YY1 Tethers Xist RNA to the Inactive X Nucleation Center

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Role of Bmi-1 and Ring1A in H2A Ubiquitylation and Hox Gene Silencing
Advertisements

Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages (April 2007)
Volume 132, Issue 3, Pages (February 2008)
Cotranscriptional Recruitment of the mRNA Export Factor Yra1 by Direct Interaction with the 3′ End Processing Factor Pcf11  Sara Ann Johnson, Gabrielle.
Volume 35, Issue 4, Pages (August 2009)
Bryan K. Sun, Aimée M. Deaton, Jeannie T. Lee  Molecular Cell 
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages (May 2016)
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages (July 2014)
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages (November 2007)
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages (November 2007)
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages (February 2013)
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages (July 2014)
Volume 122, Issue 4, Pages (August 2005)
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages (October 2009)
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages (December 2004)
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages (August 2007)
Volume 43, Issue 3, Pages e6 (November 2017)
John T. Arigo, Kristina L. Carroll, Jessica M. Ames, Jeffry L. Corden 
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages (February 2008)
Human mRNA Export Machinery Recruited to the 5′ End of mRNA
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages (September 2017)
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages (January 2015)
Tomoyasu Hattori, Lukasz Stawski, Sashidhar S
Volume 37, Issue 6, Pages (March 2010)
Daniel Wolf, Stephen P. Goff  Cell 
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages (July 2013)
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages (February 2014)
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages (April 2005)
Direct Interactions of OCA-B and TFII-I Regulate Immunoglobulin Heavy-Chain Gene Transcription by Facilitating Enhancer-Promoter Communication  Xiaodi.
Jpx RNA Activates Xist by Evicting CTCF
Posttranscriptional Crossregulation between Drosha and DGCR8
Purification of Proteins Associated with Specific Genomic Loci
Volume 16, Issue 3, Pages (March 2015)
Volume 46, Issue 1, Pages (April 2012)
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages (February 2015)
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages (November 2015)
Perinucleolar Targeting of the Inactive X during S Phase: Evidence for a Role in the Maintenance of Silencing  Li-Feng Zhang, Khanh D. Huynh, Jeannie.
HBL1 Is a Human Long Noncoding RNA that Modulates Cardiomyocyte Development from Pluripotent Stem Cells by Counteracting MIR1  Juli Liu, Yang Li, Bo Lin,
The DNA Damage Machinery and Homologous Recombination Pathway Act Consecutively to Protect Human Telomeres  Ramiro E. Verdun, Jan Karlseder  Cell  Volume.
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages (August 2010)
Mary E. Donohoe, Li-Feng Zhang, Na Xu, Yang Shi, Jeannie T. Lee 
Xudong Wu, Jens Vilstrup Johansen, Kristian Helin  Molecular Cell 
Dimethylation of H3K4 by Set1 Recruits the Set3 Histone Deacetylase Complex to 5′ Transcribed Regions  TaeSoo Kim, Stephen Buratowski  Cell  Volume 137,
Volume 19, Issue 6, Pages (September 2005)
Cotranscriptional Recruitment of the mRNA Export Factor Yra1 by Direct Interaction with the 3′ End Processing Factor Pcf11  Sara Ann Johnson, Gabrielle.
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages (June 2007)
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages (November 2007)
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages (November 2007)
An AT-Rich Sequence in Human Common Fragile Site FRA16D Causes Fork Stalling and Chromosome Breakage in S. cerevisiae  Haihua Zhang, Catherine H. Freudenreich 
Two Functional Modes of a Nuclear Receptor-Recruited Arginine Methyltransferase in Transcriptional Activation  María J. Barrero, Sohail Malik  Molecular.
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages (May 2016)
Amanda O'Donnell, Shen-Hsi Yang, Andrew D. Sharrocks  Molecular Cell 
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages (September 2010)
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages (July 2015)
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages (July 2004)
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages (January 2012)
Volume 45, Issue 1, Pages (January 2012)
Sang-Hyun Song, Chunhui Hou, Ann Dean  Molecular Cell 
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages (April 2009)
Volume 139, Issue 5, Pages (November 2009)
NF-κB Is Required for UV-Induced JNK Activation via Induction of PKCδ
Feng Xu, Qiongyi Zhang, Kangling Zhang, Wei Xie, Michael Grunstein 
Dong Zhang, Kathrin Zaugg, Tak W. Mak, Stephen J. Elledge  Cell 
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages (January 2008)
Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages (November 2014)
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages (July 2014)
A Splicing-Independent Function of SF2/ASF in MicroRNA Processing
Volume 41, Issue 4, Pages (February 2011)
Volume 43, Issue 2, Pages (July 2011)
Role of Bmi-1 and Ring1A in H2A Ubiquitylation and Hox Gene Silencing
Presentation transcript:

YY1 Tethers Xist RNA to the Inactive X Nucleation Center Yesu Jeon, Jeannie T. Lee  Cell  Volume 146, Issue 1, Pages 119-133 (July 2011) DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026 Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 1 Newly Introduced Xist Transgenes Squelch Xist RNA from Xi in MEFs (A) Map of Xist and transgenes. Restriction sites used for cloning: M, MluI; R, RsrII; N, NheI; P, PmlI. (B) Xist RNA FISH (left) and H3K27me3 immunostaining (right) in X+P female clones. RNA FISH and immunostaining were followed by DNA FISH using a vector probe (Tg) to confirm transgenic origin of Xist or H3K27me3. Two representative clones shown before and after doxycycline induction (dox, 2 μg/ml). Arrows, Xist squelching on Xi in progress. Number of cells with indicated Xist pattern/total cells shown. Note: MEF lines are tetraploid due to SV40 large T-transformation. (C) qRT-PCR of Xist in wild-type female MEF (WT) and two X+P clones. Transgenic RNA quantitated at uXist; total Xist at exons 1–3. Xist levels normalized to WT (set arbitrarily to 1.0). Averages ± 1 standard deviation (SD) from three independent experiments shown. (D) Serial Xist RNA/Tg DNA FISH in representative clones for four transgenic lines. Arrowheads, transgenic Xist locations. Arrows, Xist squelching in progress. Number of cells with indicated Xist pattern/total cells shown. (E) Xist qRT-PCR measured at exons 1–3. (F) qRT-PCR of transgenic Xist for X-RF(7) and X-RARF(10). Levels at dox 0 hr set to 1.0. (G) qRT-PCR of endogenous (uRA) and total (exons 1–3) Xist in X-RA clones. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 2 Autosomal Transgenes Attract Xist RNA away from Xi (A) Map of Xist, FISH probes and transgenes. P, PasI. (B) Serial Xist RNA/Tg DNA FISH in X-RA cells ± dox. Tg, transgene insertion site. Endogenous Xist, RA probe (RA); transgenic Xist, 5-Xist-riboprobe mix (5mix). Arrows, transmigrated endogenous Xist to transgene site. (C) H3K27me3 immunostaining followed by DNA FISH in X-RA cells. (D) RNA FISH of female X+PE1 cells using probes E1 and E7 ± dox. Arrows, transmigration of endogenous Xist to transgene site. (E) qRT-PCR for total (uRA) and endogenous (dRE) Xist. See also Figure S1. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 3 YY1 Is Required for Xist Localization (A) Map of the proximal 2 kb region of Xist. One CTCF and three putative YY1-binding sites near Repeat F are shown. (B) Western blot, qRT-PCR, and combined Xist RNA FISH/CTCF immunostaining 48 hr after CTCF knockdown using C1 or C3 siRNA. Averages ± SD of three independent experiments are shown. (C) YY1 western blot and Yy1/Xist qRT-PCR after YY1 knockdown using Y1 or Y2 siRNA. Averages ± SD from seven independent experiments are shown for qRT-PCR. One representative western blot shown. (D) Xist FISH after YY1 knockdown. Cells with pinpoint (arrows) or no Xist were scored negative. Averages ± SD from 206–510 nuclei/sample from three independent experiments. (E) H3K27me3 immunostaining (blue) followed by Xist RNA FISH in YY1 knockdown cells. Two representative patterns shown. Histogram shows counts (n = 62–138). Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 4 Mutating YY1-Binding Sites in DNA Abolishes Xist RNA Loading (A) Map of proximal Xist, YY1-binding sites, transgenes, and EMSA probe. Site-directed mutation of YY1 sites shown. (B) Left panels: SDS-PAGE, Coomassie staining, and western blot of purified recombinant His-YY1 protein. Right panel: EMSA using YY1 and a 280 bp uRF probe. WT, wild-type YY1 probe. Mut, mutated YY1 probe. Arrow, YY1-uRF shift. Asterisks, increasing YY1 occupancy on uRF probe. (C) Two-probe Xist RNA FISH of female X-RAYy1m clones, followed by DNA FISH to locate transgene (Tg) and Xs (X paint). Arrows, transgenic RNA and transgene position. Arrowheads, transmigrated mutated transgenic RNA onto the Xi that is closer. Asterisks, Xa located close to Tg. (D) qRT-PCR of total (exons 1–3) and endogenous (uRA) Xist in female X-RAYy1m cells. (E) Two-probe Xist RNA FISH followed by DNA FISH in male X-RAYy1m cells. Asterisks, Xa located close to Tg. See also Figure S2. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 5 YY1 Binds Specifically to Xi (A) Map of the Xist deletion (Csankovszki et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2007), ChIP amplicons, and YY1 sites. (B) YY1 ChIP analyses. At least three independent experiments performed for each cell line. Averages ± standard errors of mean (SEM) from ≥3 independent experiments are shown. Statistical significance, P, determined by the Student's t test (asterisks). (C) YY1 knockdown in differentiating female ES cells (TsixTST/+) via the indicated timeline. Cells were split into siRNA-treated and -untreated samples on day 6 (d6). Western blot showed good knockdown. Xist qRT-PCR showed constant steady-state levels; averages ± SD from three independent knockdown experiments are shown. (D) Xist RNA FISH after YY1 knockdown in female ES cells. Percentage of Xist+ cells and sample sizes are shown. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 6 YY1 Is an RNA-Binding Protein that Bridges RNA and Chromatin (A) Map of Xist, transgenes, and RT-PCR amplicons. (B) UV-crosslink RIP of female MEFs, which was followed by qRT-PCR for Xist (dRC, exons 1–3) or RNA controls (U1 snRNA, Gapdh). YY1 antibodies or IgG were used. 1% input. −UV and −RT controls performed in parallel. Left panel, EtBr-stained gel. Right panel, RT-PCR quantitation. Averages ± SEM of three independent experiments. (C) RNA pulldown assay using purified His-YY1 or His-GFP (western blot) and WT female ES RNA. qRT-PCR at three different Xist positions (uRF, uRA, dRE) and two controls (Gadph, α-tubulin). Averages of five independent experiments ± SEM. (D) RNA pulldown assay using RNAs from transgenic lines after dox induction. qRT-PCR performed at dRC. Averages ± SEM for three independent experiments. (E) RNA pulldown assay using equal molar amounts of in vitro-transcribed RNA fragments AF (2.5 kb), BC (2.5 kb), eE1 (2.5 kb), B (1.2 kb), and C (1.8 kb) as illustrated in the map. Quantitated by qRT-PCR. Twenty percent of input is shown on the gel. p calculated using t test. B, BamHI; E, EcoRI; Bs, BstBI; S, ScaI. Averages of two independent experiments ± SEM. (F) Bivalent function of YY1. YY1 contacts Xist RNA and DNA via different sequences. Asterisks, positions of blocking LNAs (Sarma et al., 2010). Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure 7 Summary and Model Events at the initiation of XCI. Cotranscriptional recruitment of PRC2 and docking onto the YY1-bound nucleation center account for the cis-acting nature of Xist RNA. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure S1 Xist's L-Isoform Is Not Destabilized in Transgenic Cells, Related to Figure 2 It was previously reported that, in contrast to the short isoform (S) of Xist, the long isoform (L) is destabilized when not associated with chromatin (Hong et al., 1999; Hasegawa et al., 2010). qRT-PCR analysis of Xist L-form levels in transgenic cells demonstrates similar steady-state levels before and after dox induction. The results suggest that neither the S-form (Figure 2E) nor L-form is destabilized by displacement from chromatin in our system. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions

Figure S2 YY1 Protein Does Not Decorate Xi, Related to Figure 4 Combined Xist RNA FISH and YY1 immunostaining in wild-type MEF 48 hr after YY1 knockdown. Unlike Xist RNA, YY1 protein does not decorate Xi. Cell 2011 146, 119-133DOI: (10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.026) Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions