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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(47)2021 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34789567

ABSTRACT

Quantitative transcriptional control is essential for physiological and developmental processes in many organisms. Transcriptional output is influenced by cotranscriptional processes interconnected to chromatin regulation, but how the functions of different cotranscriptional regulators are integrated is poorly understood. The Arabidopsis floral repressor locus FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC) is cotranscriptionally repressed by alternative processing of the antisense transcript COOLAIR. Proximal 3'-end processing of COOLAIR resolves a cotranscriptionally formed R-loop, and this process physically links to a histone-modifying complex FLD/SDG26/LD. This induces a chromatin environment locally that determines low transcription initiation and a slow elongation rate to both sense and antisense strands. Here, we show that ARGONAUTE1 (AGO1) genetically functions in this cotranscriptional repression mechanism. AGO1 associates with COOLAIR and influences COOLAIR splicing dynamics to promote proximal COOLAIR, R-loop resolution, and chromatin silencing. Proteomic analyses revealed physical associations between AGO1, subunits of RNA Polymerase II (Pol II), the splicing-related proteins-the spliceosome NineTeen Complex (NTC) and related proteins (NTR)-and the THO/TREX complex. We connect these activities by demonstrating that the THO/TREX complex activates FLC expression acting antagonistically to AGO1 in COOLAIR processing. Together these data reveal that antagonistic cotranscriptional regulation through AGO1 or THO/TREX influences COOLAIR processing to deliver a local chromatin environment that determines FLC transcriptional output. The involvement of these conserved cotranscriptional regulators suggests similar mechanisms may underpin quantitative transcriptional regulation generally.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Argonaute Proteins/genetics , Argonaute Proteins/metabolism , Histone Deacetylases/metabolism , MADS Domain Proteins/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , Flowers/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Gene Silencing , Histone Deacetylases/genetics , Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase/metabolism , Histones/metabolism , MADS Domain Proteins/genetics , Proteomics , RNA Polymerase II/metabolism , RNA Splicing , RNA, Antisense/genetics
2.
Genes Dev ; 35(11-12): 888-898, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33985972

ABSTRACT

Plants monitor many aspects of their fluctuating environments to help align their development with seasons. Molecular understanding of how noisy temperature cues are registered has emerged from dissection of vernalization in Arabidopsis, which involves a multiphase cold-dependent silencing of the floral repressor locus FLOWERING LOCUS C (FLC). Cold-induced transcriptional silencing precedes a low probability PRC2 epigenetic switching mechanism. The epigenetic switch requires the absence of warm temperatures as well as long-term cold exposure. However, the natural temperature inputs into the earlier transcriptional silencing phase are less well understood. Here, through investigation of Arabidopsis accessions in natural and climatically distinct field sites, we show that the first seasonal frost strongly induces expression of COOLAIR, the antisense transcripts at FLC Chamber experiments delivering a constant mean temperature with different fluctuations showed the freezing induction of COOLAIR correlates with stronger repression of FLC mRNA. Identification of a mutant that ectopically activates COOLAIR revealed how COOLAIR up-regulation can directly reduce FLC expression. Consistent with this, transgenes designed to knockout COOLAIR perturbed the early phase of FLC silencing. However, all transgenes designed to remove COOLAIR resulted in increased production of novel convergent FLC antisense transcripts. Our study reveals how natural temperature fluctuations promote COOLAIR regulation of FLC, with the first autumn frost acting as a key indicator of autumn/winter arrival.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/physiology , Cold Temperature , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , MADS Domain Proteins/genetics , Seasons
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(17)2021 04 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33879620

ABSTRACT

Quantitative variation in expression of the Arabidopsis floral repressor FLC influences whether plants overwinter before flowering, or have a rapid cycling habit enabling multiple generations a year. Genetic analysis has identified activators and repressors of FLC expression but how they interact to set expression level is poorly understood. Here, we show that antagonistic functions of the FLC activator FRIGIDA (FRI) and the repressor FCA, at a specific stage of embryo development, determine FLC expression and flowering. FRI antagonizes an FCA-induced proximal polyadenylation to increase FLC expression and delay flowering. Sector analysis shows that FRI activity during the early heart stage of embryo development maximally delays flowering. Opposing functions of cotranscriptional regulators during an early embryonic developmental window thus set FLC expression levels and determine flowering time.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , MADS Domain Proteins/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis/embryology , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Embryonic Development , Flowers/growth & development , Polyadenylation
4.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 1790, 2021 03 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33741984

ABSTRACT

RNA-mediated chromatin silencing is central to genome regulation in many organisms. However, how nascent non-coding transcripts regulate chromatin is poorly understood. Here, through analysis of Arabidopsis FLC, we show that resolution of a nascent-transcript-induced R-loop promotes chromatin silencing. Stabilization of an antisense-induced R-loop at the 3' end of FLC enables an RNA binding protein FCA, with its direct partner FY/WDR33 and other 3'-end processing factors, to polyadenylate the nascent antisense transcript. This clears the R-loop and recruits the chromatin modifiers demethylating H3K4me1. FCA immunoprecipitates with components of the m6A writer complex, and m6A modification affects dynamics of FCA nuclear condensates, and promotes FLC chromatin silencing. This mechanism also targets other loci in the Arabidopsis genome, and consistent with this fca and fy are hypersensitive to a DNA damage-inducing drug. These results show how modulation of R-loop stability by co-transcriptional RNA processing can trigger chromatin silencing.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Chromatin/genetics , Flowers/genetics , Gene Silencing , MADS Domain Proteins/genetics , R-Loop Structures , RNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , Flowers/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , MADS Domain Proteins/metabolism , Polyadenylation , Protein Binding , RNA Stability/genetics , RNA, Plant/chemistry , RNA, Plant/genetics , RNA, Plant/metabolism , RNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Transcription, Genetic , mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors/genetics , mRNA Cleavage and Polyadenylation Factors/metabolism
5.
PLoS Genet ; 11(2): e1004956, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25680185

ABSTRACT

Arabidopsis REVERSION-TO-ETHYLENE SENSITIVITY1 (RTE1) represses ethylene hormone responses by promoting ethylene receptor ETHYLENE RESPONSE1 (ETR1) signaling, which negatively regulates ethylene responses. To investigate the regulation of RTE1, we performed a genetic screening for mutations that suppress ethylene insensitivity conferred by RTE1 overexpression in Arabidopsis. We isolated HYPER RECOMBINATION1 (HPR1), which is required for RTE1 overexpressor (RTE1ox) ethylene insensitivity at the seedling but not adult stage. HPR1 is a component of the THO complex, which, with other proteins, forms the TRanscription EXport (TREX) complex. In yeast, Drosophila, and humans, the THO/TREX complex is involved in transcription elongation and nucleocytoplasmic RNA export, but its role in plants is to be fully determined. We investigated how HPR1 is involved in RTE1ox ethylene insensitivity in Arabidopsis. The hpr1-5 mutation may affect nucleocytoplasmic mRNA export, as revealed by in vivo hybridization of fluorescein-labeled oligo(dT)45 with unidentified mRNA in the nucleus. The hpr1-5 mutation reduced the total and nuclear RTE1 transcript levels to a similar extent, and RTE1 transcript reduction rate was not affected by hpr1-5 with cordycepin treatment, which prematurely terminates transcription. The defect in the THO-interacting TEX1 protein of TREX but not the mRNA export factor SAC3B also reduced the total and nuclear RTE1 levels. SERINE-ARGININE-RICH (SR) proteins are involved mRNA splicing, and we found that SR protein SR33 co-localized with HPR1 in nuclear speckles, which agreed with the association of human TREX with the splicing machinery. We reveal a role for HPR1 in RTE1 expression during transcription elongation and less likely during export. Gene expression involved in ethylene signaling suppression was not reduced by the hpr1-5 mutation, which indicates selectivity of HPR1 for RTE1 expression affecting the consequent ethylene response. Thus, components of the THO/TREX complex appear to have specific roles in the transcription or export of selected genes.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Transcription, Genetic , Arabidopsis/growth & development , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/biosynthesis , Ethylenes/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Hypocotyl/genetics , Membrane Proteins/biosynthesis , Phenotype , RNA, Messenger/biosynthesis , Receptors, Cell Surface/biosynthesis , Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics , Seedlings/genetics
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