scholarly journals Mediator is broadly recruited to gene promoters via a Tail-independent mechanism

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linda Warfield ◽  
Rafal Donczew ◽  
Lakshmi Mahendrawada ◽  
Steven Hahn

Mediator (MED) is a conserved factor with important roles in both basal and activated transcription. It is believed that MED plays a direct role in transcriptional regulation at most genes by functionally bridging enhancers and promoters. Here, we investigate the genome-wide roles of yeast MED by rapid depletion of its activator-binding domain (Tail) and monitoring changes in nascent transcription. We find that MED Tail and activator-mediated MED recruitment regulate only a small subset of genes. At most genes, MED bypasses the UAS and is directly recruited to promoters to facilitate transcription initiation. Our results define three classes of genes that differ in PIC assembly pathways and the requirements for MED Tail, SAGA, TFIID and BET factors Bdf1/2. We also find that the depletion of the MED middle module subunit Med7 mimics inactivation of Tail, suggesting a functional link. Our combined results have broad implications for the roles of MED, other coactivators, and mechanisms of transcriptional regulation at different gene classes.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uthra Gowthaman ◽  
Maxim Ivanov ◽  
Isabel Schwarz ◽  
Heta P. Patel ◽  
Niels A. Müller ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTNucleosome-depleted regions (NDRs) at gene promoters support initiation of RNA Polymerase II transcription. Interestingly, transcription often initiates in both directions, resulting in an mRNA, and a divergent non-coding (DNC) transcript with an unclear purpose. Here, we characterized the genetic architecture and molecular mechanism of DNC transcription in budding yeast. We identified the Hda1 histone deacetylase complex (Hda1C) as a repressor of DNC in high-throughput reverse genetic screens based on quantitative single-cell fluorescence measurements. Nascent transcription profiling showed a genome-wide role of Hda1C in DNC repression. Live-cell imaging of transcription revealed that Hda1C reduced the frequency of DNC transcription. Hda1C contributed to decreased acetylation of histone H3 in DNC regions, supporting DNC repression by histone deacetylation. Our data support the interpretation that DNC results as a consequence of the NDR-based architecture of eukaryotic promoters, but that it is governed by locus-specific repression to maintain genome fidelity.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Conghui Li ◽  
Honghong Wang ◽  
Zhinang Yin ◽  
Pingping Fang ◽  
Ruijing Xiao ◽  
...  

G-quadruplexes (G4s) are noncanonical DNA secondary structures formed through the self-association of guanines, and G4s are distributed widely across the genome. G4 participates in multiple biological processes including gene transcription, and G4-targeted ligands serve as potential therapeutic agents for DNA-targeted therapies. However, genome-wide studies of the exact roles of G4s in transcriptional regulation are still lacking. Here, we establish a sensitive G4-CUT&Tag method for genome-wide profiling of native G4s with high resolution and specificity. We find that native G4 signals are cell type–specific and are associated with transcriptional regulatory elements carrying active epigenetic modifications. Drug-induced promoter-proximal RNA polymerase II pausing promotes nearby G4 formation. In contrast, G4 stabilization by G4-targeted ligands globally reduces RNA polymerase II occupancy at gene promoters as well as nascent RNA synthesis. Moreover, ligand-induced G4 stabilization modulates chromatin states and impedes transcription initiation via inhibition of general transcription factors loading to promoters. Together, our study reveals a reciprocal genome-wide regulation between native G4 dynamics and gene transcription, which will deepen our understanding of G4 biology toward therapeutically targeting G4s in human diseases.


2009 ◽  
Vol 191 (7) ◽  
pp. 2153-2162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Zeng ◽  
Robert A. Burne

ABSTRACT The ability of Streptococcus mutans to catabolize cellobiose, a β-linked glucoside generated during the hydrolysis of cellulose, is shown to be regulated by a transcriptional regulator, CelR, which is encoded by an operon with a phospho-β-glucosidase (CelA) and a cellobiose-specific sugar phosphotransferase system (PTS) permease (EIICel). The roles of CelR, EIICel components, and certain fructose/mannose-PTS permeases in the transcriptional regulation of the cel locus were analyzed. The results revealed that (i) the celA and celB (EIIBCel) gene promoters require CelR for transcriptional activation in response to cellobiose, but read-through from the celA promoter contributes to expression of the EIICel genes; (ii) the EIICel subunits were required for growth on cellobiose and for transcriptional activation of the cel genes; (iii) CcpA plays little direct role in catabolite repression of the cel regulon, but loss of specific PTS permeases alleviated repression of cel genes in the presence of preferred carbohydrates; and (iv) glucose could induce transcription of the cel regulon when transported by EIICel. CelR derivatives containing amino acid substitutions for five conserved histidine residues in two PTS regulatory domains and an EIIA-like domain also provided important insights regarding the function of this regulator. Based on these data, a model for the involvement of PTS permeases and the general PTS proteins enzyme I and HPr was developed that reveals a critical role for the PTS in CcpA-independent catabolite repression and induction of cel gene expression in S. mutans.


2003 ◽  
Vol 375 (3) ◽  
pp. 593-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sotiria BOUKOUVALA ◽  
Naomi PRICE ◽  
Kathryn E. PLANT ◽  
Edith SIM

Arylamine N-acetyltransferases (NATs) are polymorphic enzymes, well-known for their role in the metabolism of drugs and carcinogens. Mice have three NAT isoenzymes, of which NAT2 is postulated to be involved in endogenous, as well as xenobiotic, metabolism. To understand expression of the murine Nat2 gene, we have analysed its structure and transcriptional regulation. We have accurately mapped the transcription initiation site 6.5 kb upstream of the coding region of the gene, adjacent to a recently described non-coding exon. Transcription was demonstrated to start from this region in embryonic and adult liver, spleen, submaxillary gland, kidney, brain, thymus, lung and placenta, but not in the heart. Database searches and analyses of cDNA by PCR suggested alternative splicing of the single 6.2 kb intron of Nat2, and determined the position of the polyadenylation signal at 0.44 kb downstream of the coding region of the gene. Examination of the 13 kb sequence flanking the coding and non-coding exons of Nat2 revealed a single promoter, located close to the transcription-initiation site, and indicated regions likely to harbour control elements. The Nat2 promoter consists of an atypical TATA box and a Sp1 [SV40 (simian virus 40) protein 1] box identical with that found in many housekeeping gene promoters. Activity of the Nat2 promoter was severely reduced by deletion or mutation of either of these two elements, whereas the region of the Sp1 box bound cellular protein and resisted DNase I digestion. Finally, the ability of the promoter region to bind cellular protein was reduced by competition with oligonucleotides bearing the Sp1 consensus sequence.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2385-2385
Author(s):  
Martin F Kaiser ◽  
Brian A Walker ◽  
Christopher P Wardell ◽  
Fabio Mirabella ◽  
Rosemary A Fryer ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 2385 The t(4;14) group in multiple myeloma (MM) is associated with a significantly impaired prognosis based on the overexpression of MMSET, a histone methyltransferase and epigenetic modifier that is thought to play a major role in myeloma genesis. We have previously shown that t(4;14) myelomas are associated with a specific pattern of DNA hypermethylation using Illumina HumanMethylation27 BeadChip arrays. These results were interpreted as being consistent with that MMSET overexpression leads to specific changes in the epigenetic architecture of MM. However, the detailed mechanism underlying this remains unclear partly due to the low resolution of methylation array technology used. In order to address this we have performed high-resolution genome-wide analyses of DNA methylation for t(4;14) and t(11;14) samples from patients with myeloma, plasma cell leukemia (PCL) and myeloma cell lines (HMCL) using methyl binding domain next generation sequencing (MBD-seq) in order to define DNA methylation patterns specific for t(4;14) MM, as well as to analyse methylation changes accompanying the progression from MM to PCL at a high-resolution, genome-wide scale. DNA from 6 myeloma patients at diagnosis [3 MM with t(4;14), 3 MM with t(11;14)], 6 patients with PCL [3 PCL with t(4;14), 3 PCL with t(11;14)] and 6 HMCL [3 with t(4;14), 3 non-t(4;14)] was fragmented. Methylated DNA fractions were captured using biotin-labelled methyl-binding domain 2 (MBD2) protein. Captured sequences bound to MBD were washed and eluted using elution buffers with increasing salt concentrations. Eluted fragments were purified and sequenced on an Illumina GAIIx, using 1.5 lanes per patient sample, generating 36 bp single-end reads. On average, 1.4 Gbases of reads were generated per sample. Sequences were aligned and de-duplicated using stampy and bwa algorithms. The reference genome (build hg19) was divided into overlapping bins of 200 bp (termed probes) and short read coverage per bin was normalised to per million reads aligned. Differentially methylated regions were defined by comparing normalised reads per probe between the t(4;14) and the t(11;14) groups for MM, PCL and HMCL groups. We first compared probe values that were higher in all three t(4;14) MM samples compared to the three t(11;14) samples. About 16500 probe values were higher in t(4,14) cases compared the t(11;14) group, whereas only 470 probes values were higher in all t(11;14) cases compared to t(4;14) cases. This confirms our previous observation that t(4;14) MM cases are characterised by pronounced hypermethylation. Of the 16500 probes values higher in t(4;14), about 9500 probes mapped to gene bodies and 600 to gene promoters, affecting in total about 1600 genes, indicating that gene or gene regulatory sequence hypermethylation is a common feature in t(4;14). Gene set enrichment analyses of these genes demonstrated highly significant enrichment of KEGG pathways ‘pathways in cancer’, ‘cell adhesion molecules’, the GO term ‘cell development’, among others, and an overrepresentation of probes mapping to chromosomal regions on chromosome 1q. When comparing the progression from MM to PCL, about 2600 genomic probe values were higher in all 3 t(11;14) PCL vs all 3 t(11;14) MM and 1600 probes in all 3 t(4;14) PCL vs MM, indicating that hypermethylation from MM to PCL is more pronounced in t(11;14) than in t(4;14). Very few differences in probe values were present when comparing all 6 MM (both t(4;14) and t(11;14)) with the 6 PCL samples, indicating that the epigenetic mechanisms involved in progression from MM to PCL might be different between the cytogenetic subgroups. Enrichment of methylated sequences was strong for both translocation groups when comparing PCLs with HMCLs, demonstrating that the epigenetic architecture of HMCLs differs significantly even from late-stage patient tumour material. This genome-wide methylation analysis provides us with candidate genes that are likely to be directly or indirectly epigenetically modified by MMSET. We are integrating this methylation data with gene expression data to identify expression-methylation correlations. Furthermore, additional experiments using MMSET knockout models will be used to further filter MMSET-specific effects on genome wide methylation. Finally, we go on to define epigenetic markers that could serve as biomarkers for future epigenetic therapies targeting epigenetic modifiers in t(4;14) myeloma. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julien Soudet ◽  
Nissrine Beyrouthy ◽  
Anna Marta Pastucha ◽  
Andrea Maffioletti ◽  
Zahra Bakir ◽  
...  

Eukaryotic genomes are pervasively transcribed by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII), and transcription of long non-coding RNAs often overlaps with coding gene promoters. This might lead to coding gene repression in a process named Transcription Interference (TI). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae (S. cerevisiae), TI is mainly driven by antisense non-coding transcription and occurs through re-shaping of promoter Nucleosome-Depleted Regions (NDRs). In this study, we developed a genetic screen to identify new players involved in Antisense-Mediated Transcription Interference (AMTI). Among the candidates, we found the HIR histone chaperone complex known to be involved in de novo histone deposition. Using genome-wide approaches, we reveal that HIR-dependent histone deposition represses the promoters of SAGA-dependent genes via antisense non-coding transcription. However, while antisense transcription is enriched at promoters of SAGA-dependent genes, this feature is not sufficient to define the mode of gene regulation. We further show that the balance between HIR-dependent nucleosome incorporation and transcription factor binding at promoters directs transcription into a SAGA- or TFIID-dependent regulation. This study sheds light on a new connection between antisense non-coding transcription and the nature of coding transcription initiation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (7) ◽  
pp. 2391-2403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda S Lobell ◽  
Rachel R Kaspari ◽  
Yazmin L Serrano Negron ◽  
Susan T Harbison

Abstract Ovariole number has a direct role in the number of eggs produced by an insect, suggesting that it is a key morphological fitness trait. Many studies have documented the variability of ovariole number and its relationship to other fitness and life-history traits in natural populations of Drosophila. However, the genes contributing to this variability are largely unknown. Here, we conducted a genome-wide association study of ovariole number in a natural population of flies. Using mutations and RNAi-mediated knockdown, we confirmed the effects of 24 candidate genes on ovariole number, including a novel gene, anneboleyn (formerly CG32000), that impacts both ovariole morphology and numbers of offspring produced. We also identified pleiotropic genes between ovariole number traits and sleep and activity behavior. While few polymorphisms overlapped between sleep parameters and ovariole number, 39 candidate genes were nevertheless in common. We verified the effects of seven genes on both ovariole number and sleep: bin3, blot, CG42389, kirre, slim, VAChT, and zfh1. Linkage disequilibrium among the polymorphisms in these common genes was low, suggesting that these polymorphisms may evolve independently.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Busra Cagirici ◽  
Hikmet Budak ◽  
Taner Z. Sen

AbstractG-quadruplexes (G4s) are four-stranded nucleic acid structures with closely spaced guanine bases forming square planar G-quartets. Aberrant formation of G4 structures has been associated with genomic instability. However, most plant species are lacking comprehensive studies of G4 motifs. In this study, genome-wide identification of G4 motifs in barley was performed, followed by a comparison of genomic distribution and molecular functions to other monocot species, such as wheat, maize, and rice. Similar to the reports on human and some plants like wheat, G4 motifs peaked around the 5′ untranslated region (5′ UTR), the first coding domain sequence, and the first intron start sites on antisense strands. Our comparative analyses in human, Arabidopsis, maize, rice, and sorghum demonstrated that the peak points could be erroneously merged into a single peak when large window sizes are used. We also showed that the G4 distributions around genic regions are relatively similar in the species studied, except in the case of Arabidopsis. G4 containing genes in monocots showed conserved molecular functions for transcription initiation and hydrolase activity. Additionally, we provided examples of imperfect G4 motifs.


2011 ◽  
Vol 96 (2) ◽  
pp. E394-E403 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neeraj K. Sharma ◽  
Kurt A. Langberg ◽  
Ashis K. Mondal ◽  
Steven C. Elbein ◽  
Swapan K. Das

abstract Context: Genome-wide association scans (GWAS) have identified novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that increase T2D susceptibility and indicated the role of nearby genes in T2D pathogenesis. Objective: We hypothesized that T2D-associated SNPs act as cis-regulators of nearby genes in human tissues and that expression of these transcripts may correlate with metabolic traits, including insulin sensitivity (SI). Design, Settings, and Patients: Association of SNPs with the expression of their nearest transcripts was tested in adipose and muscle from 168 healthy individuals who spanned a broad range of SI and body mass index (BMI) and in transformed lymphocytes (TLs). We tested correlations between the expression of these transcripts in adipose and muscle with metabolic traits. Utilizing allelic expression imbalance (AEI) analysis we examined the presence of other cis-regulators for those transcripts in TLs. Results: SNP rs9472138 was significantly (P = 0.037) associated with the expression of VEGFA in TLs while rs6698181 was detected as a cis-regulator for the PKN2 in muscle (P = 0.00027) and adipose (P = 0.018). Significant association was also observed for rs17036101 (P = 0.001) with expression of SYN2 in adipose of Caucasians. Among 19 GWAS-implicated transcripts, expression of VEGFA in adipose was correlated with BMI (r = −0.305) and SI (r = 0.230). Although only a minority of the T2D-associated SNPs were validated as cis-eQTLs for nearby transcripts, AEI analysis indicated presence of other cis-regulatory polymorphisms in 54% of these transcripts. Conclusions: Our study suggests that a small subset of GWAS-identified SNPs may increase T2D susceptibility by modulating expression of nearby transcripts in adipose or muscle.


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