scholarly journals Paip2 cooperates with Cbp80 at an active promoter and participates in RNA Polymerase II phosphorylation in Drosophila

FEBS Letters ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 593 (10) ◽  
pp. 1102-1112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zaur M. Kachaev ◽  
Lyubov A. Lebedeva ◽  
Alexander V. Shaposhnikov ◽  
James J. Moresco ◽  
John R. Yates ◽  
...  
2006 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 67-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon Bartlett ◽  
Jelena Blagojevic ◽  
David Carter ◽  
Christopher Eskiw ◽  
Maud Fromaget ◽  
...  

We have previously suggested a model for the eukaryotic genome based on the structure of the bacterial nucleoid where active RNA polymerases cluster to loop the intervening DNA. This organization of polymerases into clusters – which we call transcription ‘factories’ – has important consequences. For example, in the nucleus of a HeLa cell the concentration of soluble RNA polymerase II is ∼1 mM, but the local concentration in a factory is 1000-fold higher. Because a promoter can diffuse ∼100 nm in 15 s, one lying near a factory is likely to initiate; moreover, when released at termination, it will still lie near a factory, and the movement and modifications (e.g. acetylation) accompanying elongation will leave it in an ‘open’ conformation. Another promoter out in a long loop is less likely to initiate, because the promoter concentration falls off with the cube of the distance from the factory. Moreover, a long tether will buffer it from transcription-induced movement, making it prone to deacetylation, deposition of HP1 (heterochromatin protein 1), and incorporation into heterochromatin. The context around a promoter will then be self-sustaining: productive collisions of an active promoter with the factory will attract factors increasing the frequency of initiation, and the longer an inactive promoter remains inactive, the more it becomes embedded in heterochromatin. We review here the evidence that different factories may specialize in the transcription of different groups of genes.


2006 ◽  
Vol 73 ◽  
pp. 85-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard J. Reece ◽  
Laila Beynon ◽  
Stacey Holden ◽  
Amanda D. Hughes ◽  
Karine Rébora ◽  
...  

The recognition of changes in environmental conditions, and the ability to adapt to these changes, is essential for the viability of cells. There are numerous well characterized systems by which the presence or absence of an individual metabolite may be recognized by a cell. However, the recognition of a metabolite is just one step in a process that often results in changes in the expression of whole sets of genes required to respond to that metabolite. In higher eukaryotes, the signalling pathway between metabolite recognition and transcriptional control can be complex. Recent evidence from the relatively simple eukaryote yeast suggests that complex signalling pathways may be circumvented through the direct interaction between individual metabolites and regulators of RNA polymerase II-mediated transcription. Biochemical and structural analyses are beginning to unravel these elegant genetic control elements.


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