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Published online 12 June 2006. doi:10.1083/jcb.1736rr3
The Rockefeller University Press, 0021-9525 $8.00
JCB, Volume 173, Number 6, 827-827
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Research Roundup

Genes pulse with activity



Figure 1
GFP reveals a spot of dscA transcription (light blue).

CHUBB/ELSEVIER

Jonathan Chubb, Robert Singer, and colleagues (Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY) have devised a method to view transcription inside individual cells. By removing the effects of population averaging, the method reveals transcriptional pulses of a eukaryotic developmental gene.

Transcription was visualized by inserting upstream stem loops into an endogenous developmentally regulated Dictyostelium gene called dscA. The nascent transcripts were then detected by a GFP fusion protein that binds to the RNA stem loops.

Single-cell analyses revealed discontinuous transcription, or pulses, rather than smooth, uniform expression. Determining the pulse mechanism will require more investigation, but possibilities include reversible chromatin modifications or variations in transcription factor binding.

Pulsing would provide exquisite regulatory control, suggests Singer. "A burst that makes a lot of message might overshoot the amount of protein needed. That can have deleterious effects." Better to turn on for a flicker, wait to equilibrate, then cycle back on if more protein is needed.

dscA is induced as Dictyostelium form fruiting bodies. This increase did not come from stronger or more frequent pulses, but rather from more pulsing cells. The new recruits were often clustered, suggesting either that the cluster is seeing the same developmental stimulus or that expressing cells tell their neighbors to join in. Whether constitutive genes also pulse remains to be determined. Formula

Reference:

Chubb, J.R., et al. 2006. Curr. Biol. 16:1018–1025.[CrossRef][Medline]



Nicole LeBrasseur

lebrasn{at}rockefeller.edu


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This Article
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