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Ethanol stress induces transient restructuring of the yeast genome yet stable formation of Hsf1 transcriptional condensates.


ABSTRACT: In mammals, 3D genome topology has been linked to transcriptional states yet whether this link holds for other eukaryotes is unclear. Here we show that in budding yeast, Heat Shock Response ( HSR ) genes under the control of Heat Shock Factor (Hsf1) rapidly reposition in cells exposed to acute ethanol stress and engage in concerted, Hsf1-dependent intergenic interactions. Accompanying 3D genome reconfiguration is equally rapid formation of Hsf1-containing condensates. However, in contrast to the transience of Hsf1-driven intergenic interactions that peak within 10 min and dissipate within 1 h, Hsf1 condensates are stably maintained for hours. Moreover, under the same conditions, Pol II occupancy of HSR genes and RNA expression are detectable only later in the response and peak much later (>1 h). This contrasts with the coordinate response of HSR genes to thermal stress where Pol II occupancy, transcription, intergenic interactions, and formation of Hsf1 condensates are all rapid yet transient (peak within 2.5-10 min and dissipate within 1 h). Collectively, our data suggest that different stimuli drive distinct transcription, topologic, and phase-separation phenomena dependent on the same transcription factor and that transcription factor-containing condensates represent only part of the ensemble required for gene activation.

SUBMITTER: Rubio LS 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10557744 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Heat Shock Factor 1 forms nuclear condensates and restructures the yeast genome before activating target genes.

Rubio Linda S LS   Mohajan Suman S   Gross David S DS  

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 20240817


In insects and mammals, 3D genome topology has been linked to transcriptional states yet whether this link holds for other eukaryotes is unclear. Using both ligation proximity and fluorescence microscopy assays, we show that in <i>Saccharomyces cerevisiae</i>, <i>Heat Shock Response</i> (<i>HSR</i>) genes dispersed across multiple chromosomes and under the control of Heat Shock Factor (Hsf1) rapidly reposition in cells exposed to acute ethanol stress and engage in concerted, Hsf1-dependent inter  ...[more]

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