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ELF1 is a component of the Arabidopsis RNA polymerase II elongation complex and associates with a subset of transcribed genes.

Hanna MarkuschPhilipp Michl-HolzingerSimon ObermeyerClaudia ThorbeckeAstrid BruckmannSabrina BablGernot LängstAkihisa OsakabeFrédéric BergerKlaus D Grasser
Published in: The New phytologist (2023)
Elongation factors modulate the efficiency of mRNA synthesis by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) in the context of chromatin, thus contributing to implement proper gene expression programs. The zinc-finger protein ELF1 is a conserved transcript elongation factor, whose molecular function so far has not been studied in plants. Using biochemical approaches, we examined the interaction of Arabidopsis ELF1 with DNA and histones in vitro and with the RNAPII elongation complex in vivo. In addition, cytological assays demonstrated the nuclear localisation of the protein and by means of double-mutant analyses, interplay with genes encoding other elongation factors was explored. The genome-wide distribution of ELF1 was addressed by chromatin immunoprecipitation. ELF1 isolated from Arabidopsis cells robustly co-purified with RNAPII and various other elongation factors including SPT4-SPT5, SPT6, IWS1, FACT and PAF1C. Analysis of a CRISPR-Cas9 mediated gene editing mutant of ELF1 revealed distinct genetic interactions with mutants deficient in other elongation factors. Moreover, ELF1 associated with genomic regions actively transcribed by RNAPII. However, ELF1 occupied only ~33% of the RNAPII transcribed loci with preference for inducible rather than constitutively expressed genes. Collectively, these results establish that Arabidopsis ELF1 shares several characteristic attributes with RNAPII transcript elongation factors.
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