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Selected topics in Transcription Nir London . Computational Biology Seminar 2006

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Selected topics in Transcription. Nir London. Computational Biology Seminar 2006. Overview. Elongation Pause; Arrest Chromatin remodeling; Histones CTD Mediator Complex Mechanism model Composition and Interaction network Initiation Mechanism New findings. Elongation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

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Selected topics in Transcription

Nir London.Computational Biology Seminar 2006

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Overview

• Elongation– Pause; Arrest– Chromatin remodeling; Histones– CTD

• Mediator Complex– Mechanism model– Composition and Interaction network

• Initiation Mechanism– New findings

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Elongation

• 17 BP Open bubble • 5’ to 3’ Elongation• 50-90 BP / second

Leninger 5’th edition

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Elongation reaction

• 3 ASPs highly conserved across all species

Leninger 5’th edition

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Elongation by RNA polymerase II: the short and long of it

Robert J. Sims, III, RimmaBelotserkovskaya and Danny Reinberg

Genes & Dev. 2004

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What’s stopping elongation?

• Efficient elongation must overcome several blocks.– Transcriptional pause– Transcriptional arrest– Transcriptional termination

• Many elongation factors serve to counteract or remove one of the above.

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Pause

• The RNA polymerase halts elongation for a time before resuming on its own.

• Pausing of bacterial RNA pol is caused by a structural rearrangement within the enzyme and DNA sequence.

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Easy modulation of rate?

• Demonstrated for all three eukaryotic RNA polymerases, viral and prokaryotic.

• Pausing is self-reversible a natural mode of transcriptional regulation.

• Many factors modulate transcriptional pause and thus, the rate of elongation.

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Pause to cap

• DSIF/NELF complex promotes pausing and enables capping

• TFIIF < Elongins < ELLs promote elongation at different places along the gene.

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Arrest

• Irreversible halt to synthesis. Pol cannot resume without additional factors

• The polymerase “backtracking” relative to the DNA template

• Misalignment of the catalytic site and 3-OH of the transcript

• Pause decays into arrest in a time dependent fashion

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Resume mechanism

• Resuming uses an evolutionarily conserved mechanism

• Requires cleavage of the RNA transcript in a 3’-to-5’ direction

• Cleavage allows the proper realignment of the active site and 3’-OH.

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TFIIS – Arrest solver

• The cleavage reaction is intrinsic to the Pol. Enhanced in the presence of TFIIS.

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TFIIS (cont.)

• An acidic hairpin coordinating a metal ion Re-aligns the RNA to the cleavage active site.

Kettenberger H. et al. 2003

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Nucleosomes – another block

• How does the Pol. Traverses the nucleosomes ?

• Models:– Nucleosome mobilization– Histone depletion

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Swi\Snf – ATP dependent chromatin remodeler

• Transcription pauses shortly after initiation.

• HSF1 alleviates the negative effect of chromatin structure.

• Recruits Swi\Snf to Hsp70 gene

• Both Activator and Swi\Snf are required for transcription on nucleosomal templates.

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Mechanism?

Narlikar GJ. Et al. Cell 2002

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FACT – histone chaperone

• Highly conserved

• ChIP showed it to be localized downstream to promoters of active genes upon induction

• Destabilize the nucleosome by removing one H2A/H2B dimer.

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Spt6

• Promotes nucleosome assembly in vitro

• Spt6 mutants show alterations in chromatin structure

• Colocalized to transcribed regions

• Interacts with H3

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Mechanism

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Histone Modifications and elongation

• Histone acetylation destabilizes chromatin structure

• No evidence for a specific role of histone acetylation in elongation

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Set1/2 - Methylation

• Methylation can co-map with silent or active regions – depend on Lys

• Linking CTD to histone modifications• Set2 - H3-K36-specific histone methyltransferase• Set2 associates with the hyperphosphorylated RNAPII• Deletion of the CTD, or the CTD-kinase Ctk1, results in a

loss of H3-K36 methylation• Set1 functions as a specific histone H3-K4

methyltransferase• Set1 interacts with the Ser-5 phosphorylated form of

RNAP II. the form associated with early transcriptional events

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Chd1

Iws1

Swi/Snf

Spt6 FACT

DSIF

TFIIS

P-TEFb

Paf

ISWII

Elongator

Set1

Set2

TFIIF

Spt2

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CTD

• CTD serves as a platform for many factors for mRNA maturation

• Different phosphorylation patterns creates different structures

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Flexible

• A) Cgt1-CTD

• B) Pin1-CTD

• Heptad repeats are not identical

• Could explain specific factor binding

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Conclusions?

• Why are there so many redundant EF’s ? – The answer might be that they are

promoter/gene specific

• How does elongation and chromatin remodeling work together ?

• How histone modifications translate to distinct functional outcomes ?

• Why is the rate of elongation in vitro, far less than the rates observed in vivo ?

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The yeast Mediator complex andits regulation

Stefan Bjorklund and Claes M. Gustafsson

TRENDS in Biochemical Sciences, May 2005

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Mediator

• Required for activator dependent stimulation of Pol2.

• Comprised of 25 subunits

• Can be found as free form or attached to Pol2.

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Mediator interaction with Pol2

• CTD reminder: – Initiation – unphosphorylated – Elongation – phosphorylated

• Mediator complex interacts directly with the unphosphorylated form of the CTD

• Dissociation upon elongation

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Transcriptional activation

• The model: Mediator acts as a bridge between activators and basal Pol2 machinery.

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Activator Example – GAL4

Transcription Transcription Transcription Transcription

• Gal4 interacts directly with subunits Med15, Med17.

• ChIP showed association to be at an upstream activation sequence.

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Separate recruitment

• 3 waves of TF recruitment:

• Separate recruitment has also been showed for other promoters.

• Demonstrated in higher eukaryotes• Mediator forms a scaffold for several rounds of

transcription

Galactose

0

SAGA

4-7

Mediator

6-10

Pol II

8-13

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Transcriptional repression

• Srb8-11 identified as crucial for mediated repression– Tup1 repressor recruits Srb8-11

containing mediator– Srb10 kinase function is necessary

for repression– Srb8-11 genes showed in genetic

screens loss of repression

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Transcriptional repression

• The model: repressors recruit mediator in a form in which interactions with Srb8-11 module are stabilized.

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Example – C/EBPβ

• Switch phosphorylated by Ras

• Active form recruits mediator devoid of Srb8-11

• Repressive form recruits Srb8-11 containing mediator

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Post translational modifications

• Irregularities in SDSpage migration for certain subunits.

• Treatment with phosphatase changed migration patterns

• ATP-analog experiments showed that Kin28 (part of TFIIH) phosphorylates not only the CTD but also the mediator

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Modifications (cont.)

• Other kinases target mediator: (Srb10, ras, PKA)

• Another option for signaling pathways to modulate transcription

• The effects of modifications aren’t characterized – Lots more to investigate

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Sub summary

• Mediator influences both recruitment of Pol. and initiation of transcription

• Might be involved in other transcription related processes (elongation, chromatin remodeling, splicing, RNA export)

• How does PT modifications affect mediator function ?

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A high resolution protein interaction map of

the yeast Mediator complex

Benjamin Guglielmi, Nynke L. van Berkum,

Benjamin Klapholz, Theo Bijma, Muriel

Boube, Claire Boschiero, Henri-Marc

Bourbon, Frank C. P. Holstege and Michel

Werner

Nucleic Acids Research, 2004.

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Pair-wise 2H analysis

• Each subunit was cloned as fusion protein with Gal4 DNA binding domain (GBD) or Gal4 Activation domain (GAD).

• Transformed into a GAL promoter-reporter genes strains.

• All possible matings were preformed.

Strains expressing GBD-Med2, Med3, Med4, Med13, Med15 showed strong expression of gal and were excluded from this analysis.

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Results

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Results (cont.)

• Identified interactions were retested by co-transformation to same strain

• 11 interactions found in middle-middle

• 7 interactions in head-head

• No interactions in tail

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Screening genomic lib.

• Some interactions can’t be discovered using complete proteins

• Same screen only now attached to GAD are random S. cerevisiae genomic seqs.

• 17 interactions were found. (7 new ones)

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Med31 – new subunit

• Med31 homologues found in mediator like complexes in higher eukaryots

• Fusion with GBD against all other 24 showed 2 interactions in middle section

• CoIP with Med17 confirmed it belongs to the mediator complex

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"בואו נחבוש את כובע הביקורת..."

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Interaction Domains

Truncation of conserved areas reveals different interaction domains for Med subunits.

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Abortive Initiation and ProductiveInitiation by RNA Polymerase

Involve DNA ScrunchingAndrey Revyakin, Chenyu Liu, Richard H.

Ebright, Terence R. Strick

Science Nov. 2006

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Initiation

• Transcription initiation is composed of:– RNAP binds to promoter (closed complex)– Unwinds 1 turn of DNA (open complex)– Abortive cycles of synthesis and release of

short RNA products (promoter initial transcribing complex)

– Upon synthesis of ~9-11 RNA nt enters into elongation (promoter escape)

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Abortive initiation mystery

• Two contradicting observations:– RNA products of 8-10 nt are synthesized –

Thus the active center translocates relative to the DNA.

– Footprinting results indicates that the upstream DNA protected by RNAP is the same in RPo and RPitc – thus RNAP appears not to translocate relative to DNA.

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Three models

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Unwinding detection

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Proving the scrunch

• The scrunching model is the only model that requires RNAP dependent DNA unwinding

• For each BP the RNAP pulls into itself, there another BP of DNA unwinding

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Scrunching in abortive init.

• If no NTP are added we receive RPo

• If only some NTP’s are added we receive RPitc<8

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Does scrunching requires RNA?

• Control I : only initiating A -> RPitc<=1

• Control II : rifampicin -> RPitc<=2

• Scrunching doesn’t occur -> requires an RNA product > 2 nt in length

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RNA length and scrunching

• Tested on: – RPo (no NTP’s)– RPitc<4 (only A, U)– RPitc<8 (only A, U, C)

• Transition from 0 to 4 shows 2 bp unwinding

• Transitions from 0 to 8 shows 6 bp unwinding

• Simplest model : N-2

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Productive initiation

• Constructs: Promotor-[400/100 bp]-Terminator.• Four transitions observed:

– Transition from initial state to RPo– Transition to scrunched RPitc– Transition to a “elongation state” – Transition to initial state again

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Controls

• No NTP’s RPo transition 1• A,U,C RPitc<8 transition 1,2• All NTP’s, halted elongation transition

1,2,3• All NTP’s, no terminator transitions

1,2,3• Length of transcribed region varied

duration of phase between 3 and 4 changed

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Conclusions

• Promoter escape requires RNA product ~9 to 11 nt in length.

• Thus requires scrunching of ~7 to 9 bp (N – 2), • Assuming an energetic cost of ~2 kcal/mol per

bp, a total of ~14 to 18 kcal/mol is accumulated in the stressed intermediate.

• RNAP-promoter interaction are ~7 to 9 kcal/mol• RNAP-initiation-factor interaction ~13 kcal/mol

(s70)

The energy accumulated in thatobligatory stressed intermediate drives the transition from initiation to elongation.

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PAF – elongation complex

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Gal11 module

• 3D EM reconstruction shows two conformations.

• Tail region doesn’t interact with Pol2

• Gal11 (Med[2,3,15,16]) module might function as a separate entity

• Associates with Gcn4 and promotes transcription of ARG1, SNZ1 genes

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Gal11 (cont.)

• Option 1: interacts with SAGA or SWI/SNF complexes, which is enough for initiation complex

• Option 2: direct stimulatory effect on transcription machinery