Dissection of Pol II Trigger Loop Function and Pol II Activity–Dependent Control of Start Site Selection
Structural and biochemical studies have revealed the importance of a conserved, mobile domain of RNA Polymerase II (Pol II), the Trigger Loop (TL), in substrate selection and catalysis. The relative contributions of different residues within the TL to Pol II function and how Pol II activity defects correlate with gene expression alteration in vivo are unknown. Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pol II as a model, we uncover complex genetic relationships between mutated TL residues by combinatorial analysis of multiply substituted TL variants. We show that in vitro biochemical activity is highly predictive of in vivo transcription phenotypes, suggesting direct relationships between phenotypes and Pol II activity. Interestingly, while multiple TL residues function together to promote proper transcription, individual residues can be separated into distinct functional classes likely relevant to the TL mechanism. In vivo, Pol II activity defects disrupt regulation of the GTP-sensitive IMD2 gene, explaining sensitivities to GTP-production inhibitors, but contrasting with commonly cited models for this sensitivity in the literature. Our data provide support for an existing model whereby Pol II transcriptional activity provides a proxy for direct sensing of NTP levels in vivo leading to IMD2 activation. Finally, we connect Pol II activity to transcription start site selection in vivo, implicating the Pol II active site and transcription itself as a driver for start site scanning, contravening current models for this process.
Published in the journal:
. PLoS Genet 8(4): e32767. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002627
Category:
Research Article
doi:
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002627
Summary
Structural and biochemical studies have revealed the importance of a conserved, mobile domain of RNA Polymerase II (Pol II), the Trigger Loop (TL), in substrate selection and catalysis. The relative contributions of different residues within the TL to Pol II function and how Pol II activity defects correlate with gene expression alteration in vivo are unknown. Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae Pol II as a model, we uncover complex genetic relationships between mutated TL residues by combinatorial analysis of multiply substituted TL variants. We show that in vitro biochemical activity is highly predictive of in vivo transcription phenotypes, suggesting direct relationships between phenotypes and Pol II activity. Interestingly, while multiple TL residues function together to promote proper transcription, individual residues can be separated into distinct functional classes likely relevant to the TL mechanism. In vivo, Pol II activity defects disrupt regulation of the GTP-sensitive IMD2 gene, explaining sensitivities to GTP-production inhibitors, but contrasting with commonly cited models for this sensitivity in the literature. Our data provide support for an existing model whereby Pol II transcriptional activity provides a proxy for direct sensing of NTP levels in vivo leading to IMD2 activation. Finally, we connect Pol II activity to transcription start site selection in vivo, implicating the Pol II active site and transcription itself as a driver for start site scanning, contravening current models for this process.
Introduction
Cellular DNA-dependent RNA polymerases likely balance fidelity in substrate selection with synthesis speed to achieve appropriate transcriptome content and regulation in vivo. In multisubunit RNA polymerases (msRNAP) from archaea, bacteria and eukaryotes, a highly conserved subdomain known as the trigger loop (TL) is critical for rapid catalysis and selection of correct substrates [1]–[9]. The TL is present in the largest subunit of eukaryotic Pol II, generally referred to as Rpb1 (Rpo21 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae), and the analogous β′ subunit of bacterial RNAP, and A″ subunit of archaeal RNAP.
Similarly to mobile domains of other classes of nucleic acid polymerases, the TL undergoes conformational changes in conjunction with the presence of an NTP substrate complementary to the DNA template (matched) in the msRNAP active site [1], [3]. These conformational changes are proposed to link TL-substrate interactions to preferential catalysis of correctly matched substrates over mismatched substrates. The TL can be observed in distinct conformations depending on the presence of matched NTP substrate, natural product polymerase inhibitors, and msRNAP-interacting proteins, underscoring its flexibility [1]–[3], [10]–[15]. In addition to effects on phosphodiester bond catalysis, the TL has been implicated in polymerase pausing, intrinsic cleavage of RNA and translocation [7]–[9], [16], [17].
The TL comprises two mostly alpha-helical regions connected by a short loop (Figure 1A). Deletion or structural compromise of the TL in either E. coli (Eco) or T. thermophilus (Tth) strongly reduces catalytic activity, but to different extents depending on whether the substrate is matched to the template or not [3]–[5], [7]. Two specific regions of the TL appear important for control of TL function. First, conserved residues in the nucleotide interacting region (NIR) recognize specific features of matched NTP substrates and work in conjunction with non-TL residues, Rpb1 N479 and R446, positioned for interaction with hydroxyl moieties on the ribose of matched NTPs [1], [3](Figure 1A). Residues in the NIR showing NTP interactions in S. cerevisiae and Tth substrate-bound structures are (using S. cerevisiae Rpb1/Rpo21Ecoβ′/Tthβ′ numbering) Gln1078Gln930/Gln1236, Leu1081Met932/Met1238, Asn1082Arg933/Arg1239 and His1085His936/His1242.Second, in all kingdoms of life, substitutions in or near the helix distal to the NIR alter elongation rate, in some cases increasing elongation rate relative to WT (“superactivity”), [2], [16], [18], [19]. These substitutions may alter dynamics of TL movement between the substrate-interacting conformation and other conformations because they are adjacent to the hinge region in the C-terminal TL helix (another hinge is apparent in the N-terminal TL helix)(Figure 1B) [2], [9].
NIR residues of the Eco and Tth RNAPs have different degrees of contribution to catalytic activity, with individual Eco residue substitutions having smaller effects on activity than homologous substitutions in Tth, underscoring the diversity of TL residue functions in msRNAPs [5], [7]. A conserved histidine within the TL NIR has been proposed to have an important or essential catalytic role [1]. Many classes of structurally distinct nucleic acid polymerases utilize a basic residue located at a position in the active site analogous to that of the TL histidine and these residues function as a general acid in the catalytic cycle of the polymerase [20]. While clearly important for RNAP catalysis, the TL histidine appeared not to be functioning as a general acid based on pH-dependence curves for bacterial RNAPs [5], [7]. Experiments in the different bacterial systems show that a TL methionine residue (equivalent to S. cerevisiae Leu1081) packs against a base-paired NTP in the active site and has a greater contribution to activity than ArgEco933/Tth1239 or HisEco936/Tth1242, which interact with the triphosphate moiety of matched substrates [5], [7].
Genetic identification of mutants with substitutions in the TL region, first in S. cerevisiae Pol II, then in Eco RNAP, demonstrated that alteration of the TL could alter transcription in vivo [16], [18], [21]–[23]. How changes in TL function or msRNAP catalysis alter transcription in vivo are not well understood and to what extent polymerase activity defects may be tolerated in vivo is not clear. In S. cerevisiae, drugs that target nucleotide synthesis pathways such as mycophenolic acid (MPA, targets GTP synthesis) [24] and 6-azauracil (6-AU, targets UTP and GTP synthesis) [25], [26] have been shown to cause alterations in gene expression in vivo [27]–[30]. A large number of Pol II transcription-related mutant strains show altered sensitivities to these drugs, leading to the broadly utilized interpretation that these drugs are elongation inhibitors and that sensitivity to them suggests defective Pol II elongation [18], [31]–[54]. Notwithstanding the large number of mutants sensitive to these drugs that have no known transcriptional role, many MPA-sensitive mutants alter transcription of the gene IMD2 [35], [38], [47], which encodes an MPA-resistant form of IMPDH, the enzymatic activity targeted by the drug [55], [56]. This gene-specific transcription defect is not always considered when interpreting mutant phenotypes. Intriguingly, IMD2 transcription involves a switch between upstream transcription start sites and downstream productive start sites that differ in initiating NTPs (upstream: GTP, downstream: ATP) leading to the proposal that the initiation process for these different classes of transcript stems from GTP levels being sensed directly by Pol II [57], [58].
The eukaryotic Pol II system provides an excellent model for in vivo studies of how the TL functions in transcription. Because nuclear transcription in eukaryotes is segregated among three essential polymerases instead of one, as in bacteria and archaea, strong defects may be more tolerated in Pol II than bacterial or archaeal RNAPs in vivo. We utilized extensive site-directed mutagenesis of the Pol II TL coupled with genetic screening to identify viable substitutions in TL NIR residues and substitutions conferring conditional growth phenotypes. We then used biochemical characterization together with a number of in vivo genetic and molecular phenotypes to probe the contributions of critical TL residues to transcription in vivo. We determined the relationship between NIR residues and superactivating TL substitutions and found that superactivating substitutions were mostly mutually suppressive with loss-of-function substitutions within the NIR in genetic and biochemical assays. These results indicated that NIR residues were not bypassed by superactivating substitutions and were still required for Pol II activity. Using a series of TL mutants that define a continuum of in vitro elongation rates, we demonstrated that a number of in vivo phenotypes correlated closely with Pol II activity in vitro. We provide support for models proposing that IMD2 transcription is directly sensitive to Pol II activity, therefore explaining the MPA-sensitivity of superactive Pol II mutants, which otherwise might have been expected to be resistant to reduced GTP levels due to increased elongation activity. Finally, we determined that start site selection at a number of other genes was similarly sensitive to alteration in Pol II activity leading to a new model for transcription-dependent polarity of start site selection in S. cerevisiae.
Results
Genetic Analyses of Rpb1 TL Mutants In Vivo
We have undertaken an extensive genetic dissection of the Pol II TL: specifically, we examined the contribution of TL residues to Pol II function, and how Pol II catalytic activity relates to transcription in vitro and in vivo. To examine a large number of Pol II mutants in vivo, we employed a yeast strain containing a deletion of the endogenous copy of RPO21 (the gene encoding Rpb1, which we henceforth refer to as RPB1) with RPB1 activity complemented by a low copy CEN plasmid containing RPB1 genomic DNA or mutant variants, allowing expression from the native RPB1 promoter. Site-directed mutagenesis was focused on TL NIR residues to identify viable substitutions and was combined with existing rpb1 TL alleles identified in genetic screens (Text S1, genetic screens to be described elsewhere). For any viable mutants, alteration in transcription in vivo was measured with two phenotypic reporters for transcriptional defects, the lys2-128∂ [59] and gal10Δ56 alleles [60], [61](Figure S1). These reporters are modulated by a number of transcription elongation factors and Pol II mutants with known transcription defects [2], [60], [62]–[66].
Previous analyses indicated that some TL substitutions cause increases in Pol II elongation rate in vitro (“superactivity” or gain of function (GOF))(e.g. E1103G) [2], [9], [18]; some of these increases in rates for misincorporation were greater than in rates for incorporation of templated NTPs, indicating possible loss of fidelity (F1084I, E1103G) [2], [9]. Other substitutions confer reduced elongation rate (loss of function (LOF))(H1085Y, F1086S) [2]. In vitro activity appeared to correlate with in vivo phenotypes for the few mutants examined [2]. Suppression of a growth defect on media lacking lysine conferred by lys2-128∂ (the Spt− phenotype) was observed for known TL GOF alleles and neighboring substitutions [2]. Lysine auxotrophy of lys2-128∂ relates to defective LYS2 transcription caused by a retrotransposon insertion in LYS2 [59]. Some of these GOF alleles are also sensitive to MPA or 6-AU, while the Spt− phenotype and strong MPA sensitivity have not been observed among known TL LOF alleles [2], [18]. Both known LOF and GOF alleles confer alteration of growth phenotypes relating to transcriptional interference at the GAL10-GAL7 locus when polyadenylation and termination at GAL10 are compromised in the gal10Δ56 allele [2].
In our current study, we found that the Spt− phenotype was concentrated in residue substitutions proximal to the two TL “hinges” (Figure 2A, 2E, see Figure 1B for positions of hinges). Growth defects were conferred by substitutions throughout the TL (Figure 2A, 2B). We found that MPA-sensitivity (MPAs) and Spt− phenotypes generally co-occurred although the relative strength of the two phenotypes varied among mutants (Figure 2A, 2D, 2E). Finally, we found that the strongest suppressors of gal10Δ56, with the exception of G1097D, were in TL NIR residues and were mostly Spt+ or MPA-resistant (MPAr), indicating a distinction between these phenotypes (Figure 2C). Taken together, these conditional plate phenotypes behave as sensitive readouts for likely complex sets of overlapping or distinct transcriptional defects in vivo.
In Vitro Transcription Elongation Rates Correlate with In Vivo Growth Defects and Plate Phenotypes
As TL substitutions causing the Spt− phenotype included those with known TL GOF phenotypes (F1084I, E1103G) [2], we asked if our plate phenotypes were predictive of biochemical phenotypes. Analysis of TL substitutions in an in vitro transcription assay using reconstituted Pol II elongation complexes indicated a good correlation between elongation rate defect in vitro and growth defect in vivo (Figure 3, Figures S4 and S5). We note that we did not detect strong expression differences for tested mutant Rpb1 proteins (Figure S6). We previously showed that LOF substitution H1085Y and a putative GOF substitution (G1097D) caused severe growth defects in vivo [2]. In this study we find that these two mutants also represent extremes of Pol II activity defects, but interestingly at different ends of the activity spectrum. Biochemical analysis of Spt− and MPAs G1097D and L1101S shows that they are GOF substitutions conferring increased maximal elongation rate in vitro. In fact, G1097D elongates too quickly for accurate measurement in our short template run off assay (Figure 3)(Figures S4 and S5). We evaluated a number of other TL substitutions and found that WT elongation rate in vitro correlates with robust growth in vivo, and that the greater the deviation from WT for elongation rate in vitro, the greater the deviation from WT growth in vivo (Figure 3, right panel). We note that the non-TL LOF substitution, N479S, deviates slightly from this relationship as it has the most severe in vitro defect but has a less severe growth defect. This could be consistent with a factor(s) functioning in vivo that can compensate for the biochemical defect caused by the N479S substitution but not the H1085Y substitution; for example, a hypothetical factor that may work through the TL.
Role of E1103-T1095 Interactions in Superactivation of E1103G
For msRNAPs from each kingdom of life, GOF substitutions have been reported in TL residues distal to the NIR and proximal to the C-terminal “hinge” region [2], [9], [16], [18], [19], which is the portion of the TL that changes conformation from open to the closed NTP-interacting orientation (Figure 1). There is evidence that the Pol II GOF substitution E1103G promotes a closed TL state [9]. An increased frequency or duration of this state could have consequences for catalysis (increased activity with all substrates and net increase in misincorporation) and translocation (reduced translocation rate likely due to stabilization of closed state after catalysis). The E1103 sidechain interacts with the T1095 sidechain and makes backbone contacts with K1112 in elongation complex crystal structures where the TL is in the open conformation or constrained by other factors [67]–[69]. Loss of this E1103-T1095 interaction has been posited to explain the effect of E1103G on Pol II transcription [9]. We found that the T1095A substitution was phenotypically indistinguishable from wild type (WT), indicating that loss of T1095-E1103 contacts are not responsible for E1103G growth alteration or, most likely, biochemical superactivity (Figure 2). T1095R, presenting a much longer sidechain that might disrupt “out conformation” hinge folding, only confers weak MPAs, Spt− and Galr phenotypes, consistent with C-terminal hinge function or TL dynamics being controlled more strongly by distal residues or other contacts of E1103 (Figure S3).
Combinatorial Analyses of TL Substitutions Reveal Functional Distinctions between Residues with Similar Single-Mutant Behavior
We next wished to probe genetic relationships between TL GOF and LOF substitutions, particularly those between TL hinge residues and TL NIR residues, as these relationships might provide mechanistic insight into TL function (Figure 4A, Figure S2, Figure S3, Text S1). Surprisingly, by combining TL GOF with TL NIR substitutions, we found that either E1103G or G1097D GOF mutations were able to suppress lethality of many, but not all, inviable (LOF) single substitution NIR mutants (Figure 4A, Figure S2, Table 1). Examination of double mutant plate phenotypes provided more evidence of mutual suppression in E1103G-NIR mutant combinations because Spt− and MPAs phenotypes of E1103G were suppressed together with moderate Galr phenotypes of individual NIR substitutions (Figure S2). In contrast, tested pairwise combinations of genetically and biochemically similar GOF substitutions, F1084I, G1097D and E1103G resulted in lethality (Figure 4A). Additionally, combination of viable LOF NIR-residue substitutions with the GOF substitution E1103G resulted in mutual suppression of conditional plate phenotypes and growth defects (Figure S2).
If observed plate phenotypes directly relate to elongation rate, as suggested by our analysis of single substitution mutations (Figure 3), the observations above predict that the double mutants' in vitro elongation rates might be closer to WT than those of the single substitution mutants. We therefore measured elongation rates of doubly substituted TL mutants to further examine the relationships between GOF and LOF variants (Figure 4B)(Figures S4 and S5). We found that combination of E1103G and individual viable LOF substitutions F1086S, H1085Q or H1085Y resulted in enzymes with activity intermediate between the relevant singly substituted enzymes. Combination of E1103G individually with the lethal single substitutions Q1078A, N1082A or H1085A resulted in viable strains and Pol II enzymes with activity reduced compared to E1103G alone. The fold enhancement of viable LOF substitutions F1086S, H1085Q and H1085Y by E1103G was roughly similar in each case.
To determine if TL NIR residues function individually or in a coupled fashion, we constructed pairwise combinations using TL NIR LOF alleles and a substitution in the TL-adjacent Rpb1 NTP-interacting residue, N479S (Figure 4C). We observed lethality when H1085 substitutions were combined with substitutions in other TL NIR residues or with N479S, consistent with H1085 functioning non-redundantly or distinctly from other TL NIR residues or N479 in the Pol II nucleotide addition cycle. Surprisingly, when we examined combinations among N479, Q1078, and N1082 substitutions we did not observe lethality (Figure 4C). In fact, we observed suppression or epistasis between Q1078 and N1082 substitutions. These observations suggested a functional distinction between N-terminal TL NIR residues (Q1078, N1082) and H1085. Viable substitutions in these residues maintain sidechains that might still confer some interaction between the TL and NTPs, however alanine substitutions in key residues Q1078, N1082, and H1085 were inviable and could not be directly assessed genetically. Because all LOF TL residues, including these lethal substitutions, were suppressed by E1103G, we examined triple mutants that contained pairwise substitutions in the TL NIR in the background of E1103G (Figure 4D). These triple mutant combinations revealed similar functional distinctions between two sets of Pol II active site residues, with the set of residues containing N479, Q1078 and N1082 being distinct from H1085. These results may be interpreted in light of structural information and have implications for the mechanism of TL function (see Discussion).
In Vivo Transcription Defects of Pol II TL Mutants
To examine our Pol II TL mutants for in vivo transcription defects, we analyzed expression of IMD genes and URA2 (Figure 5A, 5B), which function in GTP and UTP synthesis, respectively. Expression of one IMD gene, IMD2, and URA2, have been linked to GTP or UTP levels, respectively, possibly directly through alteration of Pol II function by changes in levels of these transcription substrates [57], [58], [70], [71]. Expression of IMD2 is required for WT yeast to be resistant to the drug MPA [46], [56]. IMD2 transcripts are increased in the presence of MPA due to reduced GTP levels that result from inhibition of MPA-sensitive Imd2 homologs, Imd3 and Imd4 [55], [56]. A number of transcription mutants are defective for IMD2 upregulation upon MPA treatment [35], [38], [47] while some Pol II mutants have been reported to show constitutive expression of IMD2 [18], [57]. As IMD2 has a high level of sequence similarity to the pseudogene IMD1 and to IMD3 and IMD4, and because of possible cross-hybridization [56], we do not specify that observed changes in our Northern blotting are solely due to IMD2 changes. However, it has been demonstrated that the majority of MPA-induced IMD expression comes from IMD2 [56].
We observed a constitutive upregulation of IMD transcripts in LOF mutant H1085Y and loss of MPA-responsiveness in GOF mutants E1103G and G1097D as well as in the H1085Y/E1103G double mutant (Figure 5A). E1103G appeared to have reduced expression of IMD genes in the absence of MPA treatment, and importantly, E1103G and G1097D showed reduced IMD expression upon MPA treatment. These results are consistent with the MPA-sensitivity of E1103G and G1097D and the apparent MPA-resistance of H1085Y (Figure 2) [2]. They also indicate that defects in IMD expression may fully explain the MPA-sensitivity of Pol II TL mutants and need not relate to global elongation defects due to reduced GTP levels, which is the commonly invoked mechanism for MPA-sensitivity. The results, however, are consistent with a model in which IMD2 regulation occurs directly through Pol II-nucleotide sensing.
Activation of URA2 has also been proposed to result from a Pol II-dependent NTP-sensing event because a class of Pol II mutants causes constitutive URA2 expression [70], [71]. URA2 is normally controlled by a change in start site selection from upstream start sites, which produce transcripts that are prematurely terminated and degraded, to downstream start sites that allow production of full-length mRNA. The Pol II mutants that lead to URA2 expression are located in the “switch 1” region of Rpb1 [72], near a residue linked to start site selection [73]. We reasoned that if URA2 were directly responsive to Pol II-sensing of UTP levels, then a Pol II TL LOF mutant should also show constitutive upregulation of URA2, as a reduction of Pol II activity through TL defects should mimic reduction in substrate levels. We found that H1085Y caused URA2 to be upregulated (Figure 5B). GOF TL mutants E1103G and G1097D were closer to WT for URA2 expression, while H1085Y/E1103G showed an increase in URA2 expression. Furthermore, URA2 was not responsive to MPA treatment, an expected result if URA2 were specifically responsive to UTP depletion as opposed to GTP depletion.
IMD2, like URA2, is regulated by a shift in start sites from upstream starts that lead to premature termination, to downstream starts upon nucleotide limitation [57], [58]. The start site changes in IMD2 are proposed to relate to concentration of initiating NTP, with upstream starts initiating with GTP, whereas under GTP-limiting conditions, the major downstream start initiates with ATP (Figure 5C). We examined this phenomenon in Pol II TL mutants by primer extension (Figure 5D, 5E). Examination of downstream start sites at IMD2 showed that the major ATP start site at −106 from the IMD2 start codon is induced by MPA treatment in WT cells (Figure 5D) [74]. TL LOF H1085Y showed constitutive expression from this start regardless of MPA treatment, and, interestingly, apparent usage of downstream cryptic starts at approximately −35 and −45. Although mRNA processing in theory could generate these shorter new transcripts, it is unlikely as processed transcripts lacking a 5′-cap should be fairly unstable. In contrast, for TL GOF mutants E1103G and G1097D little or no usage of the −106 start was observed, regardless of MPA treatment, consistent with MPA-sensitivity of these strains and Northern blotting showing no MPA induction of IMD transcripts. In the H1085Y/E1103G mutant that showed mutual suppression of respective single mutant phenotypes but reduced activity from WT in vitro, we observed constitutive usage of the −106 start, but at apparent lower levels than H1085Y. In addition, we observed MPA-dependent loss of upstream start site usage in this set of mutants, suggesting maintained responsiveness to MPA-effects for these starts, even though H1085Y showed constitutive use of downstream starts. In contrast to the observed H1085Y usage of new −35 and −45 downstream start sites (Figure 5D), we observed increased E1103G and G1097D usage of upstream starts relative to WT (Figure 5E), suggesting altered start site selection in Pol II TL mutants.
Activity-Dependent Control of Pol II Start Site Selection In Vivo
A number of Pol II subunit and general transcription factor (GTF) mutants have been found to alter start site selection in S. cerevisiae [73], [75]–[84], but it is unclear how Pol II activity might relate to these start site defects. For example, deletion of the Rpb9 subunit of Pol II confers many similar activity defects as Pol II TL GOF substitutions such as increased rate of elongation and misincorporation [85]–[87] and is defective for start site switching at IMD2 in response to MPA [58]. Additionally, rpb9Δ has long been known to exhibit upstream shifts in start site selection [77], [79], [84], while many mutations throughout Pol II can cause downstream shifts in start site selection (references above). Models for Pol II residue function in start site selection have previously focused on physical or functional interactions between these residues and GTFs. We propose that the Pol II TL primarily or exclusively functions in controlling the Pol II nucleotide addition cycle (substrate selection, catalysis and translocation), which, for this work, we define as Pol II activity. Therefore we used our TL mutants to interrogate the relationship between Pol II biochemical activity and start site selection in vivo, following our observations of downstream start site usage at IMD2 in TL LOF H1085Y and apparent upstream shifts in TL GOF E1103G and G1097D mutants. We examined start site selection at a number of other genes by primer extension analysis (Figure 6).
We found that TL LOF H1085Y caused downstream shift in start site distribution at ADH1, similar to reported defects of a number of other Pol II mutants and GTF mutants (Figure 6A). In contrast, TL GOF E1103G and G1097D substitutions confer upstream defects similar to those that occur in rpb9Δ (references above), a number of TFIIF mutants [78], [80]–[83], and novel insertion mutants within TFIIB [88]. As with other in vivo and in vitro phenotypes, combination of H1085Y and E1103G leads to mutual suppression, extending the correlation between observed phenotypes and in vitro activity. For transcripts from HIS4 and PMA1, genes known to be sensitive to start site alterations in mutant strains [73], [79], we also observed upstream shifts in E1103G and G1097D-bearing strains (Figure 6B). E1103G-dependent start site changes were suppressed by H1085Y for these genes as well. It is not obvious how the alteration of TL function would impact start site selection so strongly, as we expect TL function to be downstream of initiation events important for start site selection, such as pre-initiation complex formation and promoter melting. The strong upstream starts observed for GOF mutants led us to predict that these positions should already be accessible to Pol II in WT cells, because TL function in controlling Pol II activity should be downstream of promoter melting. Using permanganate footprinting to identify regions of single-stranded DNA in the GAL1 and GAL10 promoters, Giardina and Lis observed strong permanganate reactivity at greater than 60 basepairs (bp) upstream of the major transcriptional start sites, indicating promoter melting far upstream [89]. We reasoned that GAL1 should show far upstream start site shifts in TL GOF mutants within this melted region though it does not normally support productive start sites. Indeed, we observed new start site usage more than 40 bp upstream of the major GAL1 start sites in TL GOF mutants, and a slight shift in starts sites downstream in TL LOF H1085Y (Figure 6C)(Figure S7).
Discussion
The contributions of TL residues to the Pol II nucleotide addition cycle (“activity” for the purposes of this discussion) are critical for transcription in vitro and in vivo. The catalytic contribution of the TL has been proposed to function through minimization of NTP dynamics within the Pol II active site, which in turn could increase the probability of catalysis [90]. Our biochemical experiments coupled with extensive genetic analyses provide insight into the function of TL residues. We calculated an approximate 6-fold suppression effect on elongation rate conferred by the E1103G GOF substitution when it was combined with LOF substitutions. We used this fold enhancement to infer the putative defects of inviable TL LOF substitution mutants for which we were unable to measure elongation rate directly. Assuming an approximate 6-fold increase in rate contributed by E1103G to the values of E1103G-suppressed inviable substitution elongation rates, we infer 7–30 fold defects for N1082A, H1085A and Q1078A single substitutions (Figure 4B). Examination of analogous substitutions in E. coli or T. thermophilus RNAPs has revealed large differences in the contribution of these residues to catalysis with NTP substrates (4 and 6 fold for Eco R933ASceN1082A and H936ASceH1085A, respectively [7] vs. 50 and 100 fold for Tth R1239ASceN1082A and H1242ASceH1085A, respectively [5]). Our results indicate that S. cerevisiae Pol II TL residues have contributions intermediate to TL residues from different bacteria and suggest that contributions of TL residues to activity cover a range of values in homologous enzymes.
Our data also support a functional relationship between regions adjacent to TL hinges, where the TL has been observed to deviate from its fully folded, NTP-bound conformation in crystal structures. These regions are the location of most of the strong Spt− and MPAs TL substitutions, as well as the strongest GOF alleles tested. These results underscore the idea that the TL is finely balanced between functional states or conformations, and that the hinges are sensitive to changes that in some cases can promote Pol II activity. These changes likely occur at the expense of fidelity, as has been shown for E1103G [2], [9]. Alteration of distal TL residues (e.g. E1103, G1097D) conferred broad suppression on a number of TL NIR substitutions. Thus, it appears that loss of NIR function can be compensated by alteration in trigger loop dynamics. Importantly, functions of TL NIR residues are not completely bypassed, as activities of tested double mutants are intermediate between the single mutants, and not all NIR mutants are suppressible (Table 1, Text S1).
Functional distinctions between TL residues and genetic epistasis between some residue combinations have been hinted at in the case of residues analogous to Q1078 and N1082 in T. thermophilus experiments [5](Text S1), but our combinatorial genetic analyses reveal this more clearly (Figure 4). Examination of different Pol II crystal structures shows the TL in a number of states between partially and stably folded in the presence or absence of matched NTP or NTP analog [1], [13], [67](Figure 7). These structures suggest a TL folding pathway wherein N-terminal TL residues that are proximal to the N-terminal TL hinge (primarily Q1078), along with other active site residues (for example, Rpb1 R446 and N479), are positioned essentially at all times for NTP interaction. Biochemical experiments indicate that these residues function in ribose 2′- and 3′-hydroxyl (OH) recognition, with the 2′-OH of course critical for selection of NTPs over 2′-dNTPs [1], [5], [91]. Upon matched NTP basepairing with the DNA template, NTP interactions with R446, N479 and Q1078 may stabilize or begin to promote TL-folding in an N-terminal to C-terminal fashion, where L1081 and N1082 next come into position via N-terminal TL hinge movement. Supporting such a step, in some Pol II crystal structures, these residues are observed adjacent to a matched NTP basepairing with the template, but without complete folding or stabilization of the TL (Figure 7). Our genetic analyses suggest that Q1078 and N1082 (along with N479) are functionally interdependent (see also Text S1). Following initial hinge movement and TL folding, H1085 and the rest of the TL loop tip must fold into the closed conformation, and genetic analyses of H1085 substitutions suggest this step is distinguishable from functions of other TL NIR residues. It is important to note that we have not been able to evaluate contributions of residues L1081 and R446 in our genetic system because all tested substitutions in these residues were inviable and these substitutions were generally not suppressed by E1103G (Table 1, Table S1, Text S1).
The Relationship between MPA Sensitivity and Pol II Elongation Defects
In vivo it has been observed that some Pol II mutants constitutively express IMD2 in the absence of drug-induced stimulation [18], [47]. It is unclear whether this constitutive expression represents a mutant-induced alteration in Pol II start site specificity or a generic reduction of Pol II activity that mimics a drug-induced nucleotide depleted state, which itself leads to altered start site selection. We show here that an MPA-resistant LOF TL allele caused constitutive IMD2 expression, and in other work we found that this expression is likely a generic hallmark for reduced Pol II activity (Braberg et al, in preparation), and not necessarily due to a specific defect in initiation as previously proposed [57]. These results support published models that IMD2 regulation is directly responsive to reduction in nucleotide levels as reduction or increase in Pol II catalytic rates have opposing effects on the ability of IMD2 to be induced. Our observations that reduced Pol II activity does not correlate with sensitivity to MPA suggest that generic Pol II catalytic defects do not confer sensitivity to reduced nucleotide levels. Given the fact that LOF TL mutants are highly likely to confer elongation defects in vivo, the absence of MPA-sensitivity raises the question of whether reduction of GTP levels sensitizes cells to generic elongation defects caused by any transcription factor proposed to be acting through Pol II elongation. MPA sensitivity of any transcription factor mutant should not be used to infer presence or absence of an elongation defect because actual nucleotide levels in different mutant strains may vastly differ due to IMD2 transcriptional effects.
Model for Start Site Selection in Budding Yeast
The observation that TL mutants show polar effects on start site selection in vivo correlating with in vitro catalytic defects suggests a model for how Pol II activity may directly influence initiation. Start site selection in S. cerevisiae is not restricted to a short window a defined distance from the TATA box, but instead can take place over a longer region downstream [92]. It has been proposed that Pol II scans for sequences permissive for productive elongation [89]. We propose that our mutants primarily affect the nucleotide addition cycle and not some other step in initiation, therefore we expect promoter melting is already occurring in regions where start sites are not normally utilized in WT cells, and that scanning occurs subsequent to template melting, as has been proposed for GAL genes [89]. Continuous RNA synthesis during the scanning process does not appear to be required for scanning, as experiments show that chain-terminating nucleotides do not abrogate scanning in vitro [93], [94]. In light of these results, models for start site scanning in yeast that do not invoke transcription have been proposed (i.e. [95], also reviewed in [96]). We show that substitutions within the Pol II TL that have increased activity in vitro shift start sites upstream at ADH1, HIS3, PMA1 and GAL1, and those with reduced in vitro activity shift start sites downstream at ADH1 and GAL1 (Figure 6 and Figure S8). To explain these data, we invoke a new transcription-assisted model for start site scanning (Figure 8). Inefficiently or apparently unused start sites may allow undetected abortive but not productive initiation. Such abortive transcription may support Pol II downstream translocation, providing an explanation how Pol II catalytic mutants alter start site selection in a polar fashion, which is indicative of altered scanning as described in the flux model proposed by the Brow lab [97]. In the flux model, Pol II scanning from upstream to downstream will utilize starts in a polar fashion, and a decrease in usage of an upstream start will lead to increased usage of a downstream start. In our model, upstream shifts in start sites are due to increased Pol II catalytic activity, which in turn increases the probability of normally abortive initiation events becoming productive at the expense of downstream events. Conversely, downstream shifts in start sites are due to decreased Pol II activity, which increases the probability that abortive initiation will occur at upstream positions at the expense of productive initiation from those positions. Competition between abortive and productive initiation may occur at key transitions for early elongation complex stability [98], or by modulating stability of RNA:DNA hybrid in early transcription complexes as suggested by recent structural studies from the Kornberg lab [99] and the Cramer lab [13]. These new structures demonstrated a role for a matched NTP substrate in the Pol II active site in stabilization of short nascent RNAs. As GOF Pol II TL alleles have been implicated in extending the duration of substrate-bound complexes [9], these GOF alleles may also stabilize early elongation complexes in addition to increasing elongation rate. Any increase in the probability of next nucleotide incorporation at the expense of transcript release would lead to a net increase in productive elongation and a net decrease in downstream scanning by our model.
Previously described start site-altering mutants in Pol II general factors and other Pol II subunits have activities that are entirely consistent with this model. rpb9Δ shows upstream shifts in start sites at ADH1 (and other genes) [77], [79], inability to shift to downstream IMD2 starts upon MPA treatment, and causes Pol II to be superactive in vitro [85], similarly to superactive TL mutants E1103G and G1097D. An allele of the TFIIF subunit-encoding TFG1 gene causes upstream start site shifts in vivo while increasing efficiency of Pol II initiation in an abortive initiation assay, consistent with this allele conferring an increase in Pol II activity [94]. This increase in Pol II activity may be due to a gain of function in TFIIF or a loss of a negative function, under our activity-dependent framework for interpreting start site defects. Consistent with the latter, a recent in vitro study shows that TFIIF can inhibit initiation at specific template positions on a modified HIS4 template [100]. On some of the templates used in this study, TFIIF inhibits transcription initiation from upstream positions, consistent with polarity of most start site shifting mutants of TFIIF subunits in vivo. A number of sua7 (TFIIB) alleles show downstream shifts in start site selection [76], [101], [102], and in the case of the highly studied E62K allele, this mutant causes a decrease in Pol II transcription efficiency in vitro [103]. We provide a framework for interpreting the relationship between start site selection changes and the nature of alteration of the initiation process. Increasing or decreasing efficiency of productive initiation from particular nucleotide positions may relate to upstream or downstream shifts in start site selection, which appear to correlate with increases or decreases in Pol II activity, respectively. While start site defects strongly correlate with Pol II activity, their contribution to the growth defects of Pol II TL mutants remains to be determined.
Materials and Methods
Genetic Analyses
To examine mutant polymerase alleles encoding substitutions in the TL and elsewhere in Rpb1, we perform a plasmid shuffle with rpb1 CEN LEU2 plasmids by assaying ability of rpb1Δ cells to grow without an RPB1 CEN URA3 plasmid. This is accomplished by treatment of cells with the drug 5-fluoroorotic acid (5-FOA, Gold Biotechnology), which is toxic to Ura3+ cells [104], thus selecting cells containing solely an rpb1 CEN LEU2 plasmid so we might assess the ability of mutant plasmids to complement the essential function of RPB1. During the course of our experiments, we identified a previously unreported polymorphism in our RPB1 plasmid encoding substitution of isoleucine at position 69 for the threonine reported for this position in the Yeast Genome Database (T69I). This substitution was tracked as far back as the pRP112 subclone derived from an original RPO21 genomic clone from the Young lab [105]. Our analyses indicate that this substitution is phenotypically inert (Figure S8), yet all genetic data shown are for plasmids with the Ile69 corrected to threonine (I69T).
Yeast Strains, Plasmids, and Media
Yeast media are prepared in standard fashion as described in [106] with minor alterations. Yeast extract (1%)(BD), peptone (2%)(BD), dextrose (2%)(“YPD”) solid medium (2% bacto-agar, BD) is supplemented with adenine (0.15 mM final) and tryptophan (0.4 mM final)(Sigma-Aldrich). YP plates with alternate carbon sources such as raffinose (2%, USB) or raffinose (2%) plus galactose (1%, Sigma-Aldrich) also contain antimycin A (1 µg/ml, Sigma-Aldrich). Minimal media plates are synthetic complete (“SC”/“Hopkins mix”) with amino-acids dropped out as appropriate as described in [106] with minor alterations: per standard batch formulation Adenine Hemisulfate was 2 g, Uracil was 2 g, myo-inositol was 0.1 g, p-Aminobenzoic acid (PABA) was 0.2 g. For studies with mycophenolic acid (MPA, Sigma-Aldrich), MPA was added to minimal SC-Leucine medium at 20 µg/ml from a 10 mg/ml stock in ethanol. Construction of mutants is described in Text S1. Yeast strain genotypes, numbers and plasmid descriptions are found in Tables S1 and S2.
Pol II Purification and In Vitro Transcription Assays
Pol II enzymes were purified from yeast strains expressing mutant rpb1 genes from a low copy plasmid from the endogenous RPO21 promoter via a tandem-affinity tag (TAP) on Rpb3, in a procedure derived from [107] and as described in [2]. All mutant enzymes are Rpb1 I69 variants, except H1085Q/E1103G, F1086S/E1103G and Q1078A/E1103G, which are T69 variants. Transcription reactions of Pol II elongation complexes formed on nucleic acid scaffolds follow the approach described by Komissarova et al [108], and are performed as in [2] with the following modifications: for some experiments, amounts of all nucleic acids were reduced to 1/10th the amount stated in [2] (to 30 pmol from 300 pmol, etc.)(Text S1). Reactions were separated on 13.5% acrylamide-bisacrylamide gels (19∶1 ratio) containing 1× TBE and 7 M urea and quantitated as previously described [2].
Primer Extension and Northern Blotting Analysis
Total yeast RNA was purified as described [109]. Primer extension analysis was performed exactly as described (http://labs.fhcrc.org/hahn/Methods/mol_bio_meth/primer_ext.html) [110] with the following modifications. Total RNA used was 30 µg, and in the case of more dilute RNA samples, volumes of reactions were increased by 50% to accommodate greater volume of sample. Reverse transcriptase (RT) was M-MLV RT from either Life Technologies or Fermentas. RT synthesis reactions were supplemented with 1 µl RNAse Inhibitor (Fermentas). Extension products were separated on either 7% or 10% acrylamide-bisacrylamide gels (19∶1 ratio) containing 1× TBE and 7 M Urea. Northern blotting was performed essentially as described in manual for GeneScreen hybridization membranes (Perkin-Elmer) with the following modifications. RNA samples (20 µg) were prepared in NorthernMax loading buffer (Ambion/AB). Prehybridization solution did not contain SSPE or SSC buffers, but contained 5× Denhardt's solution, 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5, 1 M NaCl, 0.1% sodium pyrophosphate, 0.1% SDS instead of 1%, 10% Dextran Sulfate, 50% formamide, and 500 µg/ml sheared/denatured salmon sperm DNA. Probes for northern blots were radiolabeled using α-32P-dATP by random priming using the Decaprime II kit (Ambion) according to manufacturer's instructions. Blots were washed at twice for 10 minutes each wash at 42°C with 2× SSC, 0.5% SDS, then twice at 67°C with 5× SSC, 0.5% SDS for 30 minutes each wash, then twice in 0.2× SSC for 30 minutes each wash at room temperature. Primer extension gels and northern blots were visualized by phosphorimaging (GE Healthcare or Bio-Rad) and quantified using ImageQuant 5.0 (GE) or Quantity One (Bio-Rad) software, with data exported to Microsoft Excel for management. Oligo sequences for site-directed mutagenesis, primer extension analysis, amplification of DNA for Northern blotting and in vitro transcription are available upon request.
Supporting Information
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Štítky
Genetika Reprodukční medicínaČlánek vyšel v časopise
PLOS Genetics
2012 Číslo 4
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