and stimulated cells, respectively. As this intron is approximately half the Igh transcription unit length, we calculated that there are an average of 8.5 and 9.0 primary transcripts being produced from the two Igh transcription units per cell (4.3 and 4.5 per Igh allele). Since RNA FISH shows that 90% of Igh alleles are transcriptionally active, we estimate that there are approximately five transcripts being produced on each active allele.

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Table 1.

Quantitation of Primary Transcripts on Igh and Fos Alleles

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.t001

The picture for the IE Fos gene is very different. In unstimulated cells we found that the extrapolated, average absolute number of Fos primary transcripts per cell is 1.73 copies. This is less than one primary Fos transcript per allele, indicating that not all Fos alleles are transcriptionally active in unstimulated cells. If we calculate the average number of Fos transcripts per active allele based on our RNA FISH data in which 20% of Fos alleles showed a transcription signal, we arrive at an average number of 4.3 Fos primary transcripts per active allele. In stimulated cells Fos primary transcript intron copies per cell increase approximately 2.7-fold, consistent with the 2.65-fold increase in the percentage of actively transcribed Fos alleles determined by RNA FISH. Comparison of the number of Fos primary transcripts per active allele indicates that the number of Fos transcripts per active allele does not change upon induction (4.3 versus 4.4 copies). These data show that our RNA FISH technique is very sensitive and is capable of measuring very small numbers of primary transcripts at a transcription site. In addition, these results show that when we do not see an RNA FISH signal over a particular allele, it is truly “off” and has no primary transcripts associated with it. Collectively, these results show that Fos IE gene induction occurs via transcriptional activation of additional, previously inactive alleles, rather than by simply increasing the “basal” rate of transcription of all alleles.

IE Genes Rapidly Associate with Transcription Factories upon Induction

Our previous studies in erythroid cells suggested that gene association with transcription factories is dynamic, with genes moving to preformed factories in order to transcribe [9]. Inducible gene expression in B cells permitted us to examine the dynamics of transcription in relation to transcription factories. We speculated that the activation of previously quiescent IE alleles upon B cell induction may involve repositioning of alleles to transcription factories. However, the Myc gene has a well-characterized attenuation site that is thought to block passage of RNAP II, resulting in a stalled polymerase [22]. This observation leaves open the possibility that silent Myc alleles may be pre-positioned in factories awaiting removal of a transcriptional block.

We first examined the positions of actively transcribed genes relative to transcription factories, using RNA immuno-FISH (Figure 2). We found that 92% of Myc RNA FISH signals are associated with strong RNAP II foci (Figure 2A). Similarly, 90% of transcriptionally active Igh alleles are associated with strongly staining RNAP II foci (Figure 2B), consistent with previous observations of erythroid-expressed genes [9,10]. Others have shown that the remaining 10% of RNA FISH signals localize to weakly staining RNAPII foci [10], indicating that essentially all transcriptionally active alleles associate with transcription factories. This observation agrees with previous studies that showed a good correspondence between pulse-labeled nascent RNA and RNAPII foci [7,11]. We conclude that all Myc and Igh transcription occurs at transcription factories.

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Figure 2. Transcription of Myc and Igh Occurs at Transcription Factories in B Cells

RNA immuno-FISH (RNA FISH combined with immunodetection of RNAP II) shows the positions of transcribing Myc (A) and Igh (B) alleles (red) relative to transcription factories (green). Shown are deconvoluted, single optical sections of stimulated B cells. We have presented cells in which both transcribing alleles are in the same focal plane. The Myc and Igh RNA FISH signals show 92% (n = 52) and 90% (n = 89) co-association with RNAP II foci, respectively. Scale bar, 2 μm.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g002

Next, we investigated the position of nontranscribing alleles by DNA immuno-FISH, which detects DNA of both active and inactive alleles and RNAP II proteins. We found that approximately 30% of Myc DNA FISH signals overlapped with RNAP II foci in unstimulated cells, while 70% were not associated with RNAP II foci. These results are consistent with the percentage of transcriptionally active alleles detected by RNA FISH (Figure 3A and 3C), and show that the inactive Myc alleles are not associated with transcription factories, but are instead positioned away from these sites. Three-dimensional DNA FISH measurements between the inactive Myc alleles and the nearest transcription factory show that on average silent Myc alleles are 500 nm from the nearest factory (Figure 3D).

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Figure 3. Relocation of Myc Alleles to RNAP II Foci upon B Cell Activation

(A and B) DNA immuno-FISH of Myc locus (red) with RNAP II staining (green) in unstimulated (A) and stimulated (B) splenic B cells. Deconvoluted, single optical sections of the nuclei are shown. Scale bar, 2 μm.

(C) Comparison of the percentage of Myc loci that overlap with an RNAP II focus by DNA immuno-FISH (black, n = 81 and n = 88 for unstimulated and stimulated, respectively), and the percentage of transcriptionally active Myc alleles by RNA FISH (gray) in unstimulated (0′) and 5 min–stimulated (5′) B cells. Comparison of DNA immuno-FISH results in unstimulated versus stimulated cells, p = 6.6 × 10−6. Comparison of RNA FISH results in unstimulated versus stimulated cells, p = 3.9 × 10−23. Comparisons between DNA immuno-FISH and RNA FISH results in unstimulated and stimulated cells yielded p-values of 0.55 and 0.12, respectively.

(D) Box and whiskers plot of the distribution of 3D measurements of the separation distance between non-RNAP II-associated Myc alleles and the nearest RNAP II focus by DNA immuno-FISH. Lower and upper whiskers denote the 10th and 90th percentiles, respectively, of the distribution. The lower and upper limits of the boxes indicate the 25th and 75th percentiles, respectively. Solid and dashed lines in the box denote the median and mean, respectively. Outliers are shown as filled circles.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g003

After 5 min of stimulation the percentage of Myc loci associated with transcription factories increased to 65%, in agreement with the increased percentage of actively transcribing Myc alleles determined by RNA FISH (Figure 3B and 3C). These results show that Myc induction involves an increase in the percentage of Myc alleles associated with transcription factories. The increase of gene association with factories could be achieved in two ways. Myc transcriptional induction could involve the nucleation of transcription factories on newly activated Myc alleles. Alternatively, transcriptional induction could involve the rapid relocation of silent Myc alleles to preassembled transcription factories.

IE Genes Relocate to Preexisting Transcription Factories

The synchronous induction of IE gene alleles described above allowed us to directly test these alternate scenarios. The Igh locus on mouse Chromosome 12 is positioned 28 Mb telomeric to the Fos locus. Approximately 90% of Igh alleles exhibit RNA FISH signals in B cells (Figure 1A) [19], and are associated with transcription factories, indicating that the Igh locus undergoes nearly constant transcription, similar to the highly expressed Hbb locus in erythroid cells [9,23]. We therefore used Igh RNA FISH signals as factory reference points and scored the percentage of Igh transcription signals that have a colocalizing (overlapping) Fos signal, before and after induction using double-label RNA FISH. In unstimulated cells approximately 7% of Igh signals had a colocalizing Fos signal (Figure 4A and 4C). After induction, colocalization nearly tripled, with 20% of Igh signals having a colocalizing Fos signal. These results suggest that a significant proportion of the newly activated Fos alleles move to a factory that is already occupied by an Igh allele rather than forming their own factory.

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Figure 4. Colocalization of IE Gene Transcription Signals with Igh

(A and B) Double-label RNA FISH in stimulated splenic B cells for Igh (red) and Fos (green) (A) or Igh (red) and Myc (green) (B). Scale bar, 2 μm.

(C) The percentages of Igh signals with visibly overlapping (colocalizing) Fos or Myc signals, before and after B cell stimulation for the times indicated in minutes. One hundred nuclei were assessed for signals in each case. There are significantly more colocalizing signals in stimulated cells compared to unstimulated for Fos (0 min versus 5 min, p = 1.2 × 10−4; versus 10 min, p = 3.3 × 10−4; and versus 15 min, 1.4 × 10−3) and Myc (0 min versus 5 min, p = 2.5 × 10−3; versus 10 min, 4.2 × 10−3; and versus 15 min, p = 1.9 × 10−4).

(D) A single optical section of a triple-label, RNA immuno-FISH on stimulated B cells showing Igh (red) and Myc (green) transcription, and RNAPII foci (blue). Images on right are enlargements of colocalized transcription signals associating with the same RNAPII focus. Scale bar, 2 μm.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g004

Frequent Translocation Partner Genes Often Share the Same Transcription Factory

We previously showed a low but significant level of interchromosomal associations between the highly transcribed Hbb and Hba genes in erythroid cells [9]. We hypothesized that the preferred neighbor arrangement of Chromosomes 12 and 15 in B cells [3] might allow Myc and Igh to co-associate with the same transcription factory in trans. Using double-label RNA FISH as above, we found that approximately 6% of Igh signals have a colocalizing Myc signal in unstimulated cells (Table 2). Comparing the percentage of active Myc alleles that colocalized with an Igh signal to those that did not, we found that a remarkable 25% of the transcribing Myc alleles colocalized with Igh in trans prior to induction. Upon induction, as we observed a 2.9-fold increase in the percentage of transcribing Myc alleles, we found a 2.5-fold increase in the percentage of Igh alleles with a colocalizing Myc signal (Figure 4B and 4C; Table 2). Again, by comparing colocalizing versus noncolocalizing Myc signals we found that approximately one-fourth of the active Myc alleles (22–24%; Table 2) were associated with Igh alleles upon induction. Thus, one-fourth of the newly activated Myc alleles, which were previously located away from transcription factories, had moved to a factory occupied by Igh. We confirmed that colocalizing Myc and Igh transcription signals co-associated with a shared transcription factory using triple-label RNA immuno-FISH to detect transcriptionally active Myc and Igh alleles and RNAP II foci (Figure 4D). We found that all colocalizing Myc and Igh signals overlapped with the same transcription factory.

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Table 2.

Percentage of Transcribing and Colocalizing Igh and Myc Alleles

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.t002

In order to put this extraordinarily high frequency of interchromosomal Myc-Igh colocalization into perspective we compared the colocalization frequencies between Igh and five other B cell-expressed genes. One gene, Eif3s6, is located approximately 20 Mb from Myc on Chromosome 15, and four other genes, Igk, Igl, Uros, and Actb, are on Chromosomes 6, 16, 7, and 5, respectively. Since Chromosomes 12 and 15 are preferred neighbors in B cells [3], we considered the analysis of colocalization between Eif3s6 and Igh to be of particular interest. If the high level of interchromosomal colocalization between Myc and Igh were simply due to the fact that the genes are on neighboring chromosomes, then we might expect Eif3s6 and Igh to colocalize at similar frequencies when transcribed. We found that Eif3s6 and Igh colocalize, but at significantly lower levels than Myc-Igh. Only 11% of Eif3s6 signals colocalized with Igh, compared to approximately 25% for Myc. For the other genes we found that 9% of Uros, 8% of Igk, 6% of Igl, and 2% of Actb transcribing alleles colocalized with Igh (Figure 5). These considerably lower frequencies of co-association with Igh clearly demonstrate that trans co-association frequencies between different gene pairs can vary greatly. For example Igh-Myc trans colocalization is over 10-fold higher than Igh-Actb, indicating that the Myc and Igh trans colocalization frequency is statistically highly significant. However, the Myc-Igh co-association is also highly preferential, as indicated in the comparison between Myc and Eif3s6. Myc co-associates with Igh at a greater than 2-fold higher frequency than Eif3s6. This result demonstrates that not all genes on neighboring chromosomes co-associate at equal frequencies and shows that Myc and Igh preferentially co-associate in trans.

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Figure 5. Trans Colocalization of Transcriptionally Active Genes

Double-label RNA FISH in unstimulated B cells to detect Igh (red) and (A) Eif3s6 (green), (B) Uros (green), (C) Igk (green), (D) Igl (green), and (E) and Actb (green). DAPI staining is blue. Scale bar, 2 μm.

(F) The percentage of Myc, Eif3s6, Uros, Igk, Igl, and Actb signals that overlap with an Igh signal. One hundred nuclei were assessed for each case except Uros, for which 70 nuclei were examined. Myc-Igh versus Eif3s6-Igh, p = 0.02; versus Uros-Igh, p = 0.01; versus Igk-Igh, p = 5.9 × 10−4; versus Igl-Igh, p = 5.2 × 10−5; and versus Actb-Igh, p = 1.0 × 10−6.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g005

Myc Alleles Move toward Igh upon Induction in B Cells

Our results suggest that 5 min after induction, many previously inactive Myc alleles are moving to preformed factories that contain transcriptionally active Igh alleles. If this interpretation is correct we would expect to see a net movement of Myc alleles toward Igh alleles upon stimulation of IE gene expression. To directly test this hypothesis we carried out 3D DNA FISH, measuring the separation distances between Myc and Igh alleles in unstimulated and stimulated cells. We found a statistically significant shift in the distribution of measurements upon B cell stimulation, changing from a mean separation distance of 2.16 μm to 1.83 μm (p = 0.005) (Figure 6A). This shows that across the population of cells Myc and Igh alleles are significantly closer together 5 min after induction. In contrast, we found no significant change in the distributions of measurements between Igh and two other genes in trans, Actb and Uros (Figure 6B and 6C). These results show there is no net movement between Actb-Igh and Uros-Igh upon B cell activation, indicating that these genes are not significantly changing their location relative to one another. However, there is net movement of Myc alleles toward Igh upon induction. We did not detect any net movement between Igh and Fos upon induction (Figure 6D), most likely because the range of separation between these physically linked genes is too small to detect subtle changes in relative positioning via light microscopy [9]. We conclude that increased Myc expression during IE gene induction involves the rapid relocation of Myc alleles to preassembled transcription factories, with many alleles migrating to a factory containing the Igh gene.

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Figure 6. 3D DNA FISH Measurements of Separation Distances

(A–D) 3D DNA FISH separation distances between the Igh and the indicated alleles in unstimulated (black) and 5 min–stimulated (red) B cells. Values were grouped into 0.8 μm bins. Graphs show results for Myc-Igh (A), Uros-Igh (B), Actb-Igh (C), and Fos-Igh (D). At least 83 gene pairs were measured. p-Values show that Myc alleles are significantly shifted toward Igh upon stimulation.

(E) Separation distance between Igh and Myc alleles in unstimulated B cells (black), kidney cells (green), and fetal liver erythroid cells (blue). p-Values for Myc and Igh separation distances for kidney and fetal liver versus unstimulated B cells are 3.3 × 10−5 and 6.2 × 10−9, respectively.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g006

We also assessed separation distances between Myc and Igh alleles in two other tissue types, adult kidney and fetal liver erythroid cells. We detected much greater separation distances between Myc and Igh in these tissues compared to unstimulated B cells (Figure 6E). Myc and Igh were separated by an average of 2.78 and 3.20 μm in kidney and erythroid cells respectively, compared to an average of 2.16 μm in unstimulated B cells. These results are consistent with previously reported observations of tissue-specific positioning of genes [6,24] and chromosomes [3,25] and show that Myc and Igh are already in the same “nuclear neighborhood” in unstimulated B cells, which most likely facilitates their increased proximity and colocalization upon stimulation.

To corroborate the FISH results, we used the capturing chromosome conformation (3C) assay [9,26,27], which measures ligation frequency between in vivo formaldehyde cross-linked chromatin fragments. Ligation products were detected with four different primer pairs within the Igh and Myc loci in stimulated B cells (Figure S1). The primer pair that produced the most robust product (primer pair d/g) was used to detect ligation products in unstimulated and stimulated B cells. Over multiple experiments, ligation products were always detected in stimulated B cells, while in unstimulated cells the products were usually, but not always detected. In contrast, Igh/Myc ligation products were never detected in brain or kidney cells, indicating that juxtaposition of Myc and Igh is restricted to tissues in which both genes are expressed.

Co-Association Frequencies of Translocation Partner Genes Are in Line with Their Relative Occurrences in Cancers

Importantly, Myc and Igh are the two most common translocation partners in Burkitt lymphoma and mouse plasmacytoma. Of these cancers 80% harbor Myc-Igh translocations, while the remaining cases contain Myc-Igk (15%) or Myc-Igl (5%) translocations [28,29]. To establish whether there is a relationship between the frequency of these translocations in plasmacytomas and the co-association frequencies of transcriptionally active alleles in normal B cells, we measured the extent to which the transcriptionally active Myc colocalized with Igk and Igl alleles in 10-min stimulated cells by RNA FISH. We found that 11% of transcribing Myc alleles colocalized with Igk and 7% colocalized with Igl, compared to 22% with Igh (Figure 7). Thus the frequencies of co-association between Myc and the immunoglobulin loci in transcription factories are in line with the appearance of their respective translocation frequencies in mouse plasmacytomas.

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Figure 7. Co-Association Frequencies of Transcribing Myc Alleles with Immunoglobulin Genes

(A–C) Double-label RNA FISH in stimulated B cells (10 min), showing Myc transcription signals in green, and in red, Igh (A), Igk (B), and Igl (C). DAPI staining is blue. Scale bar, 2 μm.

(D) The percentage of Myc signals that overlap with Igh, Igk, or Igl signals. One hundred nuclei were examined in each case. Myc-Igh versus Myc-Igk, p = 0.02; versus Myc-Igl, p = 0.0003.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.0050192.g007

Discussion

Our results show that IE gene induction involves the rapid nuclear relocation of previously inactive genes to preassembled transcription factories. This dynamic transcriptional organization is nonrandom and leads to the preferential juxtaposition of the Myc and Igh genes at transcription factories. Transcriptional colocalization may provide an opportunity and therefore an increased risk of illegitimate recombination resulting in a chromosomal translocation [30,31]. We cannot discount the possibility that differences in oncogenic potential result in selective outgrowth of one type of translocation versus another. However, it is striking that the co-association frequencies echo the appearance of specific translocations in plasmacytomas, suggesting that the juxtaposition frequency of specific genes in a transcription factory has a direct effect on their translocation frequency.

Upon B cell induction, signaling pathways converge upon the IE genes, a process that causes their relocation to transcription factories. Others have shown recently that upon activation, genes can undergo directed, actin and myosin-dependent relocalization, moving between 1 and 5 μm [32]. We cannot discount the possibility that similar forces may be involved in the relocation of genes to factories. However, we found that inactive Myc alleles are positioned on average 500 nm from the nearest factory, a distance that could conceivably be covered by random chromatin movements [3335].

A key question concerns the basis of the preferred co-associations of specific genes in a common factory. The relative positions of genes in cis or on preferred neighbor chromosomes would be expected to affect the frequency of co-association in a factory [9] as it does recombination frequency [36]. On the other hand, it is possible that tissue-specific chromosomal positioning is driven by the net effect of thousands of preferential interchromosomal interactions between active (and inactive [37]) genes that serve as dynamic anchor points that facilitate chromosome positioning [38]. Preferential co-associations in factories may be the result of 3D spatial clustering of genes with related functions or genes coordinately regulated by common factors [9,37,39]. Genome-wide examination of the subsets of genes that preferentially co-associate may provide valuable information about these influences.

Igh translocations are presumed to occur through aberrant repair during programmed recombination, by recombinase activating gene protein (RAG) during V(D)J recombination, and activation-induced deaminase (AID) during somatic hypermutation and class switching [40]. Cleavage by RAG complexes at cryptic RAG recognition sites at other genes, and altered DNA structures have been implicated in the generation of some human IGH translocations [41,42]. However, the current consensus view is that cryptic RAG sites are not present in the major Myc breakpoint region. Igh translocations within the Igh diversity and joining regions occur in the bone marrow pre-B cells, which undergo V(D)J recombination [40]. However, most Igh translocations to Myc are found in the Igh class switch region and are believed to occur in germinal center B cells, the site of class switching [40]. There is strong evidence to suggest that genes may be susceptible to double-stranded breaks during transcription. The process of transcription creates considerable torsional stress [43], which can be relaxed by topoisomerases via introduction of transient double-stranded breaks. In fact, topoisomerase type IIβ-generated double-stranded breaks in the promoter regions of some genes have recently been shown to be required for regulated transcription [44]. Topoisomerase cleavage sites are common features of translocation hot spots [45]. Significantly, topoisomerase type IIβ binding sites have been mapped to the major breakpoint region of the human MYC gene, at the 5′ end of the first intron [46]. Further evidence of a link between transcriptional organization and recombination is suggested by two papers, one of which showed that actively transcribed yeast tRNA genes cluster in the nucleolus [47], and another which showed that recombination is higher between actively transcribed tRNA genes compared to inactive tRNA genes [48]. Interestingly, double-stranded break repair enzymes Ku70/80 are also associated with transcription factories [49]. In summary, the introduction and repair of double-stranded breaks may be commonplace in transcription factories. Therefore, interchromosomal co-associations between genes in factories may be expected to result in a heightened risk of aberrant repair of double-stranded breaks resulting in chromosomal translocations.

It is curious that evolution has allowed the interchromosomal juxtaposition of the Myc and Igh loci in transcription factories to persist, considering the potentially grave risks of such an organization. However, the apparent dangers of illegitimate recombinations may be outweighed by advantages of clustering transcribing genes, which may make efficient use of shared resources, or perhaps provide a degree of transcriptional coordination of subsets of genes.

Materials and Methods

B cell collection and stimulation.

CD43 resting B cells were isolated from spleens of 6- to 8-wk-old BALB/c mice by magnetic cell sorting using CD43 microbeads (Miltenyi Biotec, http://www.miltenyibiotec.com) to deplete other cell types. Induction of B cells was done in PBS supplemented with 10 ng/ml recombinant mouse IL-4 (Stemcell Technologies, http://www.stemcell.com), 20 μg/ml purified rat anti-mouse monoclonal antibodies to CD40 (clone HM40–3, Serotec, http://www.serotec.com) and 10μg/ml goat anti-mouse IgM μ chain, F(ab′)2 fragment (Jackson Immunoresearch, http://www.jacksonimmuno.com) at room temperature for up to 15 min before fixation for FISH.

RNA, DNA, and immuno-FISH.

RNA FISH was carried out as described previously [50,51]. We visualized Igh transcription with a dinitrophenol-labeled single-stranded DNA probe to the intronic enhancer region [19], followed by Texas Red detection. We prepared digoxygenin or biotin-labeled single-stranded DNA probes to detect Fos, Myc, Eif3s6, Uros, Actb, Igk, and Igl, intron sequences as described [19]. Primer sequences used to PCR-subclone the various probes are listed below. DNA FISH was carried out as previously described [52]. The following BAC clones (BACPAC Resources, http://bacpac.chori.org) were used: 234 kb RP23-98D8 for Myc; 178 kb RP24-233K8 for Fos; 166 kb RPCI24-258E20 for Igh; 151 kb RP24-132K17 for Uros; and 213 kb RP23-97O1 for Actb. For double-label experiments, we labeled one of the DNA FISH probes directly with AlexaFluor 594 and labeled the other probe with digoxigenin, detected with fluorescein-conjugated antibodies. Immunofluorescence and immuno-FISH was carried out as described [9,52], using a CTD4H8 antibody (Upstate Biotechnology, http://www.upstate.com) that was raised against a Ser5-phosphorylated CTD. This antibody is specific to phosphorylated forms of RNAP II [53].

Primers used to amplify RNA FISH probes were the following. Fos intron 1 sense, 5′-GCTTTGTGTAGCCGCCAGGT-3′; antisense 5′-AGAGGAAAGCGGAGGTGAGC-3′. Fos intron 2 sense, 5′-AAGTAGAGCTGGTGAGCAGCGATT-3′; antisense, 5′-AGAAAAGGACCAACATTCAGTTAAGG-3′. Myc intron 1 sense, 5′-AGCACAGATCTGGTGGTCTTTC-3′; antisense, 5′-CTCCTTCGAGCAGGGACTTAG-3′. Myc intron 2 sense, 5′-CTTCTCCACCACTCATTGGCATTA-3′; antisense, 5′-GGGAGGAAGTGGAAGATCACAGTT-3′. Eif3s6 intron 1 sense, 5′-GTGAGGAAGCTTTGAGAAGGAGGA-3′; antisense, 5′-ATTAATTTTGCTGTTCCCTGCTGA-3′. Uros intron 6 sense, 5′-TCAGCGCCACAGCAAGGGTT-3′; antisense, 5′-GCCTTCCCTCCTTTGTTCCCAGT-3′. Actb intron 1 sense, 5′-TCGCTCTCTCGTGGCTAGTA-3′; antisense, 5′-TGGCGAACTATCAAGACACA-3′. Igh Iμ intron sense, 5′-AGCTGTGGCTGCTGCTCTTA-3′; antisense, 5′-AGCCTCGCTTACTAGGGCTCTC-3′. Igl J-C intron probe 1 sense, 5′-TGAGTGACTCCTTCCTCCTTTG-3′; antisense, 5′-TGGAGGCAGTGTGTAAAGTGTC-3′. Igl J-C intron probe 2 sense, 5′-GTTGTCTTGCAAGGGTCTTTTT-3′; antisense, 5′-GTGCGAATAAAAGAAGGGATTG-3′. Igk J-C intron sense, 5′-AAGACACAGGTTTTCATGTTAGGA-3′; antisense, 5′-AATAGAATTATGAGCAGCCTTTCC-3′.

Microscopy and image analysis.

We examined RNA FISH signals on an Olympus BX41 epifluorescence microscope, and assessed 200 loci for each probe combination, except for Uros-Igh, for which 140 alleles were assessed. Transcription signals scored as colocalizing if the red and green signals overlapped to create a visible yellow signal. To assess the association of Myc DNA FISH signals and RNAP II foci, we captured image stacks of nuclei, using an Olympus BX41 epifluorescence microscope, equipped with a UPlanApo 100× oil objective to reduce chromatic aberration, and fitted with a motorized stage. Images were captured and analyzed using Analysis 3.2 image capture software, fitted with a RIDE module (SIS, http://www.sis.com). The stacks were deconvoluted using a nearest-neighbor algorithm with 85% haze removal, and analyzed. We analyzed 81 and 88 alleles in unstimulated and stimulated B cells, respectively. Statistical analysis was carried out using a two-sided Fisher exact test. For Myc alleles that were not co-associated with an RNAPII focus, we measured the separation distance from the edge of the gene signal to the edge of the nearest RNAP II immunofluorescence signal, and analyzed 27 alleles.

To measure the distances between Igh and genes in trans by DNA FISH, we collected image stacks using a Zeiss 510 Meta confocal microscope. Separation distances for each Igh allele and the nearest Myc, Fos, Uros, or Actb allele were measured on 3D-reconstructed image stacks using Volocity image analysis software (http://www.improvision.com/products/volocity). In all cases, we made measurements from center to center of the two gene signals. We analyzed at least 83 measurements for gene pairs in unstimulated and stimulated B cells, adult kidney cells, and E14.5 fetal liver cells. Changes in the distributions of measurements were assessed by two-sided Student t-test.

Competitive RT-PCR.

The assay was carried out essentially as described [20]. RNA competitor fragments were generated by cloning 230 bp Igh and 236 bp Fos fragments that span 5′ exon-intron junctions. The plasmid containing the Igh fragment was digested with HindIII and AflII to release a 17 bp fragment, then religated. The Fos deletion was generated by BsmFI and NheI digestion to remove a 24 bp fragment. RNA was transcribed from linearized plasmids, then checked by gel electrophoresis and quantitated by UV spectrometry. Dilutions of controlled amounts of RNA was spiked into Trizol reagent that contained a known number of cells. RNA was extracted, reverse transcribed, and PCR amplified with nested primers.

To measure the numbers of primary transcripts over the length of the intron, the relative intensity of the endogenous RT-PCR product was compared to the spiked competitor RT-PCR product, measured using AIDA quantitation software. For Igh, the lanes with four copies of spiked competitor per cell was used for quantitation. For Fos, quantitation was obtained from the average from the lanes with 1 copy per cell and 0.5 copy per cell.

The primers used were as follows. Igh-f, 5′-CCTGGGAATGTATGGTTGTGGCTTC-3′; Igh-r, 5′-CCCCCTAAAGCAAT:GACTGAAGACTCA-3′; Igh nested-f, 5′-CCTCGGTGGCTTTGAAGGAACAAT-3′; Igh nested-r, 5′-CCCTAAAGCAATGACTGAAGACTCAGT-3′; Fos-f, 5′-AGCATCGGCAGAAGGGGCAAAGTA-3′; Fos-r, 5′-TGAAGTAGGAAGCTGTCAGGGAAACTG-3′; Fos nested-f, 5′-AGAAGGGGCAAAGTAGAGCAGGTGA-3′; Fos nested-r, 5′-TGTCAAAATCTGACAAGGGAGGGAAAG-3′.

3C assay.

We carried out the 3C assay as described previously [9]. We fixed B cells that had been stimulated for 5 min in 2% formaldehyde for 10 min at room temperature, and digested 1 × 106 nuclei overnight with 600 units of BglII. We ligated digested chromatin (2 μg) with 2,000 units of T4 DNA ligase in a final volume of 800 μl. We cloned ligation product detected by primer pair d/g (see list below)and verified it by DNA sequencing. We tested the specificity of the 3C primers as previously described [9]. The primers used for 3C analysis were the following. Myc a forward, 5′-TCTACACCCCATACACCTCCA-3′; Myc a nested, 5′-CGAGAATATGCCATGAATTGG-3′. Myc b forward, 5′-GGGGAGGGAATTTTTGTCTATT-3′; Myc b nested, 5′-GGACAGTGTTCTCTGCCTCTG-3′. Myc c forward, 5′-TGCCCTCTCAGAGACTGGTAA-3′; Myc c nested, 5′-TTCCCCTTTCCTCTGTCATCT-3′. Myc d forward, 5′-ATTCTTCCAGGTGGTGATGTC-3′; Myc d nested, 5′-CTTCCCACAGCTCTCTTCCTT-3′. Igh e forward, 5′-AACCCATCTACCCATGTAGCC-3′; Igh e nested, 5′-CCTCTGACTGCCTCTTTTCCT-3′. Igh f forward, 5′-ACTGTGATCGGTTTTGGAGTG-3′; Igh f nested, 5′-CTGGGAGGGTTTGGTTCTTAC-3′. Igh g forward, 5′-CCCAGAACCTGAGAAGGAAGA-3′; Igh g nested, 5′-ACAGAACCGAACCATGACTTG-3′. Igh h forward, 5′-TTGGGCACTAAACACCACTTC-3′; Igh h nested, 5′-GGTGTGTGCAGGTTTTTGTCT-3′. Hbb-b1 forward, 5′-CTCAGAGCAGTATCTTTTGTTTGC-3′; Hbb-b1 nested, 5′-AGGATGAGCAATTCTTTTTGC-3′. Calreticulin Cal1, 5′-CTCCAGATAAACCAGTATGAT-3′; Cal2, 5′-AAACCAGATGAGGGCTGAAGG-3′. Actb Actb 1forward, 5′-CGGTGCTAAGAAGGCTGTTCC-3′; Actb 1nested, 5′-AGCAAGAGAGGTATCCTGACC-3′. Actb Actb 2forward, 5′-TGTGACAAAGCTAATGAGG-3′; Actb 2nested, 5′-TGAGTAGATGCACAGTAGG-3′.

Supporting Information

Acknowledgments

We thank Wolf Reik for critical review of the manuscript. JAM was supported by a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellowship. AH was supported by a Medical Research Council, United Kingdom, studentship. PF is a Senior Fellow of the Medical Research Council, United Kingdom.

Author Contributions

CSO, AEC, and PF conceived and designed the experiments. CSO, LC, JAM, AH, ALW, and DJB performed the experiments. CSO and PF analyzed the data. CSO and PF wrote the paper.

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