The overall goal of this laboratory's research is to understand on a molecular level how the eukaryotic cell achieves its very efficient and closely regulated synthesis of rRNA. Prior work has established that the rDNA promoter is relatively large, consisting of a small proximal domain that can direct transcription, and upstream stimulatory domains that also bind transcription factors and augment the initiation process. Yet further upstream in both frog and mouse rDNA are repetitive spacer regions that serve as enhancers for transcription by polymerase I. The transcription of rRNA is catalyzed by a promoter-binding factor 'D', and a subform of polymerase I, factor 'C', that is specifically activated to participate in accurate rRNA synthesis; many cellular rRNA down-regulatory events are mediated by decreased availability of C. In the upcoming granting period we intend to purify C and D, determine how C differs from bulk pol I, and how these factors act to catalyze transcription. We will examine the basis of a number of rRNA regulatory events in which availability of C, and possibly also D, appears to mediate the control. Another major aim of the proposed studies is to understand how the frog and mouse rDNA enhancers stimulate transcription, whether they increase the number of active genes or the frequency of initiation per active gene, and the role of the functional association between the enhancer and promoter. Finally, we will introduce rRNA genes into cells in order to determine what features of the rDNA or rRNA actually serve to organize the nucleolus, the cellular organelle in which rRNA is transcribed and ribosomes are assembled.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01GM027720-07
Application #
3274950
Study Section
Molecular Biology Study Section (MBY)
Project Start
1980-04-01
Project End
1991-03-31
Budget Start
1986-04-01
Budget End
1987-03-31
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
1986
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Johns Hopkins University
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
045911138
City
Baltimore
State
MD
Country
United States
Zip Code
21218
Osheim, Y N; Mougey, E B; Windle, J et al. (1996) Metazoan rDNA enhancer acts by making more genes transcriptionally active. J Cell Biol 133:943-54
Paalman, M H; Henderson, S L; Sollner-Webb, B (1995) Stimulation of the mouse rRNA gene promoter by a distal spacer promoter. Mol Cell Biol 15:4648-56
Brun, R P; Ryan, K; Sollner-Webb, B (1994) Factor C*, the specific initiation component of the mouse RNA polymerase I holoenzyme, is inactivated early in the transcription process. Mol Cell Biol 14:5010-21
Mougey, E B; O'Reilly, M; Osheim, Y et al. (1993) The terminal balls characteristic of eukaryotic rRNA transcription units in chromatin spreads are rRNA processing complexes. Genes Dev 7:1609-19
Pikaard, C S; Pape, L K; Henderson, S L et al. (1990) Enhancers for RNA polymerase I in mouse ribosomal DNA. Mol Cell Biol 10:4816-25
Pape, L K; Windle, J J; Sollner-Webb, B (1990) Half helical turn spacing changes convert a frog into a mouse rDNA promoter: a distant upstream domain determines the helix face of the initiation site. Genes Dev 4:52-62
Henderson, S L; Sollner-Webb, B (1990) The mouse ribosomal DNA promoter has more stringent requirements in vivo than in vitro. Mol Cell Biol 10:4970-3
Tower, J; Henderson, S L; Dougherty, K M et al. (1989) An RNA polymerase I promoter located in the CHO and mouse ribosomal DNA spacers: functional analysis and factor and sequence requirements. Mol Cell Biol 9:1513-25
Pape, L K; Windle, J J; Mougey, E B et al. (1989) The Xenopus ribosomal DNA 60- and 81-base-pair repeats are position-dependent enhancers that function at the establishment of the preinitiation complex: analysis in vivo and in an enhancer-responsive in vitro system. Mol Cell Biol 9:5093-104
Henderson, S L; Ryan, K; Sollner-Webb, B (1989) The promoter-proximal rDNA terminator augments initiation by preventing disruption of the stable transcription complex caused by polymerase read-in. Genes Dev 3:212-23

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