transcription inhibition
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Constance Kleijwegt ◽  
Florent Bressac ◽  
Camille Cohen ◽  
Pascale Texier ◽  
Thomas Simonet ◽  
...  

Promyelocytic Leukemia Nuclear Bodies (PML NBs) are nuclear membrane-less organelles physically associated with chromatin underscoring their crucial role in genome function. The H3.3 histone chaperone complex HIRA accumulates in PML NBs upon senescence, viral infection or IFN-I treatment in primary cells. Yet, the molecular mechanisms of this partitioning and its function in regulating histone dynamics have remained elusive. Here, by using specific siRNAs and protein Affimers, we identify intermolecular SUMO-SIM interactions as an essential mechanism for HIRA recruitment in PML NBs. In addition, we demonstrate that HIRA localization in the nuclear bodies is intimately linked to the presence of a soluble pool of H3.3-H4 dimers inside PML NBs, that is not found in cancer cells. Transcription inhibition prevents HIRA accumulation in PML NBs underscoring the importance of transcriptional activity to drive HIRA through PML NBs. Finally, in the context of inflammatory responses, HIRA and PML are necessary for the prolonged H3.3 deposition at the transcriptional end sites of interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs), well beyond the peak of transcription. We thus propose that HIRA partitioning in PML NBs is essential to regulate H3.3 deposition on transcriptionally active regions.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 4132
Author(s):  
Adam J. Buric ◽  
Jonathan Dickerhoff ◽  
Danzhou Yang

This review is dedicated to Professor William A. Denny’s discovery of XR5944 (also known as MLN944). XR5944 is a DNA-targeted agent with exceptionally potent antitumor activity and a novel DNA binding mode, bis-intercalation and major groove binding, as well as a novel mechanism of action, transcription inhibition. This novel anticancer compound represents a remarkable accomplishment resulting from two decades of drug discovery by Professor Denny and coworkers. Here, we review our work on the structural study of the DNA binding mode of XR5944 and mechanistic study of XR5944 action.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Déborah Bouvier ◽  
Juliette Ferrand ◽  
Odile Chevallier ◽  
Michelle T. Paulsen ◽  
Mats Ljungman ◽  
...  

AbstractTranscription restart after a genotoxic challenge is a fundamental yet poorly understood process. Here, we dissect the interplay between transcription and chromatin restoration after DNA damage by focusing on the human histone chaperone complex HIRA, which is required for transcription recovery post UV. We demonstrate that HIRA is recruited to UV-damaged chromatin via the ubiquitin-dependent segregase VCP to deposit new H3.3 histones. However, this local activity of HIRA is dispensable for transcription recovery. Instead, we reveal a genome-wide function of HIRA in transcription restart that is independent of new H3.3 and not restricted to UV-damaged loci. HIRA coordinates with ASF1B to control transcription restart by two independent pathways: by stabilising the associated subunit UBN2 and by reducing the expression of the transcription repressor ATF3. Thus, HIRA primes UV-damaged chromatin for transcription restart at least in part by relieving transcription inhibition rather than by depositing new H3.3 as an activating bookmark.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marit Geijer ◽  
Di Zhou ◽  
Kathiresan Selvam ◽  
Barbara Steurer ◽  
Bastiaan Evers ◽  
...  

Correct transcription is crucial for life. However, DNA damage severely impedes elongating RNA Polymerase II (Pol II), causing transcription inhibition and transcription-replication conflicts. Cells are equipped with intricate mechanisms to counteract the severe consequence of these transcription-blocking lesions (TBLs). However, the exact mechanism and factors involved remain largely unknown. Here, using a genome-wide CRISPR/cas9 screen, we identified elongation factor ELOF1 as an important new factor in the transcription stress response upon DNA damage. We show that ELOF1 has an evolutionary conserved role in Transcription-Coupled Nucleotide Excision Repair (TC-NER), where it promotes recruitment of the TC-NER factors UVSSA and TFIIH to efficiently repair TBLs and resume transcription. Additionally, ELOF1 modulates transcription to protect cells from transcription-mediated replication stress, thereby preserving genome stability. Thus, ELOF1 protects the transcription machinery from DNA damage by two distinct mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew D Surette ◽  
Nicholas Waglechner ◽  
Kalinka Koteva ◽  
Gerard D Wright

Rifamycin antibiotics such as rifampin are widely used for the management of tuberculosis and other bacterial infections. These drugs inhibit prokaryotic RNA polymerase (RNAP) by preventing elongation of mRNA resulting in cell death. Rifamycin resistance in the clinic is manifested primarily through amino acid substitutions in RNAP that decrease target affinity for the antibiotics. In contrast, environmental bacteria possess a wide variety of highly specific rifamycin enzyme-mediated resistance mechanisms that modify and inactivate the antibiotics by glycosylation, phosphorylation, ADP-ribosylation, or hydroxylation. Expression of rifamycin resistance is controlled by a common 19bp cis-acting rifamycin associated element (RAE) upstream of inactivating genes. Guided by the presence of RAE sequences, we identify an unprecedented ATP-dependent mechanism of rifamycin resistance that acts not by antibiotic inactivation but by protecting the RNAP target. We show that Streptomyces venezuelae encodes a helicase-like protein, HelR, which confers broad spectrum rifamycin resistance. Furthermore, HelR is essential for promoting rifamycin tolerance at inhibitory concentrations, enabling bacterial evasion of the toxic properties of these antibiotics. HelR forms a complex with RNAP in vivo and rescues transcription inhibition by rifampin in vitro. We synthesized a rifamycin photoprobe and demonstrated that HelR directly displaces rifamycins from RNAP. HelR-encoding genes associated with RAEs are broadly distributed in actinobacteria, including many opportunistic Mycobacterial pathogens, which cannot currently be treated with rifamycins. This first report of an RNAP protection protein conferring antibiotic resistance and offers guidance for developing new rifamycin antibiotics that can avoid this mechanism.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zheng Zhang ◽  
Tong Liu ◽  
Hangyan Dong ◽  
Jian Li ◽  
Haofan Sun ◽  
...  

Abstract RNA-protein interactions play key roles in epigenetic, transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation. To reveal the regulatory mechanisms of these interactions, global investigation of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) and monitor their changes under various physiological conditions are needed. Herein, we developed a psoralen probe (PP)-based method for RNA tagging and ribonucleic-protein complex (RNP) enrichment. Isolation of both coding and noncoding RNAs and mapping of 2986 RBPs including 782 unknown candidate RBPs from HeLa cells was achieved by PP enrichment, RNA-sequencing and mass spectrometry analysis. The dynamics study of RNPs by PP enrichment after the inhibition of RNA synthesis provides the first large-scale distribution profile of RBPs bound to RNAs with different decay rates. Furthermore, the remarkably greater decreases in the abundance of the RBPs obtained by PP-enrichment than by global proteome profiling suggest that PP enrichment after transcription inhibition offers a valuable way for large-scale evaluation of the candidate RBPs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 2255
Author(s):  
Hongni Xue ◽  
Fayang Liu ◽  
Zhiying Ai ◽  
Jie Ke ◽  
Mengying Yu ◽  
...  

FOXC1, a transcription factor involved in cell differentiation and embryogenesis, is demonstrated to be a negative regulator of Nanog in this study. FOXC1 is up-regulated in retinoic acid-induced differentiation of F9 Embryonal Carcinoma (EC) cells; furthermore, FOXC1 specifically inhibits the core pluripotency factor Nanog by binding to the proximal promoter. Overexpression of FOXC1 in F9 or knockdown in 3T3 results in the down-regulation or up-regulation of Nanog mRNA and proteins, respectively. In order to explain the mechanism by which FOXC1 inhibits Nanog expression, we identified the co-repressor HDAC2 from the FOXC1 interactome. FOXC1 recruits HDAC2 to Nanog promoter to decrease H3K27ac enrichment, resulting in transcription inhibition of Nanog. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report that FOXC1 is involved in the epigenetic regulation of gene expression.


Author(s):  
Déborah Bouvier ◽  
Juliette Ferrand ◽  
Odile Chevallier ◽  
Michelle T. Paulsen ◽  
Mats Ljungman ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTranscription restart after a genotoxic challenge is a fundamental yet poorly understood process. Here, we dissect the interplay between transcription and chromatin restoration after DNA damage by focusing on the human histone chaperone complex HIRA, which is required for transcription recovery post UV. We demonstrate that HIRA is recruited to UV-damaged chromatin via the ubiquitin-dependent segregase VCP to deposit new H3.3 histones. However, this local activity of HIRA is dispensable for transcription recovery. Instead, we reveal a genome-wide function of HIRA in transcription restart that is independent of new H3.3 and not restricted to UV-damaged loci. HIRA coordinates with ASF1B to control transcription restart by two independent pathways: by stabilizing the associated subunit UBN2 and by reducing the expression of the transcription repressor ATF3. Thus, HIRA primes UV-damaged chromatin for transcription restart at least in part by relieving transcription inhibition rather than by depositing new H3.3 as an activating bookmark.


2020 ◽  
Vol 103 (5) ◽  
pp. 1000-1011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Gegenfurtner ◽  
Florian Flenkenthaler ◽  
Thomas Fröhlich ◽  
Eckhard Wolf ◽  
Georg J Arnold

Abstract Proper oocyte maturation is a prerequisite for successful reproduction and requires the resumption of meiosis to the metaphase II stage (MII). In bovine oocytes, nuclear maturation has been shown to occur in in vitro maturing cumulus-enclosed oocytes (COCs) in the absence of transcription, but their developmental capacity is reduced compared to transcriptionally competent COCs. To assess the impact of transcription during in vitro maturation of bovine COCs on the quantitative oocyte proteome, a holistic nano-LC–MS/MS analysis of germinal vesicle oocytes and MII oocytes matured with or without addition of the transcription inhibitor actinomycin D (ActD) was carried out. Analyzing eight biological replicates for each of the three groups, a total of 2018 proteins was identified. These could be clearly classified into proteins depending or not depending on transcription during oocyte maturation. Proteins whose abundance increased after maturation irrespective of transcription inhibition - and hence independent of transcription - were related to the cell cycle, reflecting the progression of meiosis, and to cellular component organization, which is crucial for cytoplasmic maturation. In contrast, transcription-dependent proteins were associated with cell–cell adhesion and translation. Since a high rate of protein synthesis in oocytes has been shown to correlate with their developmental competence, oocyte maturation in transcriptionally impaired COCs is apparently disturbed. Our experiments reveal that impaired transcription during in vitro maturation of COCs has a substantial effect on specific components of the oocyte proteome, and that transcription is required for specific classes of oocyte proteins predominantly involved in translation.


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