Affiliation:
1. Department
of Cell Biology, Sciences III, 30 Quai E. Ansermet, 1211 Geneva 4,
Switzerland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Transcription
activation of some
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
genes
is paralleled by their repositioning to the nuclear periphery, but the
mechanism underlying gene anchoring is poorly defined. We
show that the nuclear pore complex-associated Mlp1p and the shuttling
mRNA export receptor Mex67p contribute to the stable association of the
activated
GAL10
and
HSP104
genes with the nuclear
periphery. However, we find no obligatory link between gene positioning
and gene expression. Furthermore, gene anchoring correlates with the
cotranscriptional recruitment of Mex67p to transcribing genes. Notably,
the association of Mex67p with chromatin is not mediated by RNA.
Interestingly, a mutant
GAL2
gene lacking the coding region is
still able to recruit Mex67p upon transcriptional activation and to
relocate to the nuclear periphery. Together these data suggest that, at
least for
GAL2
, nascent messenger ribonucleoprotein does not
play a major role in gene anchoring and that the early recruitment of
Mex67p contributes to gene repositioning by virtue of an
RNA-independent
process.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Cell Biology,Molecular Biology