Bursty gene expression in the intact mammalian liver.
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IF: 19.328
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Cited by: 181
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Abstract

Bursts of nascent mRNA have been shown to lead to substantial cell-cell variation in unicellular organisms, facilitating diverse responses to environmental challenges. It is unknown whether similar bursts and gene-expression noise occur in mammalian tissues. To address this, we combine single molecule transcript counting with dual-color labeling and quantification of nascent mRNA to characterize promoter states, transcription rates, and transcript lifetimes in the intact mouse liver. We find that liver gene expression is highly bursty, with promoters stochastically switching between transcriptionally active and inactive states. Promoters of genes with short mRNA lifetimes are active longer, facilitating rapid response while reducing burst-associated noise. Moreover, polyploid hepatocytes exhibit less noise than diploid hepatocytes, suggesting a possible benefit to liver polyploidy. Thus, temporal averaging and liver polyploidy dampen the intrinsic variability associated with transcriptional bursts. Our approach can be used to study transcriptional bursting in diverse mammalian tissues.

Keywords

Gene Expression
smFISH
PROCEDURE

MeSH terms

Animals
Gene Expression Regulation
Half-Life
Hepatocytes
Homeostasis
Liver
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Models, Genetic
Ploidies
Promoter Regions, Genetic
RNA Stability
RNA, Messenger
Single-Cell Analysis
Transcription, Genetic

Authors

Bahar Halpern, Keren
Tanami, Sivan
Landen, Shanie
Chapal, Michal
Szlak, Liran
Hutzler, Anat
Nizhberg, Anna
Itzkovitz, Shalev

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