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Visualizing transcription sites in living cells using a genetically encoded probe specific for the elongating form of RNA polymerase II

27 Apr 2021-bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)-
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a modification-specific Intacellular Antibody (mintbody) probe to detect the Ser2- phosphorylated, elongating form of RNA Polymerase II in living cells.
Abstract: In eukaryotic nuclei, most genes are transcribed by RNA polymerase II (RNAP2). How RNAP2 transcription is regulated in the nucleus is a key to understanding the genome and cell function. The largest subunit of RNAP2 has a long heptapeptide repeat (Tyr1-Ser2-Pro3-Thr4-Ser5- Pro6-Ser7) at the C-terminal domain and Ser2 is phosphorylated on an elongation form of RNAP2. To detect RNAP2 Ser2 phosphorylation (RNAP2 Ser2ph) in living cells, we developed a genetically encoded modification-specific intracellular antibody (mintbody) probe. The RNAP2 Ser2ph-mintbody probe exhibited numerous foci, possibly representing transcription “factories” in living HeLa cells, and foci were diminished when cells were treated with triptolide to induce RNAP2 degradation and with flavopiridol to inhibit Ser2ph. An in vitro binding assay using phospho-peptides confirmed the Ser2ph-specific binding of the mintbody. These results support the view that mintbody localization represents the sites of RNAP2 Ser2ph in living cells. RNAP2 Ser2ph-mintbody foci were colocalized with proteins associated with elongating RNAP2, such as the CDK12 and Paf1 complex component, compared to factors involved in transcription activation around the transcription start sites, such as CDK9 and BRD4. Tracking analysis revealed that RNAP2 Ser2ph-mintbody foci showed constrained diffusional motion like chromatin, but was more mobile compared to euchromatin domains, suggesting that the elongating RNAP2 complexes are separated from the more confined initiating clusters. Summary The authors developed a genetically encoded probe to specifically detect the Ser2- phosphorylated, elongating form of RNA Polymerase II in living cells. The motion of Ser2- phosphorylated polymerase foci was more dynamic than chromatin domains, suggesting that the elongating complexes are separated from the more confined initiating clusters.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
14 May 2021
TL;DR: Shibuta et al. as mentioned in this paper developed a protein processing and 2A peptide-mediated two-component system for real-time quantitative measurement of endogenous modification level, which enables quantitative tracking of the spatiotemporal dynamics of transcription.
Abstract: Spatiotemporal changes in general transcription levels play a vital role in the dynamic regulation of various critical activities. Phosphorylation levels at Ser2 in heptad repeats within the C-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II, representing the elongation form, is an indicator of transcription. However, rapid transcriptional changes during tissue development and cellular phenomena are difficult to capture in living organisms. We introduced a genetically encoded system termed modification-specific intracellular antibody (mintbody) into Arabidopsis thaliana. We developed a protein processing- and 2A peptide-mediated two-component system for real-time quantitative measurement of endogenous modification level. This system enables quantitative tracking of the spatiotemporal dynamics of transcription. Using this method, we observed that the transcription level varies among tissues in the root and changes dynamically during the mitotic phase. The approach is effective for achieving live visualization of the transcription level in a single cell and facilitates an improved understanding of spatiotemporal transcription dynamics. Shibuta et al develop a live imaging system that allows them to track the spatiotemporal dynamics of RNA polymerase II modification in single cells in Arabidopsis thaliana. This approach potentially enables a more detailed understanding of transcriptional dynamics in plants.

2 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Xenopus oocyte experiments are shown that the stability of gene expression in nondividing cells may arise due to the local entrapment of transcriptional machinery to specific gene transcription start sites, and it is found that within the same nucleus active versus inactive versions of the same gene are spatially segregated through liquid–liquid phase separation.
Abstract: Significance How differentiated cells such as muscle or nerve maintain their gene expression for prolonged times is currently elusive. Here, using Xenopus oocyte, we have shown that the stability of gene expression in nondividing cells may arise due to the local entrapment of transcriptional machinery to specific gene transcription start sites. We found that within the same nucleus active versus inactive versions of the same gene are spatially segregated through liquid–liquid phase separation. We further observe that silent genes are associated with RNA-Pol-II phosphorylated on Ser5 but fails to attract RNA-Pol-II elongation factors. We propose that liquid–liquid phase separation mediated entrapment of limiting transcriptional machinery factors maintain stable expression of some genes in nondividing cells. An important characteristic of cell differentiation is its stability. Only rarely do cells or their stem cell progenitors change their differentiation pathway. If they do, it is often accompanied by a malfunction such as cancer. A mechanistic understanding of the stability of differentiated states would allow better prospects of alleviating the malfunctioning. However, such complete information is yet elusive. Earlier experiments performed in Xenopus oocytes to address this question suggest that a cell may maintain its gene expression by prolonged binding of cell type–specific transcription factors. Here, using DNA competition experiments, we show that the stability of gene expression in a nondividing cell could be caused by the local entrapment of part of the general transcription machinery in transcriptionally active regions. Strikingly, we found that transcriptionally active and silent forms of the same DNA template can stably coexist within the same nucleus. Both DNA templates are associated with the gene-specific transcription factor Ascl1, the core factor TBP2, and the polymerase II (Pol-II) ser5 C-terminal domain (CTD) phosphorylated form, while Pol-II ser2 CTD phosphorylation is restricted to the transcriptionally dominant template. We discover that the active and silent DNA forms are physically separated in the oocyte nucleus through partition into liquid–liquid phase-separated condensates. Altogether, our study proposes a mechanism of transcriptional regulation involving a spatial entrapment of general transcription machinery components to stabilize the active form of a gene in a nondividing cell.

1 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
21 Oct 1988-Science
TL;DR: Three single-chain antigen-binding proteins are novel recombinant polypeptides, composed of an antibody variable light-chain amino acid sequence tethered to a variable heavy-chain sequence (VH) by a designed peptide that links the carboxyl terminus of the VL sequence to the amino terminusof the VH sequence.
Abstract: Single-chain antigen-binding proteins are novel recombinant polypeptides, composed of an antibody variable light-chain amino acid sequence (VL) tethered to a variable heavy-chain sequence (VH) by a designed peptide that links the carboxyl terminus of the VL sequence to the amino terminus of the VH sequence. These proteins have the same specificities and affinities for their antigens as the monoclonal antibodies whose VL and VH sequences were used to construct the recombinant genes that were expressed in Escherichia coli. Three of these proteins, one derived from the sequence for a monoclonal antibody to growth hormone and two derived from the sequences of two different monoclonal antibodies to fluorescein, were designed, constructed, synthesized, purified, and assayed. These proteins are expected to have significant advantages over monoclonal antibodies in a number of applications.

2,455 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A robustly folded version of GFP is generated, called 'superfolder' GFP, that folds well even when fused to poorly folded polypeptides, and shows improved tolerance of circular permutation, greater resistance to chemical denaturants and improved folding kinetics.
Abstract: Existing variants of green fluorescent protein (GFP) often misfold when expressed as fusions with other proteins. We have generated a robustly folded version of GFP, called 'superfolder' GFP, that folds well even when fused to poorly folded polypeptides. Compared to 'folding reporter' GFP, a folding-enhanced GFP containing the 'cycle-3' mutations and the 'enhanced GFP' mutations F64L and S65T, superfolder GFP shows improved tolerance of circular permutation, greater resistance to chemical denaturants and improved folding kinetics. The fluorescence of Escherichia coli cells expressing each of eighteen proteins from Pyrobaculum aerophilum as fusions with superfolder GFP was proportional to total protein expression. In contrast, fluorescence of folding reporter GFP fusion proteins was strongly correlated with the productive folding yield of the passenger protein. X-ray crystallographic structural analyses helped explain the enhanced folding of superfolder GFP relative to folding reporter GFP.

2,025 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that incubation temperature influences motility and limb bone growth in West African Dwarf crocodiles, producing altered limb proportions which may, influence post-hatching performance and provide new insights into how environmental factors can be integrated to influence cellular activity in growing bones and ultimately gross limb morphology, to generate phenotypic variation during prenatal development.
Abstract: Animals have evolved limb proportions adapted to different environments, but it is not yet clear to what extent these proportions are directly influenced by the environment during prenatal development. The developing skeleton experiences mechanical loading resulting from embryo movement. We tested the hypothesis that environmentally-induced changes in prenatal movement influence embryonic limb growth to alter proportions. We show that incubation temperature influences motility and limb bone growth in West African Dwarf crocodiles, producing altered limb proportions which may, influence post-hatching performance. Pharmacological immobilisation of embryonic chickens revealed that altered motility, independent of temperature, may underpin this growth regulation. Use of the chick also allowed us to merge histological, immunochemical and cell proliferation labelling studies to evaluate changes in growth plate organisation, and unbiased array profiling to identify specific cellular and transcriptional targets of embryo movement. This disclosed that movement alters limb proportions and regulates chondrocyte proliferation in only specific growth plates. This selective targeting is related to intrinsic mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin) pathway activity in individual growth plates. Our findings provide new insights into how environmental factors can be integrated to influence cellular activity in growing bones and ultimately gross limb morphology, to generate phenotypic variation during prenatal development.

1,786 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This approach shows that the GTPase dynamin differentially affects the kinetics of long- and short-lived endocytic structures and that the motion of CD36 receptors along cytoskeleton-mediated linear tracks increases their aggregation probability.
Abstract: Single-particle tracking (SPT) is often the rate-limiting step in live-cell imaging studies of subcellular dynamics. Here we present a tracking algorithm that addresses the principal challenges of SPT, namely high particle density, particle motion heterogeneity, temporary particle disappearance, and particle merging and splitting. The algorithm first links particles between consecutive frames and then links the resulting track segments into complete trajectories. Both steps are formulated as global combinatorial optimization problems whose solution identifies the overall most likely set of particle trajectories throughout a movie. Using this approach, we show that the GTPase dynamin differentially affects the kinetics of long- and short-lived endocytic structures and that the motion of CD36 receptors along cytoskeleton-mediated linear tracks increases their aggregation probability. Both applications indicate the requirement for robust and complete tracking of dense particle fields to dissect the mechanisms of receptor organization at the level of the plasma membrane.

1,753 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors show that the PHD1 controls muscle mass in a hydroxylation-independent manner and prevents the degradation of leucine sensor LRS during oxygen and amino acid depletion to ensure effective mTORC1 activation in response to leucines.
Abstract: mTORC1 is an important regulator of muscle mass but how it is modulated by oxygen and nutrients is not completely understood. We show that loss of the prolyl hydroxylase domain isoform 1 oxygen sensor in mice (PHD1KO) reduces muscle mass. PHD1KO muscles show impaired mTORC1 activation in response to leucine whereas mTORC1 activation by growth factors or eccentric contractions was preserved. The ability of PHD1 to promote mTORC1 activity is independent of its hydroxylation activity but is caused by decreased protein content of the leucyl tRNA synthetase (LRS) leucine sensor. Mechanistically, PHD1 interacts with and stabilizes LRS. This interaction is promoted during oxygen and amino acid depletion and protects LRS from degradation. Finally, elderly subjects have lower PHD1 levels and LRS activity in muscle from aged versus young human subjects. In conclusion, PHD1 ensures an optimal mTORC1 response to leucine after episodes of metabolic scarcity.

1,466 citations