Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have mapped the precise frequency by which
genes2 get turned on across the human genome, providing new insight into the most fundamental of
cellular3 processes -- and revealing new clues as to what happens when this process goes
awry4. In a study being published this week online in the
Proceedings5 of the National Academy of Sciences, Gladstone
Investigator6 Leor Weinberger, PhD, and his research team describe how a
gene1's on-and-off switching -- called "bursting" -- is the predominant method by which genes make proteins. By gaining an understanding of this
underlying7 mechanism8, this discovery has the potential to vastly help researchers learn what happens at the
molecular9 level when this mechanism is disrupted -- such as in cancer or when exposed to a particular drug.
The manufacture, or synthesis, of proteins takes place inside every cell.
DNA10 and genes -- which house the instructions for making proteins -- are stored within the
nucleus11 of each cell. When a gene is switched on, those instructions are
transcribed12 as a copy onto RNA, another type of
genetic13 material that then directs the protein synthesis. Proteins perform a variety of functions within the cell -- from the breaking down and digesting fats to resisting foreign
invaders14, such as bacteria or viruses. The
timing15 and frequency with which a particular protein is synthesized is crucial to maintaining the health of the cell.
"Much like
flicking16 on a light switch, genes get 'switched on' at specific
intervals17 to
initiate18 the fundamental biological process of protein synthesis," said Dr. Weinberger, who is also an associate professor at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), with which Gladstone is
affiliated19. "Until recently, the process was thought to be continuous -- once a gene is switched on, it stays on, churning out protein products at a steady pace like a garden hose. But recently, some studies have suggested the opposite -- that DNA produces RNA
molecules20 in rapid-fire 'staccato' bursts. We
decided21 to investigate how common this rapid-fire bursting was across the genome."
In laboratory experiments, Dr. Weinberger and his team inserted a green
fluorescent22(荧光的) protein, or "vector," into the DNA of Jurkat T lymphocytes -- a type of white blood cell that helps maintain a healthy human immune system. From this they generated new cells in which the vector was integrated into any one of thousands of gene segments -- with each segment glowing green when it was
activated23, or "switched on." This allowed the researchers to see exactly how gene
activation24 occurred across the entire human genome.
"Our analysis reveals support for the "bursting" hypothesis -- the genes acted as a sort of strobe light --
transcribing25 RNA in rapid-fire bursts," said Roy Dar, PhD, a Gladstone postdoctoral fellow and one of the paper's lead authors. "We observed that the bursting frequency increases until, over time, it reaches a particular threshold. At that point higher protein levels are reached by increasing the size of the bursts, eventually coming to a halt when no more protein product is needed. These results are a huge step towards understanding the basic molecular mechanism behind gene regulation."
"Dr. Weinberger and colleagues have shown that there is a single rule governing the behavior of all genes in the genome. Their findings in human cells
complement26 and extend similar findings made recently in other organisms," said Arjun Raj, PhD, assistant professor of bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania and an expert in imaging single molecules within cells.
The team believes that this new-found understanding of this fundamental biological process -- that genomic bursts account for the majority of instances of protein production -- holds clues to discovering how the disruption of these bursts could be harmful.