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Dive into the research topics where Oxana M. Olenkina is active.

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Featured researches published by Oxana M. Olenkina.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Regulation of glutamate receptor subunit availability by microRNAs

Julie Karr; Vasia Vagin; Kaiyun Chen; Subhashree Ganesan; Oxana M. Olenkina; Vladimir A. Gvozdev; David E. Featherstone

The efficacy of synaptic transmission depends, to a large extent, on postsynaptic receptor abundance. The molecular mechanisms controlling receptor abundance are poorly understood. We tested whether abundance of postsynaptic glutamate receptors (GluRs) in Drosophila neuromuscular junctions is controlled by microRNAs, and provide evidence that it is. We show here that postsynaptic knockdown of dicer-1, the endoribonuclease necessary for microRNA synthesis, leads to large increases in postsynaptic GluR subunit messenger RNA and protein. Specifically, we measured increases in GluRIIA and GluRIIB but not GluRIIC. Further, knockout of MiR-284, a microRNA predicted to bind to GluRIIA and GluRIIB but not GluRIIC, increases expression of GluRIIA and GluRIIB but not GluRIIC proportional to the number of predicted binding sites in each transcript. Most of the de-repressed GluR protein, however, does not appear to be incorporated into functional receptors, and only minor changes in synaptic strength are observed, which suggests that microRNAs primarily regulate Drosophila receptor subunit composition rather than overall receptor abundance or synaptic strength.


Biochemistry | 2010

Lysine methylation of nonhistone proteins is a way to regulate their stability and function.

Ksenia S. Egorova; Oxana M. Olenkina; Ludmila V. Olenina

This review is devoted to the dramatically expanding investigations of lysine methylation on nonhistone proteins and its functional importance. Posttranslational covalent modifications of proteins provide living organisms with ability to rapidly change protein activity and function in response to various stimuli. Enzymatic protein methylation at different lysine residues was evaluated in histones as a part of the “histone code”. Histone methyltransferases methylate not only histones, but also many nuclear and cytoplasmic proteins. Recent data show that the regulatory role of lysine methylation on proteins is not restricted to the “histone code”. This modification modulates activation, stabilization, and degradation of nonhistone proteins, thus influencing numerous cell processes. In this review we particularly focused on methylation of transcription factors and other nuclear nonhistone proteins. The methylated lysine residues serve as markers attracting nuclear “reader” proteins that possess different chromatin-modifying activities.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

A novel organelle, the piNG-body, in the nuage of Drosophila male germ cells is associated with piRNA-mediated gene silencing

Mikhail V. Kibanov; Ksenia S. Egorova; Sergei Ryazansky; Olesia A. Sokolova; Alexei A. Kotov; Oxana M. Olenkina; A. D. Stolyarenko; Vladimir A. Gvozdev; Ludmila V. Olenina

A novel perinuclear nuage organelle, the piNG-body, is associated with piRNA silencing in testes of Drosophila. This body contains the known ovarian nuage proteins Vasa, Aub, AGO3, Tud, Spn-E, Bel, Squ, and Cuff, as well as AGO1.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Genetically Derepressed Nucleoplasmic Stellate Protein in Spermatocytes of D. melanogaster Interacts with the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase 2 and Carries Histone-Like Lysine-Methylated Mark

Ksenia S. Egorova; Oxana M. Olenkina; Mikhail V. Kibanov; Alla Kalmykova; Vladimir A. Gvozdev; Ludmila V. Olenina

SUMMARY The X-chromosome-linked clusters of the tandemly repeated testis-specific Stellate genes of Drosophila melanogaster, encoding proteins homologous to the regulatory beta-subunit of the protein kinase casein kinase 2 (CK2), are repressed in wild-type males. Derepression of Stellate genes in the absence of the Y chromosome or Y-linked crystal locus (crystal line) causes accumulation of abundant protein crystals in testes and different meiotic abnormalities, which lead to partial or complete male sterility. To understand the cause of abnormalities in chromosome behavior owing to Stellate overexpression, we studied subcellular localization of Stellate proteins by biochemical fractionation and immunostaining of whole testes. We showed that, apart from the known accumulation of Stellate in crystalline form, soluble Stellate was located exclusively in the nucleoplasm, whereas Stellate crystals were located mainly in the cytoplasm. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments revealed that the alpha-subunit of the protein kinase CK2 (CK2alpha) was associated with soluble Stellate. Interaction between soluble Stellate and CK2alpha in the nucleus could lead to modulations in the phosphorylation of nuclear targets of CK2 and abnormalities in the meiotic segregation of chromosomes. We also observed that Stellate underwent lysine methylation and mimicked trimethyl-H3K9 epigenetic modification of histone H3 tail.


Genetica | 2003

Stellate repeats: targets of silencing and modules causing cis-inactivation and trans-activation.

Vladimir A. Gvozdev; Alexei A. Aravin; Yury A. Abramov; M. S. Klenov; Galina L. Kogan; Sergei A. Lavrov; Natalia M. Naumova; Oxana M. Olenkina; Alexei V. Tulin; Vasili V. Vagin

The mechanism of silencing of testis expressed X-linked Stellate repeats by homologous Y-linked Suppressor of Stellate [Su(Ste)] repeats localized in the crystal locus was studied. The double stranded RNA as a product of symmetrical transcription of Su(Ste) repeat and small iinterfaceSu(Ste) siRNA were revealed suggesting the mechanism of RNA interference (RNAi) for Stellate silencing. The relief of Stellate silencing as a result of impaired complementarity between the sequences of putative target Stellate transcripts and Su(Ste) repeats was shown. The role of RNAi mechanism in the silencing of heterochromatic retrotransposon GATE inserted in Stellate cluster was revealed. The studies of cis-effects of Stellate tandem repeats causing variegated expression of juxtaposed reporter genes were extended and the lacZ variegation in imaginal disc was shown. The exceptional case of a non-variegated expression of mini-white gene juxtaposed to Stellate repeats in a construct inserted into the 39C region was shown to be accompanied by trans-activation in homozygous state. Trans-activation effect was retained after transposition of this construct into heterochromatic environment in spite of strong variegation of a mini-white gene.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

RNA helicase Belle (DDX3) is essential for male germline stem cell maintenance and division in Drosophila

Alexei A. Kotov; Oxana M. Olenkina; Mikhail V. Kibanov; Ludmila V. Olenina

The present study showed that RNA helicase Belle (DDX3) was required intrinsically for mitotic progression and survival of germline stem cells (GSCs) and spermatogonial cells in the Drosophila melanogaster testes. We found that deficiency of Belle in the male germline resulted in a strong germ cell loss phenotype. Early germ cells are lost through cell death, whereas somatic hub and cyst cell populations are maintained. The observed phenotype is related to that of the human Sertoli Cell-Only Syndrome caused by the loss of DBY (DDX3) expression in the human testes and results in a complete lack of germ cells with preservation of somatic Sertoli cells. We found the hallmarks of mitotic G2 delay in early germ cells of the larval testes of bel mutants. Both mitotic cyclins, A and B, are markedly reduced in the gonads of bel mutants. Transcription levels of cycB and cycA decrease significantly in the testes of hypomorph bel mutants. Overexpression of Cyclin B in the germline partially rescues germ cell survival, mitotic progression and fertility in the bel-RNAi knockdown testes. Taken together, these results suggest that a role of Belle in GSC maintenance and regulation of early germ cell divisions is associated with the expression control of mitotic cyclins.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Piwi interacts with chromatin at nuclear pores and promiscuously binds nuclear transcripts in Drosophila ovarian somatic cells

Artem A. Ilyin; Sergei Ryazansky; Semen A. Doronin; Oxana M. Olenkina; Elena A. Mikhaleva; Evgeny Y. Yakushev; Yuri Abramov; Stepan N. Belyakin; A. V. Ivankin; Alexey V. Pindyurin; Vladimir A. Gvozdev; M. S. Klenov; Yuri Y. Shevelyov

Abstract Piwi in a complex with Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) triggers transcriptional silencing of transposable elements (TEs) in Drosophila ovaries, thus ensuring genome stability. To do this, Piwi must scan the nascent transcripts of genes and TEs for complementarity to piRNAs. The mechanism of this scanning is currently unknown. Here we report the DamID-seq mapping of multiple Piwi-interacting chromosomal domains in somatic cells of Drosophila ovaries. These domains significantly overlap with genomic regions tethered to Nuclear Pore Complexes (NPCs). Accordingly, Piwi was coimmunoprecipitated with the component of NPCs Elys and with the Xmas-2 subunit of RNA transcription and export complex, known to interact with NPCs. However, only a small Piwi fraction has transient access to DNA at nuclear pores. Importantly, although 36% of the protein-coding genes overlap with Piwi-interacting domains and RNA-immunoprecipitation results demonstrate promiscuous Piwi binding to numerous genic and TE nuclear transcripts, according to available data Piwi does not silence these genes, likely due to the absence of perfect base-pairing between piRNAs and their transcripts.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2003

Inactivation of Reporter Genes by Cloned Heterochromatic Repeats of Drosophila melanogaster is Accompanied by Chromatin Compaction

N. M. Naumova; Oxana M. Olenkina; Vladimir A. Gvozdev

Cloned Stellate heterochromatic repeats caused unstable mosaic inactivation (position effect variegation; PEV) of the reporter genemini-white. A number of known protein modifiers of the classical position effect induced by large heterochromatin blocks do not affect the expression of mini-white. This raises the question as to the specificity of chromatin compaction around the reporter gene. The inactivation of themini-white gene has been found to be accompanied by a decrease in its methylation catalyzed by Escherichia coli dam-methyltransferase expressed in the genome of Drosophila. However, no changes in the nucleosome organization of mini-whitehave been found.


Biochemistry | 2016

Interaction of Telomeric Retroelement HeT-A Transcripts and Their Protein Product Gag in Early Embryogenesis of Drosophila.

Ivan Olovnikov; Valeriya Morgunova; Anastasia Mironova; Maria Kordyukova; Elizaveta Radion; Oxana M. Olenkina; Natalia Akulenko; Alla Kalmykova

The telomere is a nucleoprotein complex at the ends of linear chromosomes that protects them from fusion and degradation. The telomere consists of telomeric DNA, a protective protein complex and telomeric RNA. Biogenesis of telomeric transcripts in development is still far from being understood. Drosophila telomeres are elongated by a transposition of specialized telomeric retrotransposons that encode proteins. Using transgenic constructs encoding tagged telomeric protein, we found that transcripts of Drosophila telomeric element HeT-A bind Gag-HeT-A protein encoded by these transcripts. Maternal HeT-A transcripts and Gag-HeT-A form ribonucleoprotein granules around centrosomes, centers of microtubule organization, during blastoderm formation, upon disruption of telomere silencing during oogenesis. The specific localization of HeT-A RNA is dependent on microtubules since disruption of microtubules caused delocalization of HeT-A transcripts. This transgenic system is a valuable model for the study of telomeric RNA biogenesis.


Biochemistry | 2012

Mapping of cis-regulatory sites in the promoter of testis-specific Stellate genes of Drosophila melanogaster

Oxana M. Olenkina; Ksenia S. Egorova; A. A. Aravin; N. M. Naumova; Vladimir A. Gvozdev; Ludmila V. Olenina

Tandem Stellate genes organized into two clusters in heterochromatin and euchromatin of the X-chromosome are part of the Ste-Su(Ste) genetic system required for maintenance of male fertility and reproduction of Drosophilamelanogaster. Stellate genes encode a regulatory subunit of protein kinase CK2 and are the main targets of germline-specific piRNA-silencing; their derepression leads to appearance of protein crystals in spermatocytes, meiotic disturbances, and male sterility. A short promoter region of 134 bp appears to be sufficient for testis-specific transcription of Stellate, and it contains three closely located cis-regulatory elements called E-boxes. By using reporter analysis, we confirmed a strong functionality of the E-boxes in the Stellate promoter for in vivo transcription. Using selective mutagenesis, we have shown that the presence of the central E-box 2 is preferable to maintain a high-level testis-specific transcription of the reporter gene under the Stellate promoter. The Stellate promoter provides transcription even in heterochromatin, and corresponding mRNAs are translated with the generation of full-size protein products in case of disturbances in the piRNA-silencing process. We have also shown for the first time that the activity of the Stellate promoter is determined by chromatin context of the X-chromosome in male germinal cells, and it increases at about twofold when relocating in autosomes.

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Ludmila V. Olenina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ksenia S. Egorova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Mikhail V. Kibanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexei A. Kotov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alla Kalmykova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Sergei Ryazansky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Anastasia Mironova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Elena A. Mikhaleva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ivan Olovnikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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