| Literature DB >> 28906249 |
Jingxun Chen1, Amy Tresenrider1, Minghao Chia2, David T McSwiggen3, Gianpiero Spedale2, Victoria Jorgensen1, Hanna Liao1, Folkert Jacobus van Werven2, Elçin Ünal1,4.
Abstract
Differentiation programs such as meiosis depend on extensive gene regulation to mediate cellular morphogenesis. Meiosis requires transient removal of the outer kinetochore, the complex that connects microtubules to chromosomes. How the meiotic gene expression program temporally restricts kinetochore function is unknown. We discovered that in budding yeast, kinetochore inactivation occurs by reducing the abundance of a limiting subunit, Ndc80. Furthermore, we uncovered an integrated mechanism that acts at the transcriptional and translational level to repress NDC80 expression. Central to this mechanism is the developmentally controlled transcription of an alternate NDC80 mRNA isoform, which itself cannot produce protein due to regulatory upstream ORFs in its extended 5' leader. Instead, transcription of this isoform represses the canonical NDC80 mRNA expression in cis, thereby inhibiting Ndc80 protein synthesis. This model of gene regulation raises the intriguing notion that transcription of an mRNA, despite carrying a canonical coding sequence, can directly cause gene repression.Entities:
Keywords: S. cerevisiae; budding yeast; chromosomes; gene regulation; genes; kinetochore; meiosis; transcription; uORF translation
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28906249 PMCID: PMC5655150 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.27417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140