Promoter-and RNA polymerase II-dependent hsp-16 gene association with nuclear pores in caenorhabditis elegans

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Abstract

Some inducible yeast genes relocate to nuclear pores upon activation, but the general relevance of this phenomenon has remained largely unexplored. Here we show that the bidirectional hsp-16.2/41 promoter interacts with the nuclear pore complex upon activation by heat shock in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Direct pore association was confirmed by both super-resolution microscopy and chromatin immunoprecipitation. The hsp-16.2 promoter was sufficient to mediate perinuclear positioning under basal level conditions of expression, both in integrated transgenes carrying from 1 to 74 copies of the promoter and in a single-copy genomic insertion. Perinuclear localization of the uninduced gene depended on promoter elements essential for induction and required the heat-shock transcription factor HSF-1, RNA polymerase II, and ENY-2, a factor that binds both SAGA and the THO/TREX mRNA export complex. After induction, colocalization with nuclear pores increased significantly at the promoter and along the coding sequence, dependent on the same promoter-associated factors, including active RNA polymerase II, and correlated with nascent transcripts.© 2013 Rohner et al.

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Rohner, S., Kalck, V., Wang, X., Ikegami, K., Lieb, J. D., Gasser, S. M., & Meister, P. (2013). Promoter-and RNA polymerase II-dependent hsp-16 gene association with nuclear pores in caenorhabditis elegans. Journal of Cell Biology, 200(5), 589–604. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201207024

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