Cell Reports (Apr 2015)

Cellular Levels of Signaling Factors Are Sensed by β-actin Alleles to Modulate Transcriptional Pulse Intensity

  • Alon Kalo,
  • Itamar Kanter,
  • Amit Shraga,
  • Jonathan Sheinberger,
  • Hadar Tzemach,
  • Noa Kinor,
  • Robert H. Singer,
  • Timothée Lionnet,
  • Yaron Shav-Tal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2015.03.039
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
pp. 419 – 432

Abstract

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The transcriptional response of β-actin to extra-cellular stimuli is a paradigm for transcription factor complex assembly and regulation. Serum induction leads to a precisely timed pulse of β-actin transcription in the cell population. Actin protein is proposed to be involved in this response, but it is not known whether cellular actin levels affect nuclear β-actin transcription. We perturbed the levels of key signaling factors and examined the effect on the induced transcriptional pulse by following endogenous β-actin alleles in single living cells. Lowering serum response factor (SRF) protein levels leads to loss of pulse integrity, whereas reducing actin protein levels reveals positive feedback regulation, resulting in elevated gene activation and a prolonged transcriptional response. Thus, transcriptional pulse fidelity requires regulated amounts of signaling proteins, and perturbations in factor levels eliminate the physiological response, resulting in either tuning down or exaggeration of the transcriptional pulse.