scholarly journals Hypophosphorylated SR splicing factors transiently localize around active nucleolar organizing regions in telophase daughter nuclei

2004 ◽  
Vol 167 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paula A. Bubulya ◽  
Kannanganattu V. Prasanth ◽  
Thomas J. Deerinck ◽  
Daniel Gerlich ◽  
Joel Beaudouin ◽  
...  

Upon completion of mitosis, daughter nuclei assemble all of the organelles necessary for the implementation of nuclear functions. We found that upon entry into daughter nuclei, snRNPs and SR proteins do not immediately colocalize in nuclear speckles. SR proteins accumulated in patches around active nucleolar organizing regions (NORs) that we refer to as NOR-associated patches (NAPs), whereas snRNPs were enriched at other nuclear regions. NAPs formed transiently, persisting for 15–20 min before dissipating as nuclear speckles began to form in G1. In the absence of RNA polymerase II transcription, NAPs increased in size and persisted for at least 2 h, with delayed localization of SR proteins to nuclear speckles. In addition, SR proteins in NAPs are hypophosphorylated, and the SR protein kinase Clk/STY colocalizes with SR proteins in NAPs, suggesting that phosphorylation releases SR proteins from NAPs and their initial target is transcription sites. This work demonstrates a previously unrecognized role of NAPs in splicing factor trafficking and nuclear speckle biogenesis.

1998 ◽  
Vol 143 (2) ◽  
pp. 297-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tom Misteli ◽  
Javier F. Cáceres ◽  
Jade Q. Clement ◽  
Adrian R. Krainer ◽  
Miles F. Wilkinson ◽  
...  

Expression of most RNA polymerase II transcripts requires the coordinated execution of transcription, splicing, and 3′ processing. We have previously shown that upon transcriptional activation of a gene in vivo, pre-mRNA splicing factors are recruited from nuclear speckles, in which they are concentrated, to sites of transcription (Misteli, T., J.F. Cáceres, and D.L. Spector. 1997. Nature. 387:523–527). This recruitment process appears to spatially coordinate transcription and pre-mRNA splicing within the cell nucleus. Here we have investigated the molecular basis for recruitment by analyzing the recruitment properties of mutant splicing factors. We show that multiple protein domains are required for efficient recruitment of SR proteins from nuclear speckles to nascent RNA. The two types of modular domains found in the splicing factor SF2/ ASF exert distinct functions in this process. In living cells, the RS domain functions in the dissociation of the protein from speckles, and phosphorylation of serine residues in the RS domain is a prerequisite for this event. The RNA binding domains play a role in the association of splicing factors with the target RNA. These observations identify a novel in vivo role for the RS domain of SR proteins and suggest a model in which protein phosphorylation is instrumental for the recruitment of these proteins to active sites of transcription in vivo.


2003 ◽  
Vol 371 (3) ◽  
pp. 937-945 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming-Chih LAI ◽  
Ru-Inn LIN ◽  
Woan-Yuh TARN

Members of the serine/arginine-rich (SR) protein family play an important role in both constitutive and regulated splicing of precursor mRNAs. Phosphorylation of the arginine/serine dipeptide-rich domain (RS domain) can modulate the activity and the subcellular localization of SR proteins. However, whether the SR protein family members are individually regulated and how this is achieved remain unclear. In this report we show that 5,6-dichloro-1β-d-ribofuranosyl-benzimidazole (DRB), an inhibitor of RNA polymerase II-dependent transcription, specifically induced hyperphosphorylation of SRp55 but not that of any other SR proteins tested. Hyperphosphorylation of SRp55 occurs at the RS domain and appears to require the RNA-binding activity. Upon DRB treatment, hyperphosphorylated SRp55 relocates to enlarged nuclear speckles. Intriguingly, SRp55 is specifically targeted for degradation by the proteasome upon overexpression of the SR protein kinase Clk/Sty. Although a destabilization signal is mapped within the C-terminal 43-amino acid segment of SRp55, its adjacent lysine/serine-rich RS domain is nevertheless critical for the Clk/Sty-mediated degradation. We report for the first time that SRp55 can be hyperphosphorylated under different circumstances whereby its fate is differentially influenced.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (18) ◽  
pp. 3694-3706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vidisha Tripathi ◽  
David Y. Song ◽  
Xinying Zong ◽  
Sergey P. Shevtsov ◽  
Stephen Hearn ◽  
...  

The mammalian cell nucleus is compartmentalized into nonmembranous subnuclear domains that regulate key nuclear functions. Nuclear speckles are subnuclear domains that contain pre-mRNA processing factors and noncoding RNAs. Many of the nuclear speckle constituents work in concert to coordinate multiple steps of gene expression, including transcription, pre-mRNA processing and mRNA transport. The mechanism that regulates the formation and maintenance of nuclear speckles in the interphase nucleus is poorly understood. In the present study, we provide evidence for the involvement of nuclear speckle resident proteins and RNA components in the organization of nuclear speckles. SR-family splicing factors and their binding partner, long noncoding metastasis-associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 RNA, can nucleate the assembly of nuclear speckles in the interphase nucleus. Depletion of SRSF1 in human cells compromises the association of splicing factors to nuclear speckles and influences the levels and activity of other SR proteins. Furthermore, on a stably integrated reporter gene locus, we demonstrate the role of SRSF1 in RNA polymerase II–mediated transcription. Our results suggest that SR proteins mediate the assembly of nuclear speckles and regulate gene expression by influencing both transcriptional and posttranscriptional activities within the cell nucleus.


1994 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 387-396 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.B. Bregman ◽  
L. Du ◽  
Y. Li ◽  
S. Ribisi ◽  
S.L. Warren

Cytostellin, a approximately 240 kDa phosphoprotein found in all cells examined from human to yeast, is predominantly intranuclear in interphase mammalian cells and undergoes continuous redistribution during the cell cycle. Here, mammalian cytostellin is shown to localize to intranuclear regions enriched with multiple splicing proteins, including spliceosome assembly factor, SC-35. Cytostellin and the splicing proteins also co-localize to discrete foci (called ‘dots’), which are distributed throughout the cell during mitosis and part of G1. The cytostellin that is localized to these dots resists extraction by Triton X-100, indicating that it is tightly associated with insoluble cell structures. All immunostainable cytostellin reappears in the nucleus before S-phase. Although cytostellin and the splicing proteins co-localize in interphase and dividing cells, cytostellin is not detected in purified spliceosomes, and it associates with six unidentified proteins, forming a macromolecular complex that is biochemically distinct from the proteins that comprise spliceosomes. This macromolecular complex is detected at constant levels throughout the cell cycle, and the level of cytostellin protein remains constant during the cell cycle. Nevertheless, intranuclear cytostellin immunostaining fluctuates markedly during the cell cycle. The monoclonal antibody (mAb) H5 epitope of cytostellin is ‘masked’ in serum-starved cells, but 60 minutes after serum stimulation intense cytostellin immunoreactivity appears in the nuclear speckles. This rapid induction of cytostellin immunoreactivity in subnuclear regions enriched with many splicing factors, as well as accumulations of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) transcripts, suggests that cytostellin may have a function related to mRNA biogenesis.


Author(s):  
D.L. Spector ◽  
S. Huang ◽  
S. Kaurin

We have been interested in the organization of RNA polymerase II transcription and pre-mRNA splicing within the cell nucleus. Several models have been proposed for the functional organization of RNA within the eukaryotic nucleus and for the relationship of this organization to the distribution of pre-mRNA splicing factors. One model suggests that RNAs which must be spliced are capable of recruiting splicing factors to the sites of transcription from storage and/or reassembly sites. When one examines the organization of splicing factors in the nucleus in comparison to the sites of chromatin it is clear that splicing factors are not localized in coincidence with heterochromatin (Fig. 1). Instead, they are distributed in a speckled pattern which is composed of both perichromatin fibrils and interchromatin granule clusters. The perichromatin fibrils are distributed on the periphery of heterochromatin and on the periphery of interchromatin granule clusters as well as being diffusely distributed throughout the nucleoplasm. These nuclear regions have been previously shown to represent initial sites of incorporation of 3H-uridine.


EMBO Reports ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 2 (9) ◽  
pp. 808-813 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerhard Mittler ◽  
Elisabeth Kremmer ◽  
H Th. Marc Timmers ◽  
Michael Meisterernst

2003 ◽  
Vol 164 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caroline Jolly ◽  
Alexandra Metz ◽  
Jérôme Govin ◽  
Marc Vigneron ◽  
Bryan M. Turner ◽  
...  

Exposure of mammalian cells to stress induces the activation of heat shock transcription factor 1 (HSF1) and the subsequent transcription of heat shock genes. Activation of the heat shock response also correlates with a rapid relocalization of HSF1 within a few nuclear structures termed nuclear stress granules. These stress-induced structures, which form primarily on the 9q12 region in humans through direct binding of HSF1 to satellite III repeats, do not colocalize with transcription sites of known hsp genes. In this paper, we show that nuclear stress granules correspond to RNA polymerase II transcription factories where satellite III repeats are transcribed into large and stable RNAs that remain associated with the 9q12 region, even throughout mitosis. This work not only reveals the existence of a new major heat-induced transcript in human cells that may play a role in chromatin structure, but also provides evidence for a transcriptional activity within a locus considered so far as heterochromatic and silent.


Biopolymers ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 528-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. V. Liu ◽  
D. J. Clark ◽  
V. Tchernajenko ◽  
M. E. Dahmus ◽  
V. M. Studitsky

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 3334-3334
Author(s):  
María Luz Morales ◽  
Roberto Garcia-Vicente ◽  
Alba Rodríguez García ◽  
Noemí Álvarez Sánchez-Redondo ◽  
Alejandra Ortiz-Ruiz ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction. Despite the recent approval of several drugs for the treatment of AML, the 3 + 7 regimens remain as the standard of care for many patients. Its lack of efficacy represents the main cause of death, since only 10% of patients who show refractoriness/relapse overcome the disease. Therefore, there is still an urgent need for seeking more effective treatments. Aberrant RNA splicing has been described in AML, but its relevance as mechanism of resistance is unclear. In this study, we deepen the mechanism of resistance to cytarabine and the role of splicing factors SR proteins, involved in the spliceosome functionality, to seek more effective therapies for AML. Methods. First, the expression levels of genes encoding SR proteins were analyzed with the GEPIA2 platform, comparing the data from the TCGA-LAML (AML patients) and GTEx (healthy) projects. Then, the gene expression of one of the most overexpressed genes, SRRM2, was validated by qPCR in samples of AML patients compared to controls and other myeloid disorders, as MDS and MPN (n=54). The resistance-associated phospho-proteomic profile was analyzed by LC-MS / MS after IMAC enrichment in paired samples from 3 AML patients. The expression of SR proteins and their phosphorylated forms was studied by immunohistochemistry (IHC) before and after resistance in paired bone marrow samples from 3 AML patients. We also analyzed by IHC the prognostic value of phospho-SR proteins at the moment of diagnosis in 64 patients with different responses to cytarabine (non-responders and responders). In order to validate an altered function of SR proteins, the analysis of the differential use of exons of paired samples from 25 AML patients was performed using RNAseq. Then, we evaluated in vitro the efficacy of some splicing modulators, and its combination with other approved drugs, in cytarabine-sensitive and resistant cells. The combination of H3B-8800, a spliceosome inhibitor, with venetoclax was tested in ex vivo samples from AML patients and healthy donors. Results. We found that the gene expression levels of SRSF9, SRSF12 and SRRM2 were altered in AML (Fig 1A-B). Immunohistochemical studies revealed that, although at the protein level no differences were found in SR proteins expression between the diagnosis and relapse moment, an increase in the levels of phosphorylated SR proteins was associated at the time of relapse (Fig 1C). Indeed, the phosphorylation levels of SRRM2, among other SR proteins, were found to be increased during cytarabine resistance by phospho-proteomics (Fig 1D). Moreover, the phosphorylation levels of SR proteins predicted the response to cytarabine treatment, as AML patients that were non-responders presented significantly higher levels compared to responders ones (Fig 1E). The observed alterations in the phosphorylation of these proteins were correlated with a differential use of exons in some of their known targets, when comparing the diagnostic condition and drug resistance moment. Based on this evidence, the efficacy of combining different therapeutic options was evaluated in vitro using sensitive or cytarabine-resistant cell models (Fig 1F). The combination of H3B-8800 together with venetoclax was the most effective in vitro and also presented synergic effects ex vivo in AML patients samples (Fig 1G). Furthermore, this combination did not show toxicity over healthy hematopoietic progenitors, since the same doses that were effective in AML did not show toxicity in a healthy context (Fig 1H). Conclusions. The results of this work shed light on the role of the RNA splicing process in cytarabine resistance in AML. Interestingly, the high levels of phosphorylated splicing factors SR proteins at diagnosis in refractory patients, would allow us to use them as a predictive biomarker of response to cytarabine treatment. Otherwise, due to the need to search effective and safe treatments in this disease, we have found that the combination of splicing inhibitors with venetoclax should be a good strategy for the treatment of AML. Acknowledgment. This work has been possible thanks to the granting of the project PI19/01518 from the Carlos III Health Institute and the CRIS Against Cancer Foundation. ML.M. enjoys a research grant from the Spanish Society of Hematology and Hemotherapy and R.GV. a FPU grant from the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures Sanchez: Altum sequencing: Current Employment. Ayala: Incyte Corporation: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Honoraria, Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Astellas: Honoraria; Celgene: Honoraria.


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