Polycomb recruitment to DNA in vivo by the YY1 REPO domain

Abstract
Polycomb group (PcG) proteins are responsible for maintaining transcriptional repression of developmentally important genes. However, the mechanism of PcG recruitment to specific DNA sequences is poorly understood. Transcription factor YY1 is one of the few PcG proteins with sequence-specific DNA binding activity. We previously showed that YY1 can recruit other PcG proteins to DNA, leading to histone posttranslational modifications and stable transcriptional repression. Using Drosophila transgenic approaches, we identified YY1 sequences 201-226 as necessary and sufficient for PcG transcriptional repression in vivo. When fused to a heterologous DNA-binding domain, this short 26-aa motif was sufficient for transcriptional repression, recruitment of PcG proteins to DNA, and methylation of histone H3 lysine 27. Deletion of this short YY1 motif did not affect transient transcriptional repression but ablated PcG repression, PcG protein recruitment to DNA, and methylation of H3 lysine 27. We propose that this motif be named the REPO domain for its function in recruitment of Polycomb. The REPO domain is well conserved in YY1 orthologs and in related proteins.