Early C elegans embryos are transcriptionally active
Early C. elegans embryos are transcriptionally active.
45
We have developed a nucleotide incorporation assay for run-on transcription in C. elegans embryonic extracts as an approach to characterizing early transcription. The incorporation is primarily polymerase II-catalyzed RNA synthesis, producing transcripts of the expected size range for mRNAs. Incorporation is insensitive to inhibitors of reinitiation, indicating that the activity represents primarily elongation of nascent chains initiated prior to extract preparation. The transcripts produced appear to be unprocessed pre-mRNAs. Hybridization of labeled transcripts from extracts of staged embryos to a set of cloned genes suggests that the specificity of the in vitro reaction accurately reflects developmentally regulated in vivo transcription. Comparative analyses of transcription in extracts from various stages indicate that pregastrulation embryos are active transcriptionally and that the level of transcription per nucleus is approximately constant throughout embryogenesis. Furthermore, most embryonically expressed genes are already being transcribed in pregastrulation embryos. We also demonstrate that the labeled embryonic run-on transcripts can be used as probes to screen for sequences transcribed preferentially in pregastrulation embryos. There appears to be only a small set of such sequences, which could represent a previously unsuspected class of embryonically transcribed genes important for early embryogenesis.
Schauer IE, Wood WB
Development (Cambridge, England)
1990-12-01 00:00
110
4
1303-17
Animals,Autoradiography,Caenorhabditis,DNA Probes,Electrophoresis,Embryo, Nonmammalian,Nucleotides,Time Factors,Transcription, Genetic,DNA Probes,Nucleotides
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder 80309
Development
NICHD 5F32HD06773, NICHD HD-14958, NIA N01-AG-2113
0950-1991
1313
True
2100265