Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Drosophila ELL is associated with actively elongating RNA polymerase II on transcriptionally active sites in vivo

2001; Springer Nature; Volume: 20; Issue: 21 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/emboj/20.21.6104

ISSN

1460-2075

Autores

Michael A. Gerber,

Tópico(s)

RNA modifications and cancer

Resumo

Article1 November 2001free access Drosophila ELL is associated with actively elongating RNA polymerase II on transcriptionally active sites in vivo Mark Gerber Mark Gerber The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Jiyan Ma Jiyan Ma The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Kimberly Dean Kimberly Dean The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Joel C. Eissenberg Corresponding Author Joel C. Eissenberg The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Ali Shilatifard Corresponding Author Ali Shilatifard The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Mark Gerber Mark Gerber The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Jiyan Ma Jiyan Ma The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Kimberly Dean Kimberly Dean The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Joel C. Eissenberg Corresponding Author Joel C. Eissenberg The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Ali Shilatifard Corresponding Author Ali Shilatifard The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA Search for more papers by this author Author Information Mark Gerber1, Jiyan Ma1, Kimberly Dean1, Joel C. Eissenberg 1 and Ali Shilatifard 1 1The Edward Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St Louis University School of Medicine, 1402 South Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO, 63104 USA *Corresponding authors. E-mail: [email protected] or E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2001)20:6104-6114https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/20.21.6104 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info Several factors have been biochemically characterized based on their ability to increase the overall rate of transcription elongation catalyzed by the multiprotein complex RNA polymerase II (Pol II). Among these, the ELL family of elongation factors has been shown to increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation in vitro by suppressing transient pausing. Several fundamental biological aspects of this class of elongation factors are not known. We have cloned the Drosophila homolog (dELL) in order to test whether ELL family proteins are actually associated with the elongating Pol II in vivo. Here we report that dELL is a nuclear protein, which, like its mammalian homologs, can increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation by Pol II in vitro. Interestingly, we find that dELL co-localizes extensively with the phosphorylated, actively elongating form of Pol II at transcriptionally active sites on Drosophila polytene chromosomes. Furthermore, dELL is relocalized from a widespread distribution pattern on polytenes under normal conditions to very few transcriptionally active puff sites upon heat shock. This observation indicates a dynamic pattern of localization of dELL in cells, which is a predicted characteristic of a Pol II general elongation factor. We also demonstrate that dELL physically interacts with Pol II. Our results strongly suggest that dELL functions with elongating RNA polymerase II in vivo. Introduction The regulation of gene expression by the eukaryotic RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is controlled by the action of a variety of transcription factors. Transcriptional regulation by Pol II proceeds through a set of multiple stages denoted as pre-initiation, initiation, promoter clearance, elongation and termination. For more than 20 years, research from many laboratories has centered around understanding the pre-initiation and initiation stages of eukaryotic mRNA synthesis. These studies have resulted in defining biochemical roles for the components of the basal transcription machinery and its interacting proteins, and have firmly established the cellular roles of these factors. A requirement for Pol II elongation factors was predicted from early biochemical studies on the catalytic properties of transcription elongation. These early studies demonstrated that purified Pol II lacked the ability to catalyze mRNA chain elongation in vitro at rates sufficient to account for the observed rates of mRNA synthesis in vivo (Ucker and Yamamoto, 1984; Izban and Luse, 1992; Tennyson et al., 1995). Transcription elongation by purified Pol II in vitro results in transient and/or stable pausing, which sometimes ends with arrest (Reines et al., 1996; Uptain and Chamberlain, 1997; Uptain et al., 1997). Therefore, it has been hypothesized that transcription elongation factors are required to increase the overall rate of transcription and/or prevent premature pausing and arrest by Pol II during the expression of many eukaryotic genes (Uptain and Chamberlain, 1997; Uptain et al., 1997). Based on this observation, to date several Pol II elongation factors have been characterized biochemically using in vitro transcription assays. The Pol II elongation factors fall into at least three functional classes. One class includes P-TEFb, DSIF (Spt4, Spt5), Spt6 and SII. P-TEFb prevents elongation arrest by ATP analog DRB, DSIF is required for DRB to inhibit transcript elongation, and SII prevents DNA sequence-dependent arrest (Reines and Mote, 1993; Rudd et al., 1994; Marshall and Price, 1995; Marshall et al., 1996; Reines et al., 1996; Mancebo et al., 1997; Zhu et al., 1997; Peng et al., 1998; Hartzog et al., 1998; Shilatifard, 1998a, b; Wada et al., 1998; Yamaguchi et al., 1999; Price, 2000). The elongation rate of transcription by Pol II in vivo is also controlled by the presence of nucleosomal DNA. This has led to the discovery of the second class factors, which regulate the rate of transcription elongation through nucleosomes. A member of this class of factors is FACT (facilitates chromatin transcription) (Orphanides et al., 1998). The third class of Pol II elongation factors operates to increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation by altering the Km and/or the Vmax of the elongating polymerase, and is comprised of TFIIF, Elongin and the ELL family (ELL, ELL2 and ELL3) (Price et al., 1989; Bradsher et al., 1993; Garrett et al., 1994; Duan et al., 1995; Reines et al., 1996; Shilatifard et al., 1996, 1997a, b; Miller et al., 2000). It is not clear whether all of the above factors function at the same time with the elongating polymerase; however, the observed rate of transcription in vivo suggests that several of these factors may work together to regulate the elongation stage of transcription catalyzed by Pol II. During the past few years, biochemical studies have demonstrated the importance of the promoter clearance and the elongation stages of transcription (Dvir et al., 1996, 1997; Kugal and Goodrich, 1998; Kumar et al., 1998; Moreland et al., 1999; Bradsher et al., 2000; Tremeau-Bravard et al., 2001). Some Pol II elongation factors have been biochemically implicated in processes such as transcriptional regulation of the human immunodeficiency virus genome (Mancebo et al., 1997; Zhu et al., 1997; Parada and Roeder, 1999), heat shock and stress response (Andrulis et al., 2000; Kaplan et al., 2000), neuronal development (Guo et al., 2000) and pathogenesis of human cancer (DiMartino et al., 2000). As mentioned above, TFIIF, Elongin and the ELLs are all capable of stimulating the overall elongation rate catalyzed by Pol II by suppressing transient pausing by the enzyme in vitro. Previous studies have shown that bacterial and eukaryotic RNA polymerases are susceptible to pausing at each step of nucleotide addition (Reines et al., 1996). Because the duration of pausing is often greater than the rate of phosphodiester bond formation (kcat), it has been proposed that elongating Pol II cycles between active and inactive conformations at each step of nucleotide addition in vivo. Although we know a great deal about the biochemical properties of Pol II elongation factors (TFIIF, Elongin and ELLs), we do not know whether any of these factors actually function with the actively elongating polymerase in vivo. Also, little is known about the extent of their role and association with transcription complexes in the context of chromatin. To determine whether ELL can function with the elongating Pol II in vivo, we have studied biological properties of the Drosophila melanogaster homolog of ELL (dELL). We show here that dELL is a nuclear protein and, like its mammalian homolog, it can increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation by Pol II in vitro. To define whether dELL is associated with the elongating Pol II in vivo, we have generated polyclonal antibodies to dELL and have also generated transgenic flies that express epitope-tagged dELL. We found that both the endogenous dELL and transgenic tagged dELL co-localized extensively with the phosphorylated, actively elongating form of Pol II at transcriptionally active sites on Drosophila polytene chromosomes. Upon heat shock, dELL dramatically relocalized to a very few transcriptionally active heat shock puff sites. This observation indicates a dynamic localization pattern of dELL. We also found that dELL is biochemically associated with Pol II in whole fly extract. This study provides strong evidence for a general role for the ELL family of proteins in transcription elongation by Pol II in vivo. Results Identification and sequence analysis of the Drosophila homolog of ELL To define the biochemical and cellular properties of the Pol II elongation factor ELL, we have cloned the gene encoding the unique Drosophila ELL protein dELL. dELL is most similar to human ELL2, based on its primary sequence (Figure 1A), and it is the only ELL-related protein in Drosophila. There are three distinct domains of extensive homology. First is the region from amino acids 15 to 175 of ELL2, which also has a very high degree of homology to the ELL and ELL3 human homologs. This domain has been characterized by deletion mutagenesis of ELL, and has been shown to be required for in vitro elongation activity (Shilatifard et al., 1997a, b). A second region of nearly identical sequence in the central portion of the two proteins is unique to ELL2 and dELL; it is not seen in either ELL or ELL3, and it has not been characterized. The C-terminal domain is the most highly conserved domain in the ELL family (Miller et al., 2000) and a homologous domain is also found in the C-terminal half of dELL. Interestingly, we have demonstrated that the conserved C-terminal domain of ELL is necessary and sufficient for the immortalization activity of an mixed lineage leukemia (MLL)–ELL fusion protein in myeloid progenitor cells (DiMartino et al., 2000). Figure 1.Domain structure and conservation and expression pattern of D.melanogaster ELL. (A) Sequence alignment of dELL with human ELL2. Amino acid identities are highlighted in red. Gray boxes indicate the sequences homologous to the N-terminal elongation activation domain and the C-terminal immortalization domain of ELL, and a central region of high homology between dELL and ELL2. (B) Affinity chromatography and western analysis of recombinant dELL. His6-tagged protein was expressed and one-step purified by nickel chromatography as described in Materials and methods. Chromatographic fractions were analyzed by western blotting with anti-Express monoclonal antibody (Invitrogen) to visualize recombinant dELL. As expected, a single band of ∼120 kDa appears in both the load and bound fractions. (C) Expression of dELL transcripts during development. (Top) An autoradiograph of a northern blot showing the two dELL mRNAs. (Bottom) An autoradiograph from the same northern blot probed for rp49 transcript as loading control. Each lane contained 5 μg of total RNA isolated from Oregon R wild-type flies at the developmental stage indicated: EE, 0–30 min after egg laying (AEL); LE, 30 min–16 h AEL; L1–L3, first to third instar larvae; P1–P4, first to fourth day of pupation; AM, 0- to 1-day-old male adults; AF, 0- to 1-day-old adult females. (D) Western analysis of dELL protein expression at different stages of fly development. Protein extracts were prepared from third instar larvae, salivary gland tissue from third instar larvae and adult Drosophila as described in Materials and methods. Extracts were subjected to western analysis with purified anti-dELL polyclonal antisera to examine relative levels of protein expression at the selected developmental stages. A single polypeptide band (∼120 kDa) was detected in the extracts from each stage, and this polypeptide co-migrates with recombinant dELL. Protein concentrations in each extract were determined prior to loading to ensure that total protein in each lane was similar. Download figure Download PowerPoint dELL can stimulate elongation by Pol II Each of the three human ELL homologs (ELL, ELL2 and ELL3) exhibits the ability to increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation catalyzed by Pol II from adenovirus major late (AdML) promoter constructs in vitro (Shilatifard et al., 1996, 1997a; Miller et al., 2000). To test the in vitro elongation activity of dELL, we expressed ELL in Escherichia coli as a His6-tagged protein. Recombinant dELL was purified by affinity chromatography and tested in a pulse–chase transcription assay. Accumulation of runoff transcripts from the AdML promoter was determined by autoradiography. Runoff transcripts became readily visible within 20 min in the presence of dELL after the chase was initiated, and a large amount of transcript was observed after 30 min (Figure 2, lanes 6–10). Under conditions where no dELL was added, transcript levels were virtually undetectable after 30 min (Figure 2, lanes 1–5). These results demonstrate that dELL can increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation catalyzed by Pol II in vitro. Figure 2.Drosophila ELL can increase the catalytic rate of transcription elongation catalyzed by RNA polymerase II in vitro. Pre-initiation complexes were formed in the presence of AdMLP DNA, TBP, TFIIB, TFIIF, TFIIE, TFIIH and RNA Pol II. Transcription reactions were initiated by the addition of rNTPs as described in Materials and methods. Nascent transcripts were chased after the addition of cold CTP in the presence or absence of recombinant dELL for the times indicated. Runoff transcripts were analyzed in a 6% acrylamide gel containing 7 M urea and 0.51× TBE, and visualized by PhosphorImager analysis. Download figure Download PowerPoint Expression of dELL during development To characterize the expression of dELL during different stages of development in Drosophila, we have analyzed the mRNA and protein levels at several stages. Northern blot analysis of total RNA isolated from 10 developmental stages was performed to identify the dELL transcript and its relative level of expression at various times throughout development. Using a radiolabeled antisense RNA generated from the cloned cDNA, we detected two transcripts ranging from ∼5.0 to 6.2 kb in size (Figure 1C). The upper (thicker arrow) indicates the position of the bands corresponding to full-length dELL transcript. The lower (thinner arrow) indicates the position of an alternatively spliced form of dELL transcript. This form of dELL appears to be higher in the adult male. It is possible that this spliced version of the dELL transcript may be a replacement of human ELL3 (which is testes specific) in the adult male fly. The full-length transcripts for dELL appear to be maternally loaded, as seen by their abundance in 30′ old embryos, before zygotic transcription begins in the developing organism. It must be noted here that we have also seen alternatively spliced forms of mammalian ELLs. Following the peak of the mRNA level in the early embryogenesis, levels appear to be quite similar. To confirm dELL protein expression, polyclonal antiserum to recombinant dELL was raised and affinity purified for use in detecting endogenous dELL. Extracts from Drosophila larvae or adult flies were subjected to western blot analysis. dELL is detectable in larvae and adults, corresponding to the northern data, suggesting that a steady-state level of dELL protein expression is maintained throughout development. In extracts of larval salivary glands, the purified dELL polyclonal antibody specifically recognizes a single band of ∼120 kDa co-migrating with the recombinant dELL expressed in bacteria (Figure 1D). This demonstrates the presence of dELL in salivary glands and that the purified dELL polyclonal antibody does not cross-react with other polypeptides in the salivary gland. dELL is localized to the nuclei of Drosophila embryos To determine the distribution of dELL in embryos, dELL was localized by immunofluorescence. Like its mammalian homolog, dELL is a nuclear protein with ubiquitous distribution in early and late embryos (Figure 3). Co-localization of dELL with the pattern of DAPI staining and with Pol II staining occurred in all cells, with no indication of tissue specificity at this stage of development. Figure 3.Whole-mount immunofluorescence detection of ELL in D.melanogaster embryo. Pre-cellularization Drosophila embryos were fixed as described in Materials and methods and probed either with (A) DAPI to visualize DNA, (B) monoclonal antibody directed against phosphorylated Pol II or (C) purified polyclonal anti-dELL serum. (D) Overlay of (B) and (C). Download figure Download PowerPoint Immunolocalization of dELL in polytene chromosomes To determine whether dELL is associated with the elongating polymerase in vivo and in the presence of chromatin components, we examined the distribution of dELL on polytene chromosomes from the salivary glands of third instar larvae. dELL is found at many sites along all the polytene chromosome arms (Figure 4A). To confirm the specificity of our purified polyclonal antibody, we also examined the distribution of epitope-tagged dELL expressed in transgenic Drosophila. Figure 4B and C shows that the immunofluorescence for tagged dELL (using anti-His monoclonal antibody) (Figure 4B) co-localizes with immunofluorescence for dELL (using dELL purified polyclonal antibody) (Figure 4C). These results demonstrate that endogenous dELL (Figure 4A) is widely dispersed on developmental puff sites, which are generally recognized as sites of active transcription (Pelling, 1964; Plagens et al., 1976). Among the prominent dELL binding sites are the loci encoding the salivary gland glue proteins sgs 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8, which are highly transcribed in mid-third instar larval salivary glands (Figure 4A; Korge, 1975; Guild and Shore, 1984; Crowley et al., 1983). Figure 4.Drosophila ELL is associated with euchromatin on transcriptionally active sites. (A) Immunofluorescence localization of dELL on polytene chromosomes. Wild-type polytene chromosomes were prepared from third instar larvae salivary glands and probed with purified polyclonal antibodies raised against dELL. (B and C) To ensure that the purified dELL polyclonal antibodies were specific for dELL, we also generated a tagged dELL transgenic fly. Polytene chromosomes isolated from the transgenic dELL third instar larvae salivary glands were probed either with (B) monoclonal antibody directed against the His6-tag on dELL or (C) purified polyclonal antibodies directed against dELL. (D) Polytene chromosomes were probed for dELL (red) and the heterochromatin-associated protein HP1 (green). The bracket indicates the heterochromatic chromocenter (cc), while a prominent region of euchromatic staining by HP1 in region 31 is indicated by a line (31). Download figure Download PowerPoint Unexpectedly, we found nucleolar staining using the purified anti-dELL polyclonal serum, although Pol II is absent from the nucleolus. The significance of this observation is unclear, but may indicate a previously unanticipated role for the ELL family of proteins in RNA Pol I activity. Nucleolar staining was not observed when anti-His6 antibody was used to immunolocalize transgenic His6-tagged dELL. The possible role of dELL in RNA Pol I activity is not clear at this point. While dELL is distributed widely throughout the euchromatic chromosome arms, double staining of the polytene chromosome with antibodies directed against heterochromatin binding protein 1 (HP1) and dELL showed no detectable overlap (Figure 4D), indicating that dELL is largely excluded from the heterochromatin. dELL co-localizes extensively with Pol IIo on polytene chromosomes It is well established that the elongating form of Pol IIo is hyperphosphorylated at its C-terminal domain (Dahmus, 1996; Myers et al., 1998; Wada et al., 1998; Cho et al., 1999; Otero et al., 1999; Yamaguchi et al., 1999). We have examined whether dELL co-localizes with the hyperphosphorylated Pol II on polytene chromosomes from the salivary glands of third instar larvae. Chromosome squashes were stained simultaneously with antibodies against dELL (purified polyclonal) (Figure 5A) and Pol IIo (monoclonal H14; Covance) (Figure 5B), and the appropriate secondary antibodies and fluorescence images were generated for each fluorophore. dELL co-localizes extensively with Pol IIo at a number of transcriptionally active sites on polytene chromosomes (Figure 5C), consistent with a role for dELL as a Pol II elongation factor in vivo. Figure 5.Co-localization of dELL with hyperphosphorylated RNA polymerase II (Pol IIo) on polytene chromosomes. (A) Immunofluorescence detection of dELL. (B) Immunolocalization of Pol IIo. (C) Overlay of (A) and (B). Co-localization of red and green signals appears yellow. Download figure Download PowerPoint Heat shock induces relocalization of dELL to activated heat shock genes Heat shock in Drosophila results in a dramatic relocalization of RNA Pol II from sites of developmentally regulated genes to a small number of vigorously transcribed heat shock genes (Greenleaf et al., 1978). To determine whether dELL accompanies RNA Pol II mobilization upon heat shock, we compared the distribution of dELL on wild-type polytene chromosomes under normal and heat shock conditions (Figure 6). As shown in Figure 6A, there is a wide distribution of dELL on polytene chromosomes before heat shock. Upon heat shock, there is a dramatic relocalization of dELL to a small number of puffs (Figure 6B). Detailed analysis indicated that a significant amount of dELL is relocalized to selected heat shock puffs upon heat shock (Figure 6C). Most prominent are the 87A and 87C sites and the puff site at 93D. We have also analyzed these heat shock puff sites for the presence of hyperphosphorylated RNA Pol II and dELL (Figure 6D). These data demonstrate that dELL is mobilized together with Pol IIo during heat shock, consistent with the hypothesis that dELL functions as a transcription factor in vivo. Figure 6.Heat shock induces a dramatic relocalization of dELL to heat shock loci. Immunofluorescence detection of wild-type third instar larvae salivary glands polytene chromosomes probed with polyclonal antibodies directed against dELL (A) before and (B) after heat shock induction. (C) Presence of dELL on heat shock loci 87A, 87C, 63C and 93D (left panel) before and (right panel) after heat shock induction. (D) Co-localization of Pol IIo and dELL at heat shock puffs 87A, 87C, and 93D in heat-shocked polytene chromosomes. Phase contrast (left panel), staining for Pol IIo (middle panel) and staining for dELL (right panel) on a heat-shocked polytene chromosome. Download figure Download PowerPoint RNA Pol II and dELL are part of a common complex in vivo The co-localization of dELL and RNA Pol II suggests that they are part of a complex at sites of active transcription elongation. To provide evidence for the presence of a common biochemical complex containing dELL and RNA Pol II in vivo, we prepared total fly extracts from equal masses of control flies and transgenic flies expressing His6-tagged dELL. The polyhistidine tag permits a one-step chromatographic enrichment of dELL-associated polypeptides using a nickel chelating resin to anchor dELL and its associated polypeptides. Western blot analysis of fractionated extracts is shown in Figure 7. As expected, His-tagged dELL is retained by the resin (data not shown). Aliquots from nickel chelating resin were examined for the presence of Pol II using a Pol II-specific monoclonal antibody. Pol II is specifically retained in extracts containing His-tagged dELL, demonstrating that the two proteins interact directly or indirectly in vivo. While only a fraction of the total Pol II is retained by His6-dELL, this is expected since the tagged protein presumably competes with endogenous dELL for RNA polymerase binding. Figure 7.RNA polymerase II and dELL can physically interact. To determine biochemical interaction between dELL and Pol II, wild-type and His6-tagged dELL transgenic fly extracts were fractionated by nickel chromatography. Load, flow-through, wash and bound fractions were subjected to 12% SDS–PAGE, and fractions were analyzed for the presence of Pol II by western blot analysis using a Pol II-specific monoclonal antibody as described in Materials and methods. Download figure Download PowerPoint Discussion Transcriptional elongation represents a key regulated step in the expression of eukaryotic genes (reviewed in Uptain et al., 1997; Shilatifard, 1998a; Reines et al., 1999; Conaway and Conaway, 2000). Several biochemical factors have been identified that enhance Pol II elongation activity in vitro, suggesting multiple layers of cellular control. The specific roles of these diverse elongation factors and the interplay and/or functional redundancy between them are poorly understood. Conceptually, one can consider the elongation mechanism as two steps: promoter escape and processive elongation. The ELL family of proteins behave in vitro as enhancers of Pol II processive elongation by suppressing transient pausing by polymerase (Shilatifard et al., 1997a, b; Elmendorf et al., 2001). These biochemical studies implicate the ELL family of proteins in promoting Pol II catalysis. Previous studies demonstrated that both human and murine ELLs are nuclear proteins (Thirman et al., 1997; DiMartino et al., 2000), consistent with a role in transcription in vivo. Here, we present the first direct evidence placing an ELL family of proteins at sites of active transcription elongation in vivo. dELL is a nuclear protein in all cell types examined. We find that dELL is broadly distributed on polytene chromosomes. Upon heat shock, dELL undergoes a massive redistribution that accompanies the redistribution of Pol II and the switch to heat shock gene transcription. We show that dELL is complexed with Pol II in vivo, providing the first evidence that the ELL family of elongation factors is directly associated with the catalytic machinery of transcription in the cell. dELL is a structurally and functionally conserved member of the ELL family of Pol II elongation factors Three mammalian ELL family proteins have been identified, all with biochemical elongation activity but differing in expression pattern. ELL and ELL2 are widely expressed (Thirman et al., 1994; Shilatifard et al., 1997), while ELL3 is testis specific (Miller et al., 2000). dELL shows significant sequence homology to all three mammalian ELL family proteins, but is most closely related to ELL2. Importantly, the conserved sequences in dELL include N- and C-terminal domains with previously defined properties in ELL: the N-terminal domain is required for transcription elongation activity in vitro (Shilatifard et al., 1997a, b), and the conserved C-terminal domain is required for immortalization activity as part of an MLL–ELL chimeric protein (DiMartino et al., 2000). Based on the annotated Drosophila genome sequence, dELL appears to be the unique ELL family protein in Drosophila. Its ubiquitous expression in development suggests that dELL has a broad role in transcription, perhaps reflecting an ancestral role for ELL family proteins from which specialized or redundant mammalian isoforms evolved. ELL-like proteins and related sequences have been reported in all mammals tested, as well as in chickens and fish (Thirman et al., 1994, 1997), but are apparently absent in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Caenorhabditis elegans. Thus, the ELL family of elongation factors may represent

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