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Dive into the research topics where Domenico Libri is active.

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Featured researches published by Domenico Libri.


Cell | 2005

Cryptic Pol II Transcripts Are Degraded by a Nuclear Quality Control Pathway Involving a New Poly(A) Polymerase

Françoise Wyers; Mathieu Rougemaille; Gwenael Badis; Jean-Claude Rousselle; Marie-Elisabeth Dufour; Jocelyne Boulay; Béatrice Regnault; Frédéric Devaux; Abdelkader Namane; Bertrand Séraphin; Domenico Libri; Alain Jacquier

Since detection of an RNA molecule is the major criterion to define transcriptional activity, the fraction of the genome that is expressed is generally considered to parallel the complexity of the transcriptome. We show here that several supposedly silent intergenic regions in the genome of S. cerevisiae are actually transcribed by RNA polymerase II, suggesting that the expressed fraction of the genome is higher than anticipated. Surprisingly, however, RNAs originating from these regions are rapidly degraded by the combined action of the exosome and a new poly(A) polymerase activity that is defined by the Trf4 protein and one of two RNA binding proteins, Air1p or Air2p. We show that such a polyadenylation-assisted degradation mechanism is also responsible for the degradation of several Pol I and Pol III transcripts. Our data strongly support the existence of a posttranscriptional quality control mechanism limiting inappropriate expression of genetic information.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Interactions between mRNA Export Commitment, 3′-End Quality Control, and Nuclear Degradation

Domenico Libri; Ken Dower; Jocelyne Boulay; Rune Thomsen; Michael Rosbash; Torben Heick Jensen

ABSTRACT Several aspects of eukaryotic mRNA processing are linked to transcription. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, overexpression of the mRNA export factor Sub2p suppresses the growth defect of hpr1 null cells, yet the protein Hpr1p and the associated THO protein complex are implicated in transcriptional elongation. Indeed, we find that a pool of heat shock HSP104 transcripts are 3′-end truncated in THO complex mutant as well as sub2 mutant backgrounds. Surprisingly, however, this defect can be suppressed by deletion of the 3′-5′ exonuclease Rrp6p. This indicates that incomplete RNAs result from nuclear degradation rather than from a failure to efficiently elongate transcription. RNAs that are not degraded are retained at the transcription site in a Rrp6p-dependent manner. Interestingly, the addition of a RRP6 deletion to sub2 or to THO complex mutants shows a strong synthetic growth phenotype, suggesting that the failure to retain and/or degrade defective mRNAs is deleterious. mRNAs produced in the 3′-end processing mutants rna14-3 and rna15-2, as well as an RNA harboring a 3′ end generated by a self-cleaving hammerhead ribozyme, are also retained in Rrp6p-dependent transcription site foci. Taken together, our results show that several classes of defective RNPs are subject to a quality control step that impedes release from transcription site foci and suggest that suboptimal messenger ribonucleoprotein assembly leads to RNA degradation by Rrp6p.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Neutralizing aptamers from whole-cell SELEX inhibit the RET receptor tyrosine kinase.

Laura Cerchia; Frédéric Ducongé; Carine Pestourie; Jocelyne Boulay; Youssef Aissouni; Karine Gombert; Bertrand Tavitian; Vittorio de Franciscis; Domenico Libri

Targeting large transmembrane molecules, including receptor tyrosine kinases, is a major pharmacological challenge. Specific oligonucleotide ligands (aptamers) can be generated for a variety of targets through the iterative evolution of a random pool of sequences (SELEX). Nuclease-resistant aptamers that recognize the human receptor tyrosine kinase RET were obtained using RET-expressing cells as targets in a modified SELEX procedure. Remarkably, one of these aptamers blocked RET-dependent intracellular signaling pathways by interfering with receptor dimerization when the latter was induced by the physiological ligand or by an activating mutation. This strategy is generally applicable to transmembrane receptors and opens the way to targeting other members of this class of proteins that are of major biomedical importance.


Current Biology | 2001

The DECD box putative ATPase Sub2p is an early mRNA export factor

Torben Heick Jensen; Jocelyne Boulay; Michael Rosbash; Domenico Libri

Abstract Nuclear mRNA metabolism relies on the interplay between transcription, processing, and nuclear export. RNA polymerase II transcripts experience major rearrangements within the nucleus, which include alterations in the structure of the mRNA precursors as well as the addition and perhaps even removal of proteins prior to transport across the nuclear membrane. Such mRNP-remodeling steps are thought to require the activity of RNA helicases/ATPases. One such protein, the DECD box RNA-dependent ATPase Sub2p/UAP56, is involved in both early and late steps of spliceosome assembly [1–4]. Here, we report a more general function of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Sub2p in mRNA nuclear export. We observe a rapid and dramatic nuclear accumulation of poly(A) + RNA in strains carrying mutant alleles of sub2 . Strikingly, an intronless transcript, HSP104 , also accumulates in nuclei, suggesting that Sub2p function is not restricted to splicing events. The HSP104 transcripts are localized in a single nuclear focus that is suggested to be at or near their site of transcription. Intriguingly, Sub2p shows strong genetic and functional interactions with the RNA polymerase II-associated DNA/DNA:RNA helicase Rad3p as well as the nuclear RNA exosome component Rrp6p, which was independently implicated in the retention of mRNAs at transcription sites [5]. Taken together, our data suggest that Sub2p functions at an early step in the mRNA export process.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Extensive degradation of RNA precursors by the exosome in wild-type cells.

Rajani Kanth Gudipati; Zhenyu Xu; Alice Lebreton; Bertrand Séraphin; Lars M. Steinmetz; Alain Jacquier; Domenico Libri

The exosome is a complex involved in the maturation of rRNA and sn-snoRNA, in the degradation of short-lived noncoding RNAs, and in the quality control of RNAs produced in mutants. It contains two catalytic subunits, Rrp6p and Dis3p, whose specific functions are not fully understood. We analyzed the transcriptome of combinations of Rrp6p and Dis3p catalytic mutants by high-resolution tiling arrays. We show that Dis3p and Rrp6p have both overlapping and specific roles in degrading distinct classes of substrates. We found that transcripts derived from more than half of intron-containing genes are degraded before splicing. Surprisingly, we also show that the exosome degrades large amounts of tRNA precursors despite the absence of processing defects. These results underscore the notion that large amounts of RNAs produced in wild-type cells are discarded before entering functional pathways and suggest that kinetic competition with degradation proofreads the efficiency and accuracy of processing.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2008

Phosphorylation of the RNA polymerase II C-terminal domain dictates transcription termination choice

Rajani Kanth Gudipati; Tommaso Villa; Jocelyne Boulay; Domenico Libri

Cryptic unstable transcripts (CUTs) are short, 300–600-nucleotide (nt) RNA polymerase II transcripts that are rapidly degraded by the nuclear RNA exosome in yeast. CUTs are widespread and probably represent the largest share of hidden transcription in the yeast genome. Similarly to small nucleolar and small nuclear RNAs, transcription of CUT-encoding genes is terminated by the Nrd1 complex pathway. We show here that this termination mode and ensuing CUTs degradation crucially depend on the position of RNA polymerase II relative to the transcription start site. Notably, position sensing correlates with the phosphorylation status of the polymerase C-terminal domain (CTD). The Nrd1 complex is recruited to chromatin via interactions with both the nascent RNA and the CTD, but a permissive phosphorylation status of the latter is absolutely required for efficient transcription termination. We discuss the mechanism underlying the regulation of coexisting cryptic and mRNA-productive transcription.


FEBS Letters | 2002

Nucleic acid aptamers in cancer medicine

Laura Cerchia; Jörg Hamm; Domenico Libri; Bertrand Tavitian; Vittorio de Franciscis

Many signalling proteins involved in diverse functions such as cell growth and differentiation can act as oncogenes and cause cellular transformation. These molecules represent attractive targets for cancer diagnosis or therapy and are therefore subject to intensive investigation. Aptamers are small nucleic acid molecules, isolated from combinatorial libraries by a procedure termed SELEX, that bind to a target molecule by providing a limited number of specific contact points embedded in a larger, defined three‐dimensional structure. In some cases aptamers have the potential to inhibit the biological function of the molecule resulting in useful reagents for target validation in a variety of disease models.


Molecular Cell | 2013

Dealing with Pervasive Transcription

Torben Heick Jensen; Alain Jacquier; Domenico Libri

Eukaryotic genomes are pervasively transcribed. However, it is unclear how many newly found RNAs have functions and how many are byproducts of functional, or spurious, transcription events. Cells control the accumulation of many opportunistic transcripts by limiting their synthesis and by provoking their early transcription termination and decay. In this review, we use S. cerevisiae and mammalian cells as models to discuss the circumstances by which pervasive transcripts are produced and turned over. This ultimately relates to the likelihood, and potential mechanism, of molecular function.


The EMBO Journal | 2007

Dissecting mechanisms of nuclear mRNA surveillance in THO/sub2 complex mutants

Mathieu Rougemaille; Rajani Kanth Gudipati; Jens Raabjerg Olesen; Rune Thomsen; Bertrand Séraphin; Domenico Libri; Torben Heick Jensen

The nuclear exosome is involved in numerous RNA metabolic processes. Exosome degradation of rRNA, snoRNA, snRNA and tRNA in Saccharomyces cerevisiae is activated by TRAMP complexes, containing either the Trf4p or Trf5p poly(A) polymerase. These enzymes are presumed to facilitate exosome access by appending oligo(A)‐tails onto structured substrates. Another role of the nuclear exosome is that of mRNA surveillance. In strains harboring a mutated THO/Sub2p system, involved in messenger ribonucleoprotein particle biogenesis and nuclear export, the exosome‐associated 3′ → 5′ exonuclease Rrp6p is required for both retention and degradation of nuclear restricted mRNAs. We show here that Trf4p, in the context of TRAMP, is an mRNA surveillance factor. However, unlike Rrp6p, Trf4p only partakes in RNA degradation and not in transcript retention. Surprisingly, a polyadenylation‐defective Trf4p protein is fully active, suggesting polyadenylation‐independent mRNA degradation. Transcription pulse–chase experiments show that HSP104 molecules undergoing quality control in THO/sub2 mutant strains fall into two distinct populations: One that is quickly degraded after transcription induction and another that escapes rapid decay and accumulates in foci associated with the HSP104 transcription site.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Early Formation of mRNP License for Export or Quality Control

Torben Heick Jensen; Ken Dower; Domenico Libri; Michael Rosbash

Eukaryotic mRNA is processed by enzymes and packaged with proteins within nuclei to generate functional messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) particles. Processing and packaging factors can interact with mRNA cotranscriptionally to form an early mRNP. Erroneous mRNP formation leads to nuclear retention and degradation of the mRNA. It therefore appears that one function of cotranscriptional mRNP assembly is to discard aberrant mRNPs early in their biogenesis. Cotranscriptional mRNP assembly may also enable the transcription machinery to respond to improper mRNP formation.

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Dive into the Domenico Libri's collaboration.

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Jocelyne Boulay

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Mathieu Rougemaille

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Odil Porrua

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bertrand Tavitian

Paris Descartes University

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Laura Cerchia

University of Naples Federico II

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Youssef Aissouni

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jessie Colin

École pratique des hautes études

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