An Rnai Screen for Aire Cofactors Reveals a Role for Hnrnpl in Polymerase Release and Aire-Activated Ectopic Transcription
An RNAi screen for Aire cofactors reveals a role for Hnrnpl in polymerase release and Aire-activated ectopic transcription Matthieu Girauda,b, Nada Jmarib, Lina Dua, Floriane Carallisb, Thomas J. F. Nielandc, Flor M. Perez-Campod, Olivier Bensaudee, David E. Rootc, Nir Hacohenc, Diane Mathisa,1, and Christophe Benoista,1 aDivision of Immunology, Department of Microbiology and Immunobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115; bDepartment of Immunology, Institut Cochin, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U1016, Université Paris Descartes, 75014 Paris, France; cThe Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA 02142; dDepartment of Internal Medicine, Hospital U.M. Valdecilla-Instituto de Formación e Investigación Marqués de Valdecilla, University of Cantabria, 39008 Santander, Spain; and eEcole Normale Supérieure, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Unité Mixte de Recherche 8197, INSERM U1024, 75005 Paris, France Contributed by Christophe Benoist, December 19, 2013 (sent for review December 3, 2013) Aire induces the expression of a large set of autoantigen genes in Aire primarily impacts the elongation steps of transcription, in the thymus, driving immunological tolerance in maturing T cells. particular by releasing promoter-bound polymerases that remain To determine the full spectrum of molecular mechanisms underlying paused after abortive initiation (8, 9). Correspondingly, Aire has the Aire transactivation function, we screened an AIRE-dependent been shown to interact with subunits of the key controller of gene-expression system with a genome-scale lentiviral shRNA polymerase release, the positive transcription elongation factor library, targeting factors associated with chromatin architecture/ b (P-TEFb) (8, 10, 11). P-TEFb is recruited to stalled initiation function, transcription, and mRNA processing.
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