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1 Regulatory Biology Laboratory, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037, USA; 2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Gene Expression Laboratory, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California 92037, USA
| Abstract |
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[Keywords: Spt6; SH2 domain; RNAPII CTD; transcription elongation; splicing; nuclear mRNA export]
Received October 16, 2006; revised version accepted November 27, 2006.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, mRNA export is linked to RNAPII transcription elongation through the TREX (transcription export) complex, which is composed of the THO subcomplex proteins (Hpr1, Tho2, Mtf1, Thp2), the RNA export factor, REF1/Aly (Yra1 in yeast), and UAP56 (Sub2 in yeast) (Lei et al. 2001
; Strasser and Hurt 2001
). REF1/Aly is recruited cotranscriptionally to nascent transcripts by UAP56/Sub2 and the THO complex, and subsequently directs mRNAs to the TAP:NXF1p15 (Mex67 in yeast) export receptor at the nuclear pore (Lei et al. 2001
; Luo et al. 2001
; Strasser and Hurt 2001
; Lei and Silver 2002
; Zenklusen et al. 2002
). In mammalian cells, UAP56 and REF1/Aly associate with the exon junction complex (EJC), and can be stably deposited onto spliced RNAs independently of ongoing transcription (Abruzzi et al. 2004
; Masuda et al. 2005
). However, splicing is not a prerequisite for mRNA export in mammalian cells, and factors like REF1/Aly must be recruited cotranscriptionally to intronless genes. This process may involve eukaryotic THO complex, which has been suggested to link RNAPII elongation with mRNA processing (Rondon et al. 2003
; Rehwinkel et al. 2004
; Li et al. 2005
). Because eukaryotic cells possess multiple mRNA export pathways, it is unclear whether splicing-dependent recruitment is the predominant mechanism(s) by which export factors are loaded onto nascent transcripts (for reviews, see Dimaano and Ullman 2004
; Aguilera 2005
; Reed and Cheng 2005
).
Recent studies have examined the mechanisms that connect RNAPII elongation with later steps in gene expression. Phosphorylation of the RNAPII CTD at the Ser5 position occurs upon promoter clearance, concomitant with the loading of elongation factors like Spt6, FACT/Spt16Cdc73, the Paf1 complex, and enzymes that mediate histone H3K4 trimethylation (H3K4Me3). Spt6 functions as a H3:H4 chaperone to alter chromatin structure (Bortvin and Winston 1996
; DeSilva et al. 1998
; Adkins and Tyler 2006
) and can act together with FACT, a histone H2A:2B chaperone, to coordinate the local disassembly and reassembly of nucleosomes during transcription (Orphanides et al. 1998
; Belotserkovskaya et al. 2003
; Saunders et al. 2003
; for review, see Reinberg and Sims 2006
). Loss of Spt6 histone H3-binding activity leads to increased cryptic intragenic transcription (Kaplan et al. 2003
) and decreased levels of H3K36Me3, which is normally associated with elongation. Recruitment of Spt6 to responsive genes requires Paf1 (Adelman et al. 2006
; Pavri et al. 2006
) and the Kismet chromatin remodeling complex (Srinivasan et al. 2005
). Studies in yeast and flies have shown that Spt6 colocalizes extensively with elongating RNAPII (Andrulis et al. 2000
; Kaplan et al. 2000
) and is essential for transcription elongation at many, but not all, genes (for review, see Sims et al. 2004
). In vitro, Spt6 strongly enhances RNAPII elongation rates on nonchromatin templates (Endoh et al. 2004
), indicating that it has both chromatin-dependent and -independent roles in transcription. In yeast, the Spt6 and Spt5 elongation factors are also required for pre-mRNA 3'-end processing (Lindstrom et al. 2003
; Kaplan et al. 2005
). Yeast Spt6 associates with another nuclear SPT family member, designated Iws1 (interacts with Spt6)/SPN1 (Fischbeck et al. 2002
; Lindstrom et al. 2003
); however, the precise role of Iws1/SPN1 in transcription is unclear.
Many late events in gene expression including splicing, cleavage/polyadenylation, surveillance, and nuclear mRNA export also depend on Ser2 phosphorylation of the RNAPII CTD (Licatalosi et al. 2002
; Xiao et al. 2003
; Ahn et al. 2004
; Bird et al. 2004
; Ni et al. 2004
), which is mediated by the P-TEFb (CycT1:CDK9) kinase (for review, see Peterlin and Price 2006
). P-TEFb/CDK9 is critical for transcription elongation at HIV-1 and many, but not all, regulated genes. The yeast Ser2-specific CTD kinase, Ctk1, is also essential for Set2-mediated H3K36Me3 during elongation and limits the spread of H3K4Me3 (Xiao et al. 2003
, 2006
; Wood et al. 2006
). Both mRNA processing enzymes and the nuclear exosome RNA degradation complex associate with actively transcribing Ser2-P RNAPII (RNAPIIo) complexes in vivo (Andrulis et al. 2002
). Although the mechanisms that link mRNA surveillance with elongation are not well defined, nuclear Spt6 has been shown to associate tightly with the nuclear exosome subunit, Rrp6 (Andrulis et al. 2002
). Moreover, another exosome subunit, hSki8, is an integral component of the human Paf1 complex (Zhu et al. 2005
). In yeast, mutations in the nuclear exosome and mRNA 3'-processing factors cause apparent defects in transcription elongation, which underscores the bidirectional cross-talk between transcription and mRNP biogenesis (Luna et al. 2005
).
In this study, we report that mammalian RNAPII transcription elongation can be linked to mRNA processing and export through the Spt6 elongation factor. We show that the conserved SH2 domain of Spt6 mediates direct, phospho-specific binding to Ser2-P RNAPII. A point mutant Spt6 protein that is unable to bind RNAPIIo retains the ability to support transcription elongation; however, the resulting transcripts contain splicing defects and accumulate to high levels within the nucleus. Interestingly, similar mRNA processing and nuclear export defects are observed in cells lacking the human Iws1 protein, a direct binding partner of Spt6. We further show that human Iws1 associates with the RNA export factor, REF1/Aly, and facilitates recruitment of REF1/Aly and the nuclear exosome subunit Rrp6 to Spt6-dependent genes in vivo. These findings suggest important roles for Spt6 in nuclear mRNP biogenesis and surveillance, mediated through binding to the RNAPIIo CTD.
| Results |
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Although Spt6 is a well-defined transcription elongation factor, it was not clear whether it was required for Tat-regulated transactivation of the HIV-1 promoter. Consequently, we used transient expression and small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown experiments to determine whether Spt6 promotes HIV-1 Tat-mediated activation of an integrated HIV-1:LacZ reporter gene in HeLa P4 cells. To avoid any unintended effects of Spt6 on HIV-1 Tat protein expression levels, purified recombinant Tat (GST-Tat101) (Fig. 1A, lanes 46), or control GST (Fig. 1A, lanes 13) proteins were introduced into the cells by chloroquine-mediated protein transduction. Subsequent transient expression of murine Spt6 strongly enhanced Tat activity in these cells and also modestly enhanced basal HIV-1 transcription (Fig. 1A). We next asked whether recombinant Spt6, like Tat, is sufficient to stimulate RNA elongation from the HIV-1 promoter in vitro. Addition of purified recombinant murine Spt6 to a HeLa nuclear extract strongly enhanced HIV-1 transcription from nonchromatin templates in run-off experiments that measure RNA elongation (Fig. 1B, top panel, cf. lanes 1 and 2). In contrast, Spt6 had no effect on transcription initiation from the HIV-1 promoter, as determined by primer extension analysis of the same RNA (Fig. 1B, bottom panel, cf. lanes 1 and 2). Immunodepletion of endogenous Spt6 protein from the HeLa nuclear extract reduced HIV-1 transcription elongation (Fig. 1B, top panel, cf. lanes 3 and 1), without affecting RNA initiation (Fig. 1B, bottom panel, cf. lanes 3 and 1), and RNAPII elongation could be rescued with recombinant Spt6 (Fig. 1B, top panel, cf. lanes 3 and 4). In side-by-side comparisons, either Tat (Fig. 1B, lane 6), Spt6 (Fig. 1B, lane 7), or both proteins (Fig. 1B, lane 8), strongly enhanced HIV-1 RNA elongation without affecting initiation (Fig. 1B, bottom panel, lanes 58). Pulse-chase experiments with paused early elongation complexes (EECs) further indicated that Spt6 enhances RNAPII elongation rates on nonchromatin HIV-1 templates in vitro (Supplementary Fig. S1A). Thus, Spt6 cooperates strongly with Tat to induce HIV-1 transcription in vivo and in vitro.
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Although Spt6 has been shown to colocalize extensively with elongating RNAPII transcription complexes in vivo (Andrulis et al. 2000
; Kaplan et al. 2000
), it is not known whether it binds RNAPII directly. To investigate this question, we generated antisera to human Spt6 and asked whether it associates with endogenous RNAPII in our transcription extracts. Interestingly, human Spt6 coimmunoprecipitated strongly with hyperphosphorylated RNAPIIo complexes (Fig. 1C, top panel, lane 3) that are enriched for Ser2-P RNAPII (Fig. 1C, lane 3). In contrast, Spt6 did not associate with Spt5/DSIF (Fig. 1C) or FACT/Spt16 (data not shown), indicating that these binding conditions are quite specific. To map the region of Spt6 that mediates binding to RNAPIIo, wild-type and mutant Myc- or GAL4-tagged Spt6 proteins were transiently expressed in 293T cells and analyzed for associated RNAPIIo by immunoblot (Fig. 1C, lanes 413). We noted that Ser2-P RNAPIIo bound efficiently to several C-terminal fragments of Spt6 that contain the SH2 domain (Fig. 1C, lanes 1012), but did not recognize an overlapping fragment that lacks the SH2 domain (Fig. 1C, lane 13).
To determine whether the Spt6 SH2 domain directly binds RNAPIIo, we generated a mutant Spt6 protein in which an invariant arginine in the SH2 phospho-amino acid-binding motif (Fig. 1D; Pawson 2004
) was replaced with a lysine residue (R1358K). Full-length wild-type and R1358K murine His-Spt6 proteins were then purified, coupled to beads, and analyzed for their ability to bind nuclear RNAPIIo in pulldown experiments. Remarkably, wild-type Spt6, but not the R1358K mutant, bound efficiently to native Ser2-P RNAPII in the extract (Fig. 1D, top panel, cf. lanes 2 and 3). In contrast, neither Spt6 protein associated with hypophosphorylated RNAPII (RNAPIIa). Immunoblots confirmed that equivalent levels of wild-type and mutant His-Spt6 proteins were used (Fig. 1D, bottom panel). To assess whether the interaction is direct, we expressed and purified wild-type and R1358K GST-Spt6 SH2 proteins and analyzed their ability to recognize the RNAPIIo Rpb1 subunit in a Far-Western blot. In these experiments, Ser2-P (H5 antibody) or total (N20 antibody) RNAPII immunoprecipitates were resolved by SDS-PAGE, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane, and probed with recombinant wild-type or R1358K mutant GST-Spt6 SH2 domain proteins. Binding of the GST-Spt6 SH2 domain was visualized by chemiluminescence following incubation of the filter with glutathione-coupled horseradish peroxidase (Glut-HRP). As shown in Figure 1E, the wild-type (lane 4), but not R1358K mutant (lane 8), murine GST-Spt6 SH2 domain protein bound selectively to the endogenous HeLa Ser2-P Rpb1 subunit, as evidenced by Glut-HRP reactivity of the RNAPIIo (H5), but not RNAPII (N20), immunoprecipitates. Taken together, these data indicate that Spt6 selectively binds to RNAPIIo through its conserved SH2 domain.
The SH2 domain of Spt6 interacts directly with the Ser2-P RNAPII CTD in vitro
To assess the phospho-specificity of the Spt6:RNAPIIo interaction, both GST-pulldown and Far-Western blot experiments were used to evaluate the binding of recombinant murine Spt6 to affinity-purified HeLa RNAPII or to the recombinant GST-CTD protein. Far-Western blot analysis revealed that the Spt6 SH2 domain fragment binds selectively to the highly phosphorylated Rpb1 subunit (Fig. 2A, lane 6), which is a relatively minor species in the purified HeLa RNAPII fraction (Fig. 2A, lane 3, silver stain). Binding of Spt6 was effectively blocked when the RNAPII fraction was incubated with the CTD phosphatase, FCP1a (Fig. 2A, cf. lanes 6 and 7; Mandal et al. 2002
), indicating that Spt6 binds specifically to the hyperphosphorylated RNAPII CTD.
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To confirm that Spt6 binds directly to the RNAPII CTD, the binding studies were repeated using a recombinant GST-CTD protein. Far-Western blots indicated that the GST-Spt6 SH2 domain binds avidly to P-TEFb-/Ser2-, but not c-Abl-/Tyr1-phosphorylated GST-CTD (Fig. 2D, cf. lanes 5 and 6). As observed with the native RNAPII, Spt6 did not recognize the bulk of intermediate-phosphorylated GST-CTD proteins in the P-TEFb-phosphorylated mixture, but rather selectively bound to a highly phosphorylated form of the protein (Fig. 2D, lane 2, cf. top and bottom panels). Collectively, these data indicate that Spt6 preferentially binds the heavily phosphorylated Ser2-P RNAPII CTD, in vivo and in vitro.
Transcripts formed in the presence of Spt6 R1358K contain splicing defects
To assess whether binding of Spt6 to the Ser2-P RNAPII CTD is required for transcription, we tested the ability of the recombinant R1358K Spt6 proteins to stimulate transcription elongation of the HIV-1 template in vitro. As shown in Figure 3A, the mutant Spt6 protein was as active as wild-type Spt6, both in run-off transcription experiments (cf. lanes 24 and 57) as well as in pulse-chase experiments that examine the transcription rate of preassembled EECs (cf. lanes 9,10 and 11,12) on the HIV-1 template.
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2 or fly HSP70 genes in vivo (Adelman et al. 2006As indicated in the schematic diagram, the HIV-1:LacZ gene contains a single 3'-splice site and two possible polyadenylation sites (A', A). To test for splicing defects, total HIV-1:LacZ RNA was annealed to a probe within the 3' intron of the HIV-1:LacZ gene and analyzed by means of RNase protection assay (RPA) (Supplemental Material). As shown in Figure 3B, relatively high levels of unspliced transcripts accumulated in cells expressing the R1358K Spt6 protein (cf. lanes 8 and 9). To analyze the HIV-1:LacZ transcripts in greater detail, the 3' ends of the mRNAs were amplified by RTPCR using oligo-dT anchor and LacZ-specific primers, and the amplified products were subcloned and sequenced (Supplemental Material). Expression of the mutant Spt6 protein strongly enhanced the use of a premature polyadenylation site (US-A') (Fig. 3B, lane 9). Consistent with the Northern and RPA data, a strong increase in unspliced HIV-1:LacZ RNA (both US-A and US-A') was observed in cells expressing the mutant R1358K Spt6 protein (Fig. 3B, cf. lanes 10 and 11), along with lower levels of correctly spliced HIV-1:LacZ RNAs (S-A). Quantitative RTPCR using primers within the exon (E) ensured that identical amounts of mRNA were analyzed in each reaction (Fig. 3B, exon panel, lanes 10,11). Thus, these data indicate that transcripts with splicing defects accumulate in cells expressing the R1358K mutant Spt6 protein. We cannot exclude that these transcripts may also contain polyadenylation or termination defects, which could contribute to the use of the upstream polyadenylation site.
Characterization of the human Iws1 protein
In yeast, Spt6 associates with Iws1/SPN1 (FLJ10006), an essential protein of largely unknown function (Fischbeck et al. 2002
; Lindstrom et al. 2003
). To characterize the mammalian Iws1 protein, we isolated a full-length human Iws1 cDNA from HeLa total RNA that encodes an 819-amino-acid protein from a 3 kB mRNA (Fig. 4A, lane 2). The predicted human Iws1 is much larger than its yeast ortholog, but contains a homologous 262-amino-acid domain at the C terminus (Fig. 4A, see schematic at the bottom). A fragment of hIws1 spanning the conserved region (amino acids 523819) was expressed as a bacterial His-tagged protein and used to generate rabbit polyclonal antisera. The anti-Iws1 antisera recognized a 140-kDa protein in immunoblots of HeLa nuclear extracts as well as the ectopically expressed Iws1 protein (Fig. 4A, lanes 3,4), and immunoblots confirmed that hIws1 is a nuclear protein (Fig. 4A, cf. lanes 6 and 7).
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Human Iws1 interacts directly with Spt6 and the REF1/Aly mRNA export factor
The yeast Iws1/SPN1 shows strong genetic and biochemical interactions with Spt6, but the interacting regions have not been identified. Consequently, the interacting domains of mammalian Iws1 and Spt6 were mapped using GST pulldown experiments with HeLa nuclear extract and purified recombinant factors. Immunoblot analysis of the GST-pulldown reactions revealed that the N-terminal region of murine Spt6 (GST-Spt6, amino acids 1485) (Fig. 5A, lane 3) interacts with Iws1, whereas RNAPIIo interacts with the C-terminal SH2 domain fragment (amino acids 11621726) (Fig. 5A, lane 5). No binding was observed to RNAPIIa or Spt5, or the Rrp6 in this experiment, indicating that the binding conditions are specific. In reciprocal pulldown experiments using different GST-Iws1 proteins, endogenous Spt6 and RNAPIIo bound avidly to the conserved CTD of hIws1 (amino acids 523819) (Fig. 5A, lane 8). As expected, the GST-Iws1 (amino acids 523819) protein did not associate with RNAPIIa or Spt5. Competition experiments further suggested that the binding of hIws1 to RNAPII is indirect and mediated through Spt6 (Supplementary Fig. S1C).
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To determine whether hIws1 interacts directly with Spt6 and REF1/Aly, the recombinant proteins and putative interacting domains were purified and tested in GST pulldown experiments in vitro. These studies showed that the N-terminal half of mSpt6 (His-Spt6, amino acids 1916) interacts with hIws1 (amino acids 523819) (Fig. 5D, lane 4), but not with the GST control (Fig. 5D, lane 3). In contrast, the C-terminal half of Spt6, which includes the SH2 domain, did not recognize Iws1 (Fig. 5D, lane 5), indicating that Spt6 has distinct binding sites for RNAPIIo and Iws1. Moreover, recombinant hIws1 (His-Iws1, amino acids 523819) bound tightly to GST-Aly (Fig. 5D, lane 9), but did not recognize the GST (Fig. 5D, lane 7) or GST-UAP56 (Fig. 5D, lane 8) proteins. We conclude that Iws1 interacts directly with Spt6 and REF1/Aly, both in vivo and in vitro.
Nuclear retention of bulk poly(A)+ RNAs in cells depleted of hIws1
The observation that Iws1 affects mRNA processing of HIV-1 transcripts, and interacts with the REF1/Aly nuclear mRNA export factor led us to ask whether global polyadenylated RNAs accumulate in the nucleus in cells lacking endogenous Iws1 protein. To address this question, HeLa cells were transfected with hIws1-siRNA to deplete endogenous hIws1, as assessed by immunoblot (Fig. 6A), and cellular RNA trafficking was analyzed by fluorescent in situ hybridization (RNA-FISH), using an oligo(dT) probe to detect endogenous polyadenylated RNA. To reduce the RNA signal from ongoing transcription, cells were treated with ActD for 2 h prior to analysis by RNA-FISH. Interestingly, higher levels of poly(A)+ RNA were detected in the nuclei of Iws1-siRNA-expressing cells as compared with the nuclei of control siRNA-treated cells [Fig. 6A, poly(A) RNA panels]. The panels at the far right in Figure 6A show the accumulation of poly(A)+ RNA in Iws1-siRNA-expressing cells at higher resolution. Immunoblot analysis confirmed that ActD induces a similar decline in global Ser2-phosphorylated (Ser2P) RNAPII levels in cells expressing either the control- or the hIws1-specific siRNAs (data not shown). Thus, these data indicate that hIws1 is required for efficient mRNP assembly or export.
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To assess whether binding of Spt6 to the Ser2-P RNAPII is similarly required for optimal export of polyadenylated RNAs, we examined the levels of nuclear poly(A)+ RNA in cells expressing high levels of the GAL4-Spt6 SH2 domain (amino acids 9171726). As expected, endogenous RNAPIIo efficiently coimmunoprecipitated with the wild-type, but not R1358K mutant, GAL4-Spt6 proteins (Fig. 6C, cf. lanes 2 and 3). To determine whether the GAL4-Spt6 SH2 domain affects nuclear RNA levels, cells were treated with ActD to block ongoing transcription, and nuclear poly(A)+ transcripts were analyzed by RNA-FISH. As shown in Figure 6C, poly(A)+ RNAs accumulated to high levels in HeLa nuclei expressing the wild-type GAL4-Spt6-SH2 protein as determined by costaining with anti-GAL4 antibody, as compared with neighboring untransfected cells (Fig. 6C, top, right panel). In contrast, the distribution of poly(A)+ RNAs in cells expressing the GAL4-Spt6 R1358K mutant (amino acids 9171726) protein, was indistinguishable from that observed in untransfected cells (Fig. 6C, bottom right panel). We conclude that the GAL4-Spt6 SH2 domain protein effectively competes with the endogenous Spt6 protein for binding to RNAPIIo, and disrupts the timely nuclear export of bulk poly(A)+ RNAs in vivo.
hIws1 facilitates recruitment of REF1/Aly and Rrp6 to Spt6-responsive genes in vivo
Based on these findings, we speculated that hIws1 might help recruit REF1/Aly to Spt6-responsive genes. Although Spt6 is critical for Tat-regulated HIV-1 transcription, it is not essential for expression of all RNAPII genes, and may be most important for genes regulated at the level of RNAPII elongation. As shown in Figure 7A, we determined that transcription of the endogenous human c-myc gene is highly impaired in 293T cells treated with Spt6-siRNA (lane 2), indicating that c-myc transcription requires Spt6. Moreover, RTPCR analysis revealed that unspliced c-myc mRNAs accumulate in cells depleted of endogenous hIws1 protein (Fig. 7A, cf. lanes 3 and 4) by RNA interference (RNAi), or in cells that overexpress the R1358K Spt6 mutant protein (Fig. 7A, cf. lanes 5 and 6). Immunoblots confirmed specific depletion of hIws1 protein in cells treated with Iws1-siRNA (see Fig. 6A). Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) experiments at the endogenous active c-myc gene in 293T cells revealed a strong decline in hIws1 levels, both at the promoter and within exon 2, in cells treated with the Iws1-siRNA, whereas levels of RNAPII, Spt6, or FACT were unaffected (Fig. 7B). Interestingly, cells treated with the Iws1-siRNA contained significantly reduced levels of REF1/Aly within the c-myc exon2 region, and an apparent decline in levels of exon-associated Rrp6 as well. Immunoblots confirmed that neither REF1/Aly nor Rrp6 protein levels were reduced in lysates from cells expressing the Iws1-siRNA (data not shown). Thus, these data indicate that binding of Spt6 to the RNAPIIo CTD may facilitate the recruitment of hIws1, REF1/Aly, and associated mRNA splicing, surveillance, or export factors to active transcription complexes, as illustrated in the schematic shown in Figure 7C.
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| Discussion |
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-actin, GAPDH). Similarly, Spt6 strongly enhances HIV-1 transcription elongation in vitro, but has only a minimal effect on the adenovirus major late promoter (data not shown). Thus, the role of Spt6 in transcription elongation is gene specific. Our findings indicate that after recruitment, Spt6 is eventually transferred to the Ser2P RNAPII CTD and functions there to coordinate elongation with later steps in gene expression, including mRNA processing, surveillance, and assembly of mRNP export complexes.
Spt6 is a Ser2-specific RNAPII CTD-binding protein
In vitro, Spt6 binds with strict specificity to Ser2-P (P-TEFb-phosphorylated) RNAPII, and does not recognize RNAPII complexes phosphorylated by the CDK7/TFIIH (Ser5-specific) or c-Abl (Tyr1-specific) CTD kinases (Fig. 2). Surprisingly, this Ser2-P-specific binding to the CTD is mediated by the highly conserved SH2 domain of Spt6, and a conservative point mutation (R1358K) within the Spt6 SH2 phospho-amino acid-binding pocket eliminates binding to RNAPIIo in vivo and in vitro. Interestingly, the Spt6 SH2 domain of the protein is the only SH2 domain in yeast (Maclennan and Shaw 1993
), indicating that it originally evolved to recognize phosphoserine, rather than phosphotyrosine, protein substrates. Indeed, several examples of non-phosphotyrosine-binding mammalian SH2 domains have been reported, which may turn out to bind phosphoserine substrates as well. Thus, it will be important to identify the structural features of SH2 domains that specify binding to Ser-phosphorylated rather than Tyr-phosphorylated targets. Moreover, it would be interesting to learn whether the Spt6 SH2 domain could be engineered to bind phosphotyrosine CTD substrates, which could provide a useful reagent for monitoring P-Tyr RNAPII complexes in vivo.
In Far-Western binding experiments, Spt6 recognizes a highly phosphorylated form of the RNAPII CTD, despite the fact that this is a minor species in the in vitro P-TEFb phosphorylation reaction. Thus Spt6 may bind preferentially to the extended conformation of the highly phosphorylated RNAPII CTD (Meinhart et al. 2005
), or it may need to recognize multiple phosphoheptad repeats. Our preliminary data indicate that Spt6 cannot bind a single CTD repeat (S. Yoh, unpubl.), and further studies are needed to determine whether it binds multiple repeats through an induced fit mechanism, as observed for certain CTD-interacting proteins, like Set2 (Meinhart and Cramer 2004
).
The Spt6 SH2 domain is unique among the various types of protein interaction motifs that have been shown to interact directly with the RNAPII CTD. For example, the Pcf11 3'-processing/transcription termination factor specifically binds Ser2-P RNAPII through a CTD interaction domain (CID) (Licatalosi et al. 2002
; Meinhart and Cramer 2004
), whereas the Set2 histone methyltransferase, which mediates H3K36 trimethylation during elongation, contains a novel SRI domain that binds to tandem heptad repeats that are doubly phosphorylated at the Ser2 and Ser5 positions (Kizer et al. 2005
). Given that the CTD phosphorylation pattern can vary widely among the different imperfect heptad repeats, and that this pattern changes significantly as transcription progresses (for review, see Phatnani and Greenleaf 2006
), it will be interesting to learn how the Spt6 is packaged onto the CTD relative to other mRNA processing and histone-modifying complexes, and how the actions of these different complexes are integrated during transcription.
Binding of Spt6 to the RNAPII CTD is required for mRNA processing and exit from the nucleus
Two lines of evidence indicate that the binding of Spt6 to the RNAPII CTD is not required for its ability to promote transcription elongation. First, we found that the R1358K mutant Spt6 protein, which is unable to bind RNAPIIo, retains the ability to stimulate HIV-1 transcription elongation rates in vitro. Second, the mutant Spt6 protein is able to rescue production of HIV-1 and c-myc gene transcription in vivo, in cells that have been depleted of endogenous Spt6 by RNAi. However, the RNAs produced by the R1358K Spt6 protein were longer than normal transcripts and contained splicing defects. Moreover, overexpression in HeLa cells of the isolated Spt6 WT-SH2 domain induced bulk polyadenylated mRNAs to be retained in the nucleus, as determined by RNA-FISH, whereas RNA trafficking was unaffected in cells expressing the Spt6 R1358K SH2 domain. Thus, competitive displacement of the endogenous wild-type Spt6 protein from the RNAPIIo CTD leads to a widespread disruption in mRNA processing or assembly of functional, export-competent mRNP particles, and separates the function of Spt6 in transcription elongation from subsequent downstream events.
Iws1 connects Spt6 to REF1/Aly
These new roles for Spt6 are further supported by the observation that the Spt6-interacting protein, Iws1, appears to play a dedicated role in mRNA processing or formation of functional mRNP particles. In yeast, Iws1/SPN1 was identified as an essential member of the SPT family that interacts with Spt6, but affects transcription of only a small subset of genes (Fischbeck et al. 2002
; Lindstrom et al. 2003
). We find that the human Iws1 protein is required for mRNA processing, but not transcription, of the HIV-1 and c-myc genes in vivo, and that recombinant hIws1 does not stimulate HIV-1 transcription elongation in vitro. As expected for a broad-acting mRNA processing activity, bulk poly(A)+ mRNAs were found to be retained in the nucleus in cells lacking Iws1, and mRNA export and translation were delayed, but not blocked, in these cells. In comparison, depletion of the UAP56 RNA helicase causes a more profound block to mRNA expression than does loss of either Iws1 or the REF1/Aly RNA adaptor protein (Gatfield and Izaurralde 2002
).
In yeast, UAP56 (Sub2) and REF1/Aly (Yra1) are recruited to genes through interactions with THO elongation complex proteins, forming the TREX complex that connects elongation with mRNA splicing and export. The mechanism is complicated by the fact that REF1/Aly is recruited to both DNA (Abruzzi et al. 2004
) and RNA (Masuda et al. 2005
), potentially through different mechanisms. REF1/Aly and UAP56 associate with the splicing EJC, and UAP56 is thought to recruit REF1/Aly to spliced mRNAs independently of transcription. However, intronless genes also require REF1/Aly for export, and thus far it has been unclear how it is recruited to DNA.
Biochemical interaction experiments shown here indicate that Spt6 can bind simultaneously to Iws1 and RNAPIIo, and we find that Iws1 interacts directly with REF1/Aly, but not with THO subcomplex proteins (Thoc1, Thoc2) or Paf1. Reciprocal pulldown experiments in nuclear extracts confirmed that REF1/Aly interacts strongly with Iws1, but not Spt6, Thoc1, or Thoc2, whereas UAP56 preferentially binds Thoc1, Thoc2, and REF1/Aly, but not Iws1. These findings suggested that Iws1 may connect Spt6 to REF1/Aly (Fig. 7C). Indeed, ChIP experiments revealed that depletion of Iws1 impairs recruitment of REF1/Aly to the c-myc gene in 293T cells without affecting the binding of RNAPII, Spt6, or FACT (Fig. 7B). Thus, the failure to recruit REF1/Aly to Spt6-dependent genes, or its failure to transfer to the growing mRNP, may underlie the widespread accumulation of nuclear mRNAs observed in cells lacking Iws1.
Spt6 integrates transcription elongation with downstream mRNA processing events
Recent studies have shown that export of nuclear mRNAs is directly coupled to the mRNA surveillance pathway (Vasudevan and Peltz 2003
; Vinciguerra and Stutz 2004
; Saguez et al. 2005
). The nuclear exosome subunit, Rrp6, is required for release of nascent mRNAs from sites of active transcription and for mRNA export, and studies in Drosophila show that Rrp6 colocalizes with Spt6 and active RNAPII transcription complexes in vivo (Andrulis et al. 2002
). Our data indicate that Rrp6 does not interact directly with nuclear or recombinant Spt6, but rather that Rrp6 associates strongly with REF1/Aly in HeLa nuclear extracts. These observations support a previous report that the yeast Yra1 (REF1/Aly) protein associates with Rrp6 and Rrp45 to link exosome-mediated degradation of incomplete mRNP particles with nuclear mRNA export (Zenklusen et al. 2002
). We speculate that Iws1 could also play a role in this process by bridging REF1/Aly and associated exosome components to the DNA-bound Spt6:RNAPIIo transcription complex. Paf1 may also contribute to this regulation, given its role in recruiting Spt6 to promoters (Adelman et al. 2006
), influence on poly(A) site utilization and post-transcriptional events (Mueller et al. 2004
; Penheiter et al. 2005
; Zhu et al. 2005
) and ability to traffic with nascent mRNAs as they exit from the nucleus (Porter et al. 2005
).
Taken together, our data suggest a mechanism for cotranscriptional loading of mRNA processing and export factors through Spt6 during RNAPII transcription elongation in mammalian cells. This process would provide an alternative route to loading of mRNA export factors through the EJC splicing complex, with potential parallels to yeast, where export factors are loaded through the TREX elongation complex, or the promoter-bound SAGA histone acetylation complex (Rodriguez-Navarro et al. 2004
). Additional evidence for cotranscriptional recruitment of export factors in mammalian cells comes from the observation that the herpes virus pUL69 mRNA export protein interacts directly with both Spt6 (Winkler et al. 2000
) and UAP56 (Lischka et al. 2006
) to control the export of unspliced viral mRNAs. Thus, the model described here provides a framework from which to investigate whether the Spt6Iws1 interaction has a direct role in REF1/Aly-mediated mRNP export, and whether binding to the RNAPII CTD plays a role in the other important functions of Spt6, such as nucleosome disassembly with the FACT complex or trimethylation of H3K36 by the CTD-bound Set2 complex during transcription elongation.
| Materials and methods |
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Wild-type and mutant murine Spt6 proteins and human Cyclin T1 were affinity-purified from recombinant baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells using Talon metal resin (BD Bioscience) chromatography. CDK9 was affinity-purified from recombinant baculovirus-infected Sf9 cell extracts using anti-Flag M2 agarose (Sigma). The recombinant GST-CTD protein (from murine Rpb1) was expressed in bacteria and purified using glutathione-S-agarose chromatography. RNAPII and TFIIH/CDK7 were purified from HeLa S3 nuclear pellet or extracts, respectively (Maldonado et al. 1996
). Recombinant FCP1a was purified from baculovirus-infected Sf9 cells as described (Cho et al. 1999
). Rabbit polyclonal antibodies were raised against murine Spt6 (amino acids 15081726), human Spt5 (amino acids 1215), and human Iws1 (amino acids 523819) at Pocono Rabbit Farm and Laboratory, Inc. The following commercial antisera were used: H5 (Ser2-P RNAPII), H14 (Ser5P RNAPII), and 8WG16 (RNAPIIa; Covance); N20 (RNAPII) and GAL4-DBD (Santa Cruz Biotechnology); THOC2 (CIM); REF1/Aly and THOC1 (Gene Tex); FACT/Spt16 (Upstate Biotechnology); Myc-tag and
-tubulin (Sigma).
In vitro transcription experiments
Primer extension and run-off transcription assays with the HIV-1 G-less template were carried out as described by Bres et al. (2005)
. For pulse-chase experiments, the immobilized HIV-1 linear template (340 to +400) was synthesized using a biotinylated forward primer and coupled to Streptavidin-coated paramagnetic beads (Dynabeads M-280). Approximately 500 ng of linear immobilized HIV-1 template was incubated with 20 µL of HeLa nuclear extract in an 85-µL reaction (final volume) containing transcription buffer (20 mM HEPES-Hcl at pH 7.9, 50 mM KCl, 6.25 mM MgCl2, 0.1 mM EDTA, 8.5% glycerol, 20 mM ZnCl2, 3 mM DTT) for 10 min at room temperature. The preinitiation mixture was then pulsed for 30 sec with 600 µM each rATP, rUTP, and rGTP and 1 µM [
-32P]rCTP and washed with Sarkosyl buffer (50 mM Tris-Hcl at pH 7.9, 120 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40, 0.1% Sarkosyl, 4 mM DTT). One-tenth of the reaction was incubated with 100 ng of either BSA or recombinant Spt6 for 5 min at room temperature and chased with an rNTP mixture (10 µM rUTP and 0.6 mM each rATP, rCTP, and rGTP).
Proteinprotein interaction experiments
The Far-Western procedure was as described by Nollau and Mayer (2001)
. Briefly, aliquots of 1050 µg of HeLa nuclear extract, 5 ng of the purified RNAPII fraction, or 1 µg of GST-CTD, which had been irreversibly cross-linked to glutathione, were separated on SDS-PAGE and transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane. GST-Spt6 (amino acids 11621726) protein was labeled with glutathione-coupled horseradish peroxidase and binding to the membrane was visualized by conventional chemiluminescence (Marligen). For the GST pulldown experiments, 510 µg of GST fusion proteins were coupled to glutathione-S-agarose beads and incubated with either 100 µL of HeLa nuclear extract or 50 ng of purified RNAPII fraction in a final volume of 500 µL of buffer (10 mM HEPES-Hcl at pH 8.0, 300 mM KCl, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.5% NP-40, 10% glycerol, 1 mM DTT, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, 1 mM sodium fluoride, 20 mM
-glycerophosphate, 1x protease inhibitor [Roche], 0.2 mM PMSF, supplemented with 10 mg/mL of BSA). The beads were washed extensively in buffer lacking BSA and analyzed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblot.
RNAi
Human siRNAs for Spt6 (5'-CUGCUCGGGAGUAAGCCCAdTdT-3' and 5'-UGGGCUUACUCCCGAGCAGdTdT-3'), Iws1 (5'-GGAUGAUGUAAAUGAGCAAdTdT-3' and 5'-UU GCUCAUUUACAUCAUCCdTdC-3'), or UAP56 (5'-GUCAC ACUCGGGAGUUGGCdTdT-3' and 5'-GCCAACUCCCGAG UGUGACdTdT-3') were transfected into HeLa P4 cells. Vectors expressing HIV-1 Tat, murine Spt6, or both were introduced 3660 h post-transfection, and total RNA was isolated 24 h after the second transfection.
RNA-FISH analysis of polyadenylated RNAs
For RNA-FISH and immunofluorescence staining, cells were permeabilized for 10 min in PBS with 0.1% Triton X-100, washed twice in PBS to remove cytoplasmic proteins, and fixed with PBS containing 4% paraformaldehyde. Hybridization was carried out overnight at room temperature in a buffer containing 4x SSC, 5x Denharts solution, 10% dexatransulfate, 50% formamide, 1 mg/mL tRNA, 0.5 mg/mL heparin-sulfate, 10 U/mL RNase inhibitors (Invitrogen), and 1 µg/mL Texas red-oligo-dT (18-mer). Images were collected either with an Axioplan2 fluorescence-imaging microscope outfitted with an Axiophot 2 camera, or with a Leica TCS SP2 AOB confocal microscope, and were processed with Openlab software. To analyze the rate of reporter gene expression, HeLa cells expressing the siRNAs were cotransfected with HIV-1 Tat and HIV-1 LTR:Luc vectors. Four hours post-transfection, the cells were replaced with culture medium supplemented with 2 mM luciferin, and luminescence was measured as counts per second for 30 sec at 10-min intervals over a 22-h period using a Lumicycle (Actimatrics). Excess luciferin was added to the culture medium to rapidly quench luciferase activity and ensure that only newly synthesized luciferase proteins were detected.
ChIP experiments
ChIP experiments were used to analyze the endogenous c-myc gene in 293T cells by real-time quantitative PCR with SYBR (Applied Biosystems). The following primer pairs were used: enhancer (5'-CCCAAAAAAAGGCACGGAA-3' and 5'-TATTGGAAATGCGGTCATGC-3'), promoter (5'-TCCTCTCTCGCTAATCTCCGC-3' and 5'-CGTCCAGACCCTCGCATTA TA-3'), and exon2 (5'-CCCTCAACGTTAGCTTCACCA-3' and 5'-ACCGAGTCGTAGTCGAGGTCA-3').
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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E-MAIL jones{at}salk.edu; FAX (858) 695-8684. ![]()
Supplemental material is available at http://www.genesdev.org.
Article is online at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.1503107
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