scholarly journals A Zinc-Finger-Family Transcription Factor, AbVf19, Is Required for the Induction of a Gene Subset Important for Virulence in Alternaria brassicicola

2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 443-452 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akhil Srivastava ◽  
Robin A. Ohm ◽  
Lindsay Oxiles ◽  
Fred Brooks ◽  
Christopher B. Lawrence ◽  
...  

Alternaria brassicicola is a successful saprophyte and necrotrophic plant pathogen with a broad host range within the family Brassicaceae. It produces secondary metabolites that marginally affect virulence. Cell wall–degrading enzymes (CDWE) have been considered important for pathogenesis but none of them individually have been identified as significant virulence factors in A. brassicicola. In this study, knockout mutants of a gene, AbVf19, were created and produced considerably smaller lesions than the wild type on inoculated host plants. The presence of tandem zinc-finger domains in the predicted amino acid sequence and nuclear localization of AbVf19-reporter protein suggested that it was a transcription factor. Gene expression comparisons using RNA-seq identified 74 genes being downregulated in the mutant during a late stage of infection. Among the 74 downregulated genes, 28 were putative CWDE genes. These were hydrolytic enzyme genes that composed a small fraction of genes within each family of cellulases, pectinases, cutinases, and proteinases. The mutants grew slower than the wild type on an axenic medium with pectin as a major carbon source. This study demonstrated the existence and the importance of a transcription factor that regulates a suite of genes that are important for decomposing and utilizing plant material during the late stage of plant infection.

Genetics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 165 (2) ◽  
pp. 575-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsunari Fukushige ◽  
Barbara Goszczynski ◽  
Helen Tian ◽  
James D McGhee

Abstract We describe the elt-4 gene from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. elt-4 is predicted to encode a very small (72 residues, 8.1 kD) GATA-type zinc finger transcription factor. The elt-4 gene is located ∼5 kb upstream of the C. elegans elt-2 gene, which also encodes a GATA-type transcription factor; the zinc finger DNA-binding domains are highly conserved (24/25 residues) between the two proteins. The elt-2 gene is expressed only in the intestine and is essential for normal intestinal development. This article explores whether elt-4 also has a role in intestinal development. Reporter fusions to the elt-4 promoter or reporter insertions into the elt-4 coding regions show that elt-4 is indeed expressed in the intestine, beginning at the 1.5-fold stage of embryogenesis and continuing into adulthood. elt-4 reporter fusions are also expressed in nine cells of the posterior pharynx. Ectopic expression of elt-4 cDNA within the embryo does not cause detectable ectopic expression of biochemical markers of gut differentiation; furthermore, ectopic elt-4 expression neither inhibits nor enhances the ectopic marker expression caused by ectopic elt-2 expression. A deletion allele of elt-4 was isolated but no obvious phenotype could be detected, either in the gut or elsewhere; brood sizes, hatching efficiencies, and growth rates were indistinguishable from wild type. We found no evidence that elt-4 provided backup functions for elt-2. We used microarray analysis to search for genes that might be differentially expressed between L1 larvae of the elt-4 deletion strain and wild-type worms. Paired hybridizations were repeated seven times, allowing us to conclude, with some confidence, that no candidate target transcript could be identified as significantly up- or downregulated by loss of elt-4 function. In vitro binding experiments could not detect specific binding of ELT-4 protein to candidate binding sites (double-stranded oligonucleotides containing single or multiple WGATAR sequences); ELT-4 protein neither enhanced nor inhibited the strong sequence-specific binding of the ELT-2 protein. Whereas ELT-2 protein is a strong transcriptional activator in yeast, ELT-4 protein has no such activity under similar conditions, nor does it influence the transcriptional activity of coexpressed ELT-2 protein. Although an elt-2 homolog was easily identified in the genomic sequence of the related nematode C. briggsae, no elt-4 homolog could be identified. Analysis of the changes in silent third codon positions within the DNA-binding domains indicates that elt-4 arose as a duplication of elt-2, some 25–55 MYA. Thus, elt-4 has survived far longer than the average duplicated gene in C. elegans, even though no obvious biological function could be detected. elt-4 provides an interesting example of a tandemly duplicated gene that may originally have been the same size as elt-2 but has gradually been whittled down to its present size of little more than a zinc finger. Although elt-4 must confer (or must have conferred) some selective advantage to C. elegans, we suggest that its ultimate evolutionary fate will be disappearance from the C. elegans genome.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 740-740
Author(s):  
Andrew C Perkins ◽  
Kevin R Gillinder ◽  
Graham Magor ◽  
Mathieu Lajoie ◽  
Timothy L Bailey ◽  
...  

Abstract Krûppel-like factor-1 (KLF1) is an essential erythroid-specific transcription factor [1, 2]. A number of studies have shown up to ~700 genes are poorly expressed when KLF1 is absent [3-6]. This global loss of expression is responsible for failure of effective red blood cell production in KLF1 knockout mice, and partly responsible for congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type IV (CDA-IV) observed in humans with dominant mutations in the DNA-binding domain of KLF1 [7]. Recently an ENU-generated mouse model of neonatal anemia, ‘nan’, was also reported to harbour a mutation in the second zinc-finger of KLF1 [8]. Remarkably, the ‘nan’ mutation (E339D) resides at exactly the same amino acid which results in human CDA IV (= E325 in humans). Unlike loss of function point mutations in KLF1, this mutation leads to a more severe phenotype than the KLF1 null allele, suggesting it is an unusual dominant mutation [9]. To investigate how this mutation might cause disease, we introduced tamoxifen-inducible versions of KLF1 and KLF1nan into an erythroid cell line derived from Klf1-/- fetal liver cells [10]. We performed ChIP-seq to determine differences in genome occupancy in vivo, and identified novel sites occupied by EKLF-E339D but not by wild type KLF1. Using de novo motif discovery [11], we find KLF1nan binds a slightly degenerate CACC box element (CCMNGCCC) in comparison with wild type KLF1 (CCMCRCCC). This specificity is novel with respect to any known TFs, so we think it represents a sequence specificity not normally encoded in mammals. Ectopic binding to non-erythroid gene promoters is accompanied by aberrant gene expression as determined by 4sU labelling and deep sequencing of tamoxifen-induced primary nuclear RNAs. We find a 4-fold greater number of genes induced by KLF1-nan compared with wild type KLF1 which is consistent with degenerate genome occupancy. We compared the KLF1-nan dependent genes with RNA-seq performed in primary fetal liver for KLF1+/nan versus KLF1+/- mice. We confirmed aberrant binding using EMSA and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) using recombinant GST-Klf1 zinc finger domains expressed in E.coli. The degenerate motif is consistent with structural models of how the second zinc finger of KLF1 specifically interacts with its binding site [12, 13]. We are undertaking structural studies to confirm this modelling. Together RNA-seq, ChIP-seq and SPR studies have provided a novel explanation for how mutations in KLF1 result in dominant anemia in mice and man. To our knowledge this mechanism, whereby a transcription factor DNA-binding domain mutation leads to promiscuous binding, activation of an aberrant transcriptional program and subsequent derailing of co-ordinated differentiation, is novel. References: 1.Perkins, A.C., A.H. Sharpe, and S.H. Orkin. Nature, 1995. 375(6529): p. 318-22. 2.Nuez, B., et al., Nature, 1995. 375(6529): p. 316-8. 3.Pilon, A.M., et al., Mol Cell Biol, 2006. 26(11): p. 4368-77. 4.Drissen, R., et al., Mol Cell Biol, 2005. 25(12): p. 5205-14. 5.Hodge, D., et al., Blood, 2006. 107(8): p. 3359-70. 6.Tallack, M.R., et al., Genome Res, 2012. 22(12):2385-98 7.Arnaud, L., et al., Am J Hum Genet. 87(5): p. 721-7. 8.Siatecka, M., et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010. 107(34):15151-6 9.Heruth, D.P., et al., Genomics, 2010. 96(5): p. 303-7. 10.Coghill, E., et al., Blood, 2001. 97(6): p. 1861-1868. 11.Bailey, T.L., et al., Nucleic Acids Res, 2009. 37(Web Server issue): p. W202-8. 12.Schuetz, A., et al., Cell Mol Life Sci, 2011. 68(18): p. 3121-31. 13.Oka, S., et al., Biochemistry, 2004. 43(51): p. 16027-35. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 4776-4783 ◽  
Author(s):  
M B Rollins ◽  
S Del Rio ◽  
A L Galey ◽  
D R Setzer ◽  
M T Andrews

The Xenopus 5S RNA gene-specific transcription factor IIIA (TFIIIA) has nine consecutive Cys2His2 zinc finger motifs. Studies were conducted in vivo to determine the contribution of each of the nine zinc fingers to the activity of TFIIIA in living cells. Nine separate TFIIIA mutants were expressed in Xenopus embryos following microinjection of their respective in vitro-derived mRNAs. Each mutant contained a single histidine-to-asparagine substitution in the third zinc ligand position of an individual zinc finger. These mutations result in structural disruption of the mutated finger with little or no effect on the other fingers. The activity of mutant proteins in vivo was assessed by measuring transcriptional activation of the endogenous 5S RNA genes. Mutants containing a substitution in zinc finger 1, 2, or 3 activate 5S RNA genes at a level which is reduced relative to that in embryos injected with the message for wild-type TFIIIA. Proteins with a histidine-to-asparagine substitution in zinc finger 5 or 7 activate 5S RNA genes at a level that is roughly equivalent to that of the wild-type protein. Zinc fingers 8 and 9 appear to be critical for the normal function of TFIIIA, since mutations in these fingers result in little or no activation of the endogenous 5S RNA genes. Surprisingly, proteins with a mutation in zinc finger 4 or 6 stimulate 5S RNA transcription at a level that is significantly higher than that mediated by similar concentrations of wild-type TFIIIA. Differences in the amount of newly synthesized 5S RNA in embryos containing the various mutant forms of TFIIIA result from differences in the relative number and/or activity of transcription complexes assembled on the endogenous 5S RNA genes and, in the case of the finger 4 and finger 6 mutants, result from increased transcriptional activation of the normally inactive oocyte-type 5S RNA genes. The remarkably high activity of the finger 6 mutant can be reproduced in vitro when transcription is carried out in the presence of 5S RNA. Disruption of zinc finger 6 results in a form of TFIIIA that exhibits reduced susceptibility to feedback inhibition by 5S RNA and therefore increases the availability of the transcription factor for transcription complex formation.


1993 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 4776-4783
Author(s):  
M B Rollins ◽  
S Del Rio ◽  
A L Galey ◽  
D R Setzer ◽  
M T Andrews

The Xenopus 5S RNA gene-specific transcription factor IIIA (TFIIIA) has nine consecutive Cys2His2 zinc finger motifs. Studies were conducted in vivo to determine the contribution of each of the nine zinc fingers to the activity of TFIIIA in living cells. Nine separate TFIIIA mutants were expressed in Xenopus embryos following microinjection of their respective in vitro-derived mRNAs. Each mutant contained a single histidine-to-asparagine substitution in the third zinc ligand position of an individual zinc finger. These mutations result in structural disruption of the mutated finger with little or no effect on the other fingers. The activity of mutant proteins in vivo was assessed by measuring transcriptional activation of the endogenous 5S RNA genes. Mutants containing a substitution in zinc finger 1, 2, or 3 activate 5S RNA genes at a level which is reduced relative to that in embryos injected with the message for wild-type TFIIIA. Proteins with a histidine-to-asparagine substitution in zinc finger 5 or 7 activate 5S RNA genes at a level that is roughly equivalent to that of the wild-type protein. Zinc fingers 8 and 9 appear to be critical for the normal function of TFIIIA, since mutations in these fingers result in little or no activation of the endogenous 5S RNA genes. Surprisingly, proteins with a mutation in zinc finger 4 or 6 stimulate 5S RNA transcription at a level that is significantly higher than that mediated by similar concentrations of wild-type TFIIIA. Differences in the amount of newly synthesized 5S RNA in embryos containing the various mutant forms of TFIIIA result from differences in the relative number and/or activity of transcription complexes assembled on the endogenous 5S RNA genes and, in the case of the finger 4 and finger 6 mutants, result from increased transcriptional activation of the normally inactive oocyte-type 5S RNA genes. The remarkably high activity of the finger 6 mutant can be reproduced in vitro when transcription is carried out in the presence of 5S RNA. Disruption of zinc finger 6 results in a form of TFIIIA that exhibits reduced susceptibility to feedback inhibition by 5S RNA and therefore increases the availability of the transcription factor for transcription complex formation.


Pneumologie ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 66 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
K Hoehne ◽  
H Eibel ◽  
M Grimm ◽  
M Idzko ◽  
J Müller-Quernheim ◽  
...  

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