THE Arabidopsis PHYTOCHROME A GENE HAS MULTIPLE TRANSCRIPTION START SITES AND A PROMOTER SEQUENCE MOTIF HOMOLOGOUS TO THE REPRESSOR ELEMENT OF MONOCOT PHYTOCHROME A GENES

1994 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 379-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katayoon Dehesh ◽  
Chris Franci ◽  
Robert A. Sharrock ◽  
David E. Somers ◽  
Jo Anne Welsch ◽  
...  
Genomics ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 97 (3) ◽  
pp. 166-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasushi Yukawa ◽  
Giorgio Dieci ◽  
Mircko Alzapiedi ◽  
Asako Hiraga ◽  
Katsuaki Hirai ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 58-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marko Djordjevic

Summary Promoter prediction in bacteria is a classical bioinformatics problem, where available methods for regulatory element detection exhibit a very high number of false positives. We here argue that accurate transcription start site (TSS) prediction is a complex problem, where available methods for sequence motif discovery are not in itself well adopted for solving the problem. We here instead propose that the problem requires integration of quantitative understanding of transcription initiation with careful description of promoter sequence specificity. We review evidence for this viewpoint, and discuss a current progress on these issues on the example of sigma70 transcription start sites in E. coli.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hjorleifur Einarsson ◽  
Marco Salvatore ◽  
Christian Vaagenso ◽  
Nicolas Alcaraz ◽  
Jette Bornholdt Lange ◽  
...  

Genetic and environmental exposures cause variability in gene expression. Although most genes are affected in a population, their effect sizes vary greatly, indicating the existence of regulatory mechanisms that could amplify or attenuate expression variability. Here, we investigate the relationship between the sequence and transcription start site architectures of promoters and their expression variability across human individuals. We find that expression variability is largely determined by a promoter's DNA sequence and its binding sites for specific transcription factors. We further demonstrate that flexible usage of transcription start sites within a promoter attenuates variability, providing transcriptional and mutational robustness.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 4 (10) ◽  
pp. e7526 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfredo Mendoza-Vargas ◽  
Leticia Olvera ◽  
Maricela Olvera ◽  
Ricardo Grande ◽  
Leticia Vega-Alvarado ◽  
...  

1988 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 5549-5554
Author(s):  
E B Jakobovits ◽  
U Schlokat ◽  
J L Vannice ◽  
R Derynck ◽  
A D Levinson

Transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha) is a transformation-responsive mitogenic polypeptide that is expressed in the brain, epithelial cells, and activated macrophages. We isolated and characterized the TGF-alpha promoter and localized the 5' end of the TGF-alpha transcript to a unique position. Surprisingly, no apparent TATA box was present in the promoter sequence, suggesting that transcription from mammalian genes can initiate at unique and specific positions from promoters lacking this sequence motif.


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward J Banigan ◽  
Wen Tang ◽  
Aafke A van den Berg ◽  
Roman R Stocsits ◽  
Gordana Wutz ◽  
...  

Cohesin organizes mammalian interphase chromosomes by reeling chromatin fibers into dynamic loops (Banigan and Mirny, 2020; Davidson et al., 2019; Kim et al., 2019; Yatskevich et al., 2019). "Loop extrusion" is obstructed when cohesin encounters a properly oriented CTCF protein (Busslinger et al., 2017; de Wit et al., 2015; Fudenberg et al., 2016; Nora et al., 2017; Sanborn et al., 2015; Wutz et al., 2017), and recent work indicates that other factors, such as the replicative helicase MCM (Dequeker et al., 2020), can also act as barriers to loop extrusion. It has been proposed that transcription relocalizes (Busslinger et al., 2017; Glynn et al., 2004; Lengronne et al., 2004) or interferes with cohesin (Heinz et al., 2018; Jeppsson et al., 2020; Valton et al., 2021; S. Zhang et al., 2021), and that active transcription start sites function as cohesin loading sites (Busslinger et al., 2017; Kagey et al., 2010; Zhu et al., 2021; Zuin et al., 2014), but how these effects, and transcription in general, shape chromatin is unknown. To determine whether transcription can modulate loop extrusion, we studied cells in which the primary extrusion barriers could be removed by CTCF depletion and cohesin's residence time and abundance on chromatin could be increased by Wapl knockout. We found evidence that transcription directly interacts with loop extrusion through a novel "moving barrier" mechanism, but not by loading cohesin at active promoters. Hi-C experiments showed intricate, cohesin-dependent genomic contact patterns near actively transcribed genes, and in CTCF-Wapl double knockout (DKO) cells (Busslinger et al., 2017), genomic contacts were enriched between sites of transcription-driven cohesin localization ("cohesin islands"). Similar patterns also emerged in polymer simulations in which transcribing RNA polymerases (RNAPs) acted as "moving barriers" by impeding, slowing, or pushing loop-extruding cohesins. The model predicts that cohesin does not load preferentially at promoters and instead accumulates at TSSs due to the barrier function of RNAPs. We tested this prediction by new ChIP-seq experiments, which revealed that the "cohesin loader" Nipbl (Ciosk et al., 2000) co-localizes with cohesin, but, unlike in previous reports (Busslinger et al., 2017; Kagey et al., 2010; Zhu et al., 2021; Zuin et al., 2014), Nipbl did not accumulate at active promoters. We propose that RNAP acts as a new type of barrier to loop extrusion that, unlike CTCF, is not stationary in its precise genomic position, but is itself dynamically translocating and relocalizes cohesin along DNA. In this way, loop extrusion could enable translocating RNAPs to maintain contacts with distal regulatory elements, allowing transcriptional activity to shape genomic functional organization.


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 ◽  
...  

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