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Article

Postrecruitment Regulation of RNA Polymerase II Directs Rapid Signaling Responses at the Promoters of Estrogen Target Genes

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Pages 1123-1133 | Received 26 May 2008, Accepted 09 Dec 2008, Published online: 21 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

Under classical models for signal-dependent transcription in eukaryotes, DNA-binding activator proteins regulate the recruitment of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) to a set of target promoters. However, recent studies, as well as our results herein, show that Pol II is widely distributed (i.e., “preloaded”) at the promoters of many genes prior to specific signaling events. How Pol II recruitment and Pol II preloading fit within a unified model of gene regulation is unclear. In addition, the mechanisms through which cellular signals activate preloaded Pol II across mammalian genomes remain largely unknown. We show here that the predominant genomic outcome of estrogen signaling is the postrecruitment regulation of Pol II activity at target gene promoters, likely through specific changes in Pol II phosphorylation rather than through recruitment of Pol II to the promoters. Furthermore, we show that negative elongation factor binds to estrogen target promoters in conjunction with preloaded Pol II and represses gene expression until the appropriate signal is received. Finally, our studies reveal that the estrogen-dependent activation of preloaded Pol II facilitates rapid gene regulatory responses which play important physiological roles in regulating estrogen signaling itself. Our results reveal a broad use of postrecruitment Pol II regulation by the estrogen signaling pathway, a mode of regulation that is likely to apply to a wide variety of signal-regulated pathways.

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://mcb.asm.org/ .

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We thank John Lis and members of the Kraus and Lis labs for critical reading of the manuscript; Tong Zhang for performing the gene expression microarray analyses; and Matt Gamble, Raga Krishnakumar, Tong Zhang, and members of the Kraus lab for technical advice and helpful discussions. We also thank Benita Katzenellebogen for providing the MCF-7 cells and Hiroshi Handa for providing the NELF-B and NELF-E antibodies.

This study was supported by grants from the NIH/NIDDK (DK058110 and DK069710) and the Cornell Center of Vertebrate Genomics to W.L.K. and predoctoral fellowships from the Department of Defense Breast Cancer Research Program to M.K. (BC050755) and G.D.I. (BC050806).

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