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RNA-bound PGC-1α controls gene expression in liquid-like nuclear condensates.

Joaquín Pérez-SchindlerBastian KohlKonstantin Schneider-HeieckAurel B LeuchtmannCarlos Henríquez OlguínVolkan AdakGeraldine MaierJulien DelezieThomas SakoparnigElyzabeth Vargas-FernándezBettina Karrer-CardelDanilo RitzAlexander SchmidtMaria HondeleThomas E JensenSebastian HillerChristoph Handschin
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Plasticity of cells, tissues, and organs is controlled by the coordinated transcription of biological programs. However, the mechanisms orchestrating such context-specific transcriptional networks mediated by the dynamic interplay of transcription factors and coregulators are poorly understood. The peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α) is a prototypical master regulator of adaptive transcription in various cell types. We now uncovered a central function of the C-terminal domain of PGC-1α to bind RNAs and assemble multiprotein complexes including proteins that control gene transcription and RNA processing. These interactions are important for PGC-1α recruitment to chromatin in transcriptionally active liquid-like nuclear condensates. Notably, such a compartmentalization of active transcription mediated by liquid-liquid phase separation was observed in mouse and human skeletal muscle, revealing a mechanism by which PGC-1α regulates complex transcriptional networks. These findings provide a broad conceptual framework for context-dependent transcriptional control of phenotypic adaptations in metabolically active tissues.
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