scholarly journals Alternative promoter usage modulates miRNA-guided translation inhibition of a m6A reader in phosphate starvation

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Siqueira Reis ◽  
Jules Deforges ◽  
Joaquín Clúa ◽  
Yves Poirier

AbstractAlternative transcription start sites (TSSs) are widespread in eukaryotes. In plants, light, development and tissue regulate selective usage of several TSSs, producing transcripts with distinct 5′UTR as well as shorter protein isoforms with distinct subcellular localization or activity. However, the function of non-coding transcripts generated by alternative TSSs is still largely unknown. We show that phosphate availability regulates numerous alternative TSSs, including a non-coding alternative TSS (ALTECT4) associated with ECT4, encoding a N6-methyladenosine (m6A) reader. We found that ECT4 harbors a cleavage-resistant miR826b target site at its 3’UTR, also present in ALTECT4. In the absence of ALTECT4, miR826b guides translation inhibition of ECT4. Phosphate deficiency triggers specific and robust expression of ALTECT4, counteracting miR826b inhibition of its targets, including ECT4. The role of ALTECT4 as a miR826b antagonist shows that it acts in cis to regulate translation of the m6A reader ECT4, and this function might be shared among other non-coding transcripts generated by alternative TSS.

2022 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. e202101234
Author(s):  
Sonal Dahale ◽  
Jorge Ruiz-Orera ◽  
Jan Silhavy ◽  
Norbert Hübner ◽  
Sebastiaan van Heesch ◽  
...  

The role of alternative promoter usage in tissue-specific gene expression has been well established; however, its role in complex diseases is poorly understood. We performed cap analysis of gene expression (CAGE) sequencing from the left ventricle of a rat model of hypertension, the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), and a normotensive strain, Brown Norway to understand the role of alternative promoter usage in complex disease. We identified 26,560 CAGE-defined transcription start sites in the rat left ventricle, including 1,970 novel cardiac transcription start sites. We identified 28 genes with alternative promoter usage between SHR and Brown Norway, which could lead to protein isoforms differing at the amino terminus between two strains and 475 promoter switching events altering the length of the 5′ UTR. We found that the shift in Insr promoter usage was significantly associated with insulin levels and blood pressure within a panel of HXB/BXH recombinant inbred rat strains, suggesting that hyperinsulinemia due to insulin resistance might lead to hypertension in SHR. Our study provides a preliminary evidence of alternative promoter usage in complex diseases.


2018 ◽  
Vol 293 (51) ◽  
pp. 19761-19770
Author(s):  
Marie-Elodie Cattin ◽  
Shelley A. Deeke ◽  
Sarah A. Dick ◽  
Zachary J. A. Verret-Borsos ◽  
Gayashan Tennakoon ◽  
...  

PLoS ONE ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. e0179230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evgenya Y. Popova ◽  
Anna C. Salzberg ◽  
Chen Yang ◽  
Samuel Shao-Min Zhang ◽  
Colin J. Barnstable

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 3398-3398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Gkotzamanidou ◽  
Masood Shammas ◽  
Vassilis L. Souliotis ◽  
Weihua Song ◽  
Jagannath Pal ◽  
...  

Abstract Multiple Myeloma (MM) is characterized by genomic heterogeneity that contributes to differences in clinical outcome. Mis - or unrepaired DNA damage poses a serious threat to genomic stability, potentially leading to the formation of oncogenic mutations, including translocations, deletions and amplifications. Spontaneous endogenous DNA damage represents an essential portion of DNA lesions; therefore, a thorough knowledge of its types and prevalence is of high importance for its impact on myelomagenesis, its interaction with exogenous DNA damaging sources, and consequently, at improving the clinical outcome of myeloma patients. First, we evaluated the occurrence of spontaneous DNA damage in a panel of 4 MM cell lines, 4 CD138+ primary MM patients samples and in 4 solid tumor cell lines. Using single-cell gel electrophoresis (comet assay) under neutral and alkaline conditions we observed high levels of olive tails moments indicative of DNA damage in all MM cell lines (mean±SD, MM1S 47.56±7.1, OPM2 60.92±7.9) and primary MM cells as well as solid tumor cell lines, compared to normal cell controls (PBMCs 6.283±3.56, HEEC 1.448±0.2, BJ 0.64±0.58) (P=.0001). Significantly higher signal of the most widely used marker of DNA damage γH2ax phosphorylated at serine139, 53BP1 and RPA32 as indicator of Single strand breaks (SSB) was observed by immunoblotting in all MM cell lines compared to normal controls confirming the high occurrence of DNA damage in MM in absence of any exogenous genotoxic insult. These results were further confirmed by immunocytochemistry with γH2Ax, ku70/80, 53BP1, Rad51. Remarkably, the Non homologous end joining (NHEJ) marker ku70/80 was co-localized with γH2Ax and was present in ~80% of cells, indicating the activation of NHEJ throughout the cell cycle. To further elucidate the differential spontaneous DNA damage in MM, we detected and quantified the abasic sites by using an ELISA-based assay. The distribution of abasic sites showed same pattern as the DSBs in all the MM cell types analyzed, indicating that abasic sites constitute an important portion of spontaneous DNA damage (OPM2 57.3/105, PBMCs 12/105bp). On the basis of these findings, we hypothesized that the increased stimulation by endogenous oxidative stress or possible inactivation of DNA damage repair mechanisms might be implicated to this observed high occurrence of DSBs in MM. By using our chromosomally integrated green fluorescent protein reporter construct-based assay, we observed that NHEJ and homologous recombination (HR) were significantly more active in all MM cells compared to normal controls. Moreover, we found that increased stimulation by endogenous oxidative stress was present in all MM cells evaluated, while a strong correlation between the levels of oxidative stress and the spontaneous DSBs was observed (r=0.85, P<.0001). As the information conveyed by epigenetic modifications play a key role in the regulation of DNA processes including DNA damage and repair, we performed Chip-seq analysis for γH2ax. After performing peak calling on γH2ax ChIP-seq data, we sought to determine whether γH2ax enrichment regions tend to occur in previously reported common fragile sites or early replicating sites. Interestingly, we found that spontaneous DNA damage is equally representative in replicating fragile sites and random sites throughout genome. Next, we performed sequential double chip-seq analysis for γH2ax for the first Chip and a total 5 different epigenetic marks for the re-Chip. We performed peak-calling analysis on each data type, and strikingly, we found that similar numbers of peaks can be found across re-ChIP dataset with H3K27ac having the greatest number of peaks (653). Of the 5 marks evaluated, we observed that only H4K20me2 showed significant enrichment in promoter regions relative to random chance (P=.039) within 1kb of transcription start sites. A similar trend is also observed for the region within 3kb of transcription start sites (P=.026), and 2kb of transcription start sites (P=.084, weakly significant), indicating a possible role of methylation of K20 in proper chromatin organization in proximity of DSBs. In conclusion, our study demonstrates the higher occurrence of ongoing spontaneous DNA damage in MM and provides insights into possible relationship between the aberrant epigenome and spontaneous DNA damage revealing mechanism that might be dysregulated promoting genomic instability. Disclosures Anderson: Celgene: Consultancy; Sanofi-Aventis: Consultancy; Onyx: Consultancy; Acetylon: Scientific Founder, Scientific Founder Other; Oncoprep: Scientific Founder Other; Gilead Sciences: Consultancy. Dimopoulos:Celgene: Consultancy, Honoraria.


2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (12) ◽  
pp. 3883-3893 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Harley Jenks ◽  
Thomas W. O'Rourke ◽  
Daniel Reines

ABSTRACT The IMD2 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is regulated by intracellular guanine nucleotides. Regulation is exerted through the choice of alternative transcription start sites that results in synthesis of either an unstable short transcript terminating upstream of the start codon or a full-length productive IMD2 mRNA. Start site selection is dictated by the intracellular guanine nucleotide levels. Here we have mapped the polyadenylation sites of the upstream, unstable short transcripts that form a heterogeneous family of RNAs of ≈200 nucleotides. The switch from the upstream to downstream start sites required the Rpb9 subunit of RNA polymerase II. The enzyme's ability to locate the downstream initiation site decreased exponentially as the start was moved downstream from the TATA box. This suggests that RNA polymerase II's pincer grip is important as it slides on DNA in search of a start site. Exosome degradation of the upstream transcripts was highly dependent upon the distance between the terminator and promoter. Similarly, termination was dependent upon the Sen1 helicase when close to the promoter. These findings extend the emerging concept that distinct modes of termination by RNA polymerase II exist and that the distance of the terminator from the promoter, as well as its sequence, is important for the pathway chosen.


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 3931-3931
Author(s):  
Michael Daskalakis ◽  
David Brocks ◽  
Christopher Schmidt ◽  
Daofeng Li ◽  
Jing Li ◽  
...  

Abstract Epigenetic drugs are currently used for the treatment of several hematologic malignancies, but their mechanism of action remains poorly understood. By using a previously described reporter cell line for epigenetic reactivation of the DAPK1 locus, we have shown that epigenetic treatment causes transcription from uncharacterized intronic transcription start sites (TSSs), thereby generating DAPK1 mRNA with novel first exons. Based on these findings, we analyzed whether inhibition of DNA-Methyltransferases (DNMTs), Histone deacetylases (HDACs), or both resulted in the genome-wide induction of non-canonical TSSs. While epigenetic treatment altered expression of known promoter sites, we observed that both HDAC- and DNMT-inhibitors predominantly induced de novo transcription from cryptic promoters encoded in long-terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons. These LTR-associated 'treatment induced, not-annotated TSS' (TINATs) are currently not annotated and normally silenced in almost all cell types with the exception of testicular und thymic tissue. In the majority of cases, these TINATs arose most commonly from LTR12 elements, particularly LTR12C (which apparently provides 50% of all TINATs). TINAT activation after DNMT-inhibitors (DNMTi) coincided with DNA hypomethylation and gain in H3K4me3, H3K9ac, and H3K27ac histone marks. In contrast, HDAC-inhibitors (HDACi) induced only canonical TSSs in association with histone acetylation, but TINATs via a yet unknown mechanism. Nevertheless, both inhibitors convergently induced unidirectional transcription from identical TINAT sites. Moreover, we found a consensus GATA2 binding motif which strongly distinguished LTR12Cs with TINATs from LTR12Cs without TINATs, supporting that GATA2 is likely the upstream transcription factor responsible for TINAT activation. TINATs originating from non-canonical TSSs located within introns of protein-coding genes frequently spliced into downstream exons thereby creating LTR/non-LTR fusion transcripts that harbor novel in place of canonical exon sequence at their 5' end. The resulting transcripts encode truncated or chimeric open reading frames which translated into currently uncharacterized protein isoforms with predicted abnormal functions or immunogenic potential, the last one based on their foreign sequence and capability of being presented on MHC-class I molecules. In summary, we could show that DNMTi and/or HDACi do not predominantly alter the expression of canonical genes, but induce de novo transcription of LTRs especially of the LTR12 family, resulting in numerous fusion transcripts that encode novel protein isoforms which might have the potential to influence cell proliferation or might be an elegant explanation for the priming effect of epigenetic therapy. Ongoing experiments are investigating the functional mechanisms of TINAT reactivation upon epigenetic drug treatment and future proteomic approaches combined with T-cell cytotoxicity assays will further shed light on the interaction between epigenetic and immune therapy and the role of ERV-derived antigen presentation. Disclosures Lübbert: Janssen-Cilag: Other: Travel Funding, Research Funding; Ratiopharm: Other: Study drug valproic acid; Celgene: Other: Travel Funding.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun Chen ◽  
Athma A. Pai ◽  
Jan Herudek ◽  
Michal Lubas ◽  
Nicola Meola ◽  
...  

AbstractMammalian transcriptomes are complex and formed by extensive promoter activity. In addition, gene promoters are largely divergent and initiate transcription of reverse-oriented promoter upstream transcripts (PROMPTs). Although PROMPTs are commonly terminated early, influenced by polyadenylation sites, promoters often cluster so that the divergent activity of one might impact another. Here, we find that the distance between promoters strongly correlates with the expression, stability and length of their associated PROMPTs. Adjacent promoters driving divergent mRNA transcription support PROMPT formation, but due to polyadenylation site constraints, these transcripts tend to spread into the neighboring mRNA on the same strand. This mechanism to derive new alternative mRNA transcription start sites (TSSs) is also evident at closely spaced promoters supporting convergent mRNA transcription. We suggest that basic building blocks of divergently transcribed core promoter pairs, in combination with the wealth of TSSs in mammalian genomes, provides a framework with which evolution shapes transcriptomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Bourdareau ◽  
Leila Tirichine ◽  
Bérangère Lombard ◽  
Damarys Loew ◽  
Delphine Scornet ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Brown algae evolved complex multicellularity independently of the animal and land plant lineages and are the third most developmentally complex phylogenetic group on the planet. An understanding of developmental processes in this group is expected to provide important insights into the evolutionary events necessary for the emergence of complex multicellularity. Here, we focus on mechanisms of epigenetic regulation involving post-translational modifications of histone proteins. Results A total of 47 histone post-translational modifications are identified, including a novel mark H2AZR38me1, but Ectocarpus lacks both H3K27me3 and the major polycomb complexes. ChIP-seq identifies modifications associated with transcription start sites and gene bodies of active genes and with transposons. H3K79me2 exhibits an unusual pattern, often marking large genomic regions spanning several genes. Transcription start sites of closely spaced, divergently transcribed gene pairs share a common nucleosome-depleted region and exhibit shared histone modification peaks. Overall, patterns of histone modifications are stable through the life cycle. Analysis of histone modifications at generation-biased genes identifies a correlation between the presence of specific chromatin marks and the level of gene expression. Conclusions The overview of histone post-translational modifications in the brown alga presented here will provide a foundation for future studies aimed at understanding the role of chromatin modifications in the regulation of brown algal genomes.


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