Asymmetry between Activation and Deactivation during a Transcriptional Pulse

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Abstract

Transcription in eukaryotic cells occurs in gene-specific bursts or pulses of activity. Recent studies identified a spectrum of transcriptionally active “on-states,” interspersed with periods of inactivity, but these “off-states” and the process of transcriptional deactivation are poorly understood. To examine what occurs during deactivation, we investigate the dynamics of switching between variable rates. We measured live single-cell expression of luciferase reporters from human growth hormone or human prolactin promoters in a pituitary cell line. Subsequently, we applied a statistical variable-rate model of transcription, validated by single-molecule FISH, to estimate switching between transcriptional rates. Under the assumption that transcription can switch to any rate at any time, we found that transcriptional activation occurs predominantly as a single switch, whereas deactivation occurs with graded, stepwise decreases in transcription rate. Experimentally altering cAMP signalling with forskolin or chromatin remodelling with histone deacetylase inhibitor modifies the duration of defined transcriptional states. Our findings reveal transcriptional activation and deactivation as mechanistically independent, asymmetrical processes. Dunham et al. apply mathematical tools to single-cell imaging data to quantify gene expression dynamics, revealing a pattern of all-or-nothing activation and a graded deactivation in the regulation of transcriptional bursts.

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Dunham, L. S. S., Momiji, H., Harper, C. V., Downton, P. J., Hey, K., McNamara, A., … Davis, J. R. E. (2017). Asymmetry between Activation and Deactivation during a Transcriptional Pulse. Cell Systems, 5(6), 646-653.e5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cels.2017.10.013

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