Cell Reports (Nov 2012)

Transcriptional Elongation Factor Elongin A Regulates Retinoic Acid-Induced Gene Expression during Neuronal Differentiation

  • Takashi Yasukawa,
  • Shachi Bhatt,
  • Tamotsu Takeuchi,
  • Junya Kawauchi,
  • Hidehisa Takahashi,
  • Aya Tsutsui,
  • Takuya Muraoka,
  • Makoto Inoue,
  • Masayuki Tsuda,
  • Shigetaka Kitajima,
  • Ronald C. Conaway,
  • Joan W. Conaway,
  • Paul A. Trainor,
  • Teijiro Aso

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2012.09.031
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 5
pp. 1129 – 1136

Abstract

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Elongin A increases the rate of RNA polymerase II (pol II) transcript elongation by suppressing transient pausing by the enzyme. Elongin A also acts as a component of a cullin-RING ligase that can target stalled pol II for ubiquitylation and proteasome-dependent degradation. It is not known whether these activities of Elongin A are functionally interdependent in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that Elongin A-deficient (Elongin A−/−) embryos exhibit abnormalities in the formation of both cranial and spinal nerves and that Elongin A−/− embryonic stem cells (ESCs) show a markedly decreased capacity to differentiate into neurons. Moreover, we identify Elongin A mutations that selectively inactivate one or the other of the aforementioned activities and show that mutants that retain the elongation stimulatory, but not pol II ubiquitylation, activity of Elongin A rescue neuronal differentiation and support retinoic acid-induced upregulation of a subset of neurogenesis-related genes in Elongin A−/− ESCs.