Acute myeloid leukemias (AMLs) have an overall poor prognosis with many high-risk cases co-opting stem cell gene regulatory programs, yet the mechanisms through which this occurs remain poorly understood. Increased expression of the stem cell transcription factor, MECOM, underlies one key driver mechanism in largely incurable AMLs. How MECOM results in such aggressive AML phenotypes remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAndrogen receptor (AR)-mediated transcription plays a critical role in development and prostate cancer growth. AR drives gene expression by binding to thousands of cis-regulatory elements (CRE) that loop to hundreds of target promoters. With multiple CREs interacting with a single promoter, it remains unclear how individual AR bound CREs contribute to gene expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring development, inflammation or tissue injury, macrophages may successively engulf and process multiple apoptotic corpses via efferocytosis to achieve tissue homeostasis. How macrophages may rapidly adapt their transcription to achieve continuous corpse uptake is incompletely understood. Transcriptional pause/release is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism, in which RNA polymerase (Pol) II initiates transcription for 20-60 nucleotides, is paused for minutes to hours and is then released to make full-length mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite advances in defining diverse somatic mutations that cause myeloid malignancies, a significant heritable component for these cancers remains largely unexplained. Here, we perform rare variant association studies in a large population cohort to identify inherited predisposition genes for these blood cancers. CTR9, which encodes a key component of the PAF1 transcription elongation complex, is among the significant genes identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGene regulation is dependent on the production of mRNAs and a repertoire of non-coding RNAs by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). Precision run-on sequencing (PRO-seq) maps the position of engaged RNAPII complexes at single-nucleotide resolution and can reveal direct targets of regulation, locations of enhancers, and transcription mechanisms that are difficult or impossible to measure by analysis of total cellular RNA. Briefly, this method first involves permeabilizing cells with mild detergents to remove intracellular NTPs and halt transcription.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring eukaryotic transcription elongation, RNA polymerase II (RNAP2) is regulated by a chorus of factors. Here, we identified a common binary interaction module consisting of TFIIS N-terminal domains (TNDs) and natively unstructured TND-interacting motifs (TIMs). This module was conserved among the elongation machinery and linked complexes including transcription factor TFIIS, Mediator, super elongation complex, elongin, IWS1, SPT6, PP1-PNUTS phosphatase, H3K36me3 readers, and other factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNegative elongation factor (NELF) is a critical transcriptional regulator that stabilizes paused RNA polymerase to permit rapid gene expression changes in response to environmental cues. Although NELF is essential for embryonic development, its role in adult stem cells remains unclear. In this study, through a muscle-stem-cell-specific deletion, we showed that NELF is required for efficient muscle regeneration and stem cell pool replenishment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA systems-level view of cellular gene expression requires understanding the mechanistic principles governing each step of transcription. In this chapter, we describe a massively multiplexed method for the analysis of the relationship between nucleic acid sequence and transcription termed "MASTER," for massively systematic transcript end readout. MASTER enables parallel measurements of transcription output from at least 4 (~1,000,000) individual template sequences in vitro and in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the development of a next-generation sequencing-based technology that entails construction of a DNA library comprising up to at least 4(7) (∼ 16,000) barcoded sequences, production of RNA transcripts, and analysis of transcript ends and transcript yields (massively systematic transcript end readout, "MASTER"). Using MASTER, we define full inventories of transcription start sites ("TSSomes") of Escherichia coli RNA polymerase for initiation at a consensus core promoter in vitro and in vivo; we define the TSS-region DNA sequence determinants for TSS selection, reiterative initiation ("slippage synthesis"), and transcript yield; and we define effects of DNA topology and NTP concentration. The results reveal that slippage synthesis occurs from the majority of TSS-region DNA sequences and that TSS-region DNA sequences have profound, up to 100-fold, effects on transcript yield.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe σ subunit of bacterial RNA polymerase (RNAP) confers on the enzyme the ability to initiate promoter-specific transcription. Although σ factors are generally classified as initiation factors, σ can also remain associated with, and modulate the behavior of, RNAP during elongation. Here we establish that the primary σ factor in Escherichia coli, σ(70), can function as an elongation factor in vivo by loading directly onto the transcription elongation complex (TEC) in trans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscription initiation that involves the use of a 2- to ~4-nt oligoribonucleotide primer, "primer-dependent initiation," (PDI) has been shown to be widely prevalent at promoters of genes expressed during the stationary phase of growth in Escherichia coli. However, the extent to which PDI impacts E. coli physiology, and the extent to which PDI occurs in other bacteria is not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe provide a detailed protocol for preparing cDNA libraries suitable for high-throughput sequencing that are derived specifically from the 5' ends of RNA (5' specific RNA-seq). The protocol describes how cDNA libraries for 5' specific RNA-seq can be tailored to analyze specific classes of RNAs based upon the phosphorylation status of the 5' end. Thus, the analysis of cDNA libraries generated by these methods provides information regarding both the sequence and phosphorylation status of the 5' ends of RNAs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTranscription elongation is interrupted by sequences that inhibit nucleotide addition and cause RNA polymerase (RNAP) to pause. Here, by use of native elongating transcript sequencing (NET-seq) and a variant of NET-seq that enables analysis of mutant RNAP derivatives in merodiploid cells (mNET-seq), we analyze transcriptional pausing genome-wide in vivo in Escherichia coli. We identify a consensus pause-inducing sequence element, G₋₁₀Y₋₁G(+1) (where -1 corresponds to the position of the RNA 3' end).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is often presumed that, in vivo, the initiation of RNA synthesis by DNA-dependent RNA polymerases occurs using NTPs alone. Here, using the model Gram-negative bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, we demonstrate that depletion of the small-RNA-specific exonuclease, Oligoribonuclease, causes the accumulation of oligoribonucleotides 2 to ∼4 nt in length, "nanoRNAs," which serve as primers for transcription initiation at a significant fraction of promoters. Widespread use of nanoRNAs to prime transcription initiation is coupled with global alterations in gene expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring transcription initiation in vitro, prokaryotic and eukaryotic RNA polymerase (RNAP) can engage in abortive initiation-the synthesis and release of short (2 to 15 nucleotides) RNA transcripts-before productive initiation. It has not been known whether abortive initiation occurs in vivo. Using hybridization with locked nucleic acid probes, we directly detected abortive transcripts in bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFShigella flexneri, a gram-negative enteric pathogen, is unusual in that it contains two nonredundant paralogous genes that encode the myristoyl transferase MsbB (LpxM) that catalyzes the final step in the synthesis of the lipid A moiety of lipopolysaccharide. MsbB1 is encoded on the chromosome, and MsbB2 is encoded on the large virulence plasmid present in all pathogenic shigellae. We demonstrate that myristoyl transferase activity due to MsbB2 is detected in limited magnesium medium, but not in replete magnesium medium, whereas that due to MsbB1 is detected under both conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Shigella actin assembly protein IcsA is removed from the bacterial surface by the protease IcsP. We show that decreased intracellular spreading of virK::Tn10 mutants is due in part to significant increases in IcsP and IcsP-mediated cleavage of IcsA and that IcsP expression is a critical determinant of Shigella virulence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Shigella outer membrane protease IcsP removes the actin assembly protein IcsA from the bacterial surface, and consequently modulates Shigella actin-based motility and cell-to-cell spread. Here, we demonstrate that IcsP expression is undetectable in mutants lacking either of two transcriptional activators, VirF and VirB. In wild-type Shigella spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Microbiol Biotechnol
January 2002
We here describe all recognized established and putative transport proteins encoded within the genome of Bacillus subtilis. These fall into four classes of established transporter types: (1) channel proteins, (2) secondary active transporters, (3) primary active transporters, and (4) group translocators of the sugar-transporting phosphotransferase system (PTS). Additionally, some transporters are recognized that utilize an unknown mode of action or energy coupling mechanism.
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