Rafal Archacki
University of Warsaw
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Featured researches published by Rafal Archacki.
The Plant Cell | 2014
Liesbeth Vercruyssen; Aurine Verkest; Nathalie Gonzalez; Ken S. Heyndrickx; Dominique Eeckhout; Soon-Ki Han; Teddy Jégu; Rafal Archacki; Jelle Van Leene; Megan Andriankaja; Stefanie De Bodt; Thomas Abeel; Frederik Coppens; Stijn Dhondt; Liesbeth De Milde; Mattias Vermeersch; Katrien Maleux; Kris Gevaert; Andrzej Jerzmanowski; Moussa Benhamed; Doris Wagner; Klaas Vandepoele; Geert De Jaeger; Dirk Inzé
The transcriptional coactivator ANGUSTIFOLIA3 (AN3) stimulates cell division during Arabidopsis leaf development. It is shown that AN3 associates with SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complexes to regulate the expression of important downstream transcription factors and that the module SWI/SNF-AN3 is a major player in the transition from cell division to cell expansion in developing leaves. The transcriptional coactivator ANGUSTIFOLIA3 (AN3) stimulates cell proliferation during Arabidopsis thaliana leaf development, but the molecular mechanism is largely unknown. Here, we show that inducible nuclear localization of AN3 during initial leaf growth results in differential expression of important transcriptional regulators, including GROWTH REGULATING FACTORs (GRFs). Chromatin purification further revealed the presence of AN3 at the loci of GRF5, GRF6, CYTOKININ RESPONSE FACTOR2, CONSTANS-LIKE5 (COL5), HECATE1 (HEC1), and ARABIDOPSIS RESPONSE REGULATOR4 (ARR4). Tandem affinity purification of protein complexes using AN3 as bait identified plant SWITCH/SUCROSE NONFERMENTING (SWI/SNF) chromatin remodeling complexes formed around the ATPases BRAHMA (BRM) or SPLAYED. Moreover, SWI/SNF ASSOCIATED PROTEIN 73B (SWP73B) is recruited by AN3 to the promoters of GRF5, GRF3, COL5, and ARR4, and both SWP73B and BRM occupy the HEC1 promoter. Furthermore, we show that AN3 and BRM genetically interact. The data indicate that AN3 associates with chromatin remodelers to regulate transcription. In addition, modification of SWI3C expression levels increases leaf size, underlining the importance of chromatin dynamics for growth regulation. Our results place the SWI/SNF-AN3 module as a major player at the transition from cell proliferation to cell differentiation in a developing leaf.
Plant Physiology | 2013
Elżbieta Sarnowska; Anna T. Rolicka; Ernest Bucior; Pawel Cwiek; Takayuki Tohge; Alisdair R. Fernie; Yusuke Jikumaru; Yuji Kamiya; Rainer Franzen; Elmon Schmelzer; Aimone Porri; Sebastian P. Sacharowski; Dominika M. Gratkowska; Dorota L. Zugaj; Aleksandra Taff; Anna Zalewska; Rafal Archacki; Seth J. Davis; George Coupland; Csaba Koncz; Andrzej Jerzmanowski; Tomasz J. Sarnowski
A chromatin remodeling complex subunit physically interacts with DELLA proteins and is involved in control of gibberellin biosynthesis and hormonal cross talk. Switch (SWI)/Sucrose Nonfermenting (SNF)-type chromatin-remodeling complexes (CRCs) are involved in regulation of transcription, DNA replication and repair, and cell cycle. Mutations of conserved subunits of plant CRCs severely impair growth and development; however, the underlying causes of these phenotypes are largely unknown. Here, we show that inactivation of SWI3C, the core component of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) SWI/SNF CRCs, interferes with normal functioning of several plant hormone pathways and alters transcriptional regulation of key genes of gibberellin (GA) biosynthesis. The resulting reduction of GA4 causes severe inhibition of hypocotyl and root elongation, which can be rescued by exogenous GA treatment. In addition, the swi3c mutation inhibits DELLA-dependent transcriptional activation of GIBBERELLIN-INSENSITIVE DWARF1 (GID1) GA receptor genes. Down-regulation of GID1a in parallel with the DELLA repressor gene REPRESSOR OF GA1-3 1 in swi3c indicates that lack of SWI3C also leads to defects in GA signaling. Together with the recent demonstration of function of SWI/SNF ATPase BRAHMA in the GA pathway, these results reveal a critical role of SWI/SNF CRC in the regulation of GA biosynthesis and signaling. Moreover, we demonstrate that SWI3C is capable of in vitro binding to, and shows in vivo bimolecular fluorescence complementation interaction in cell nuclei with, the DELLA proteins RGA-LIKE2 and RGA-LIKE3, which affect transcriptional activation of GID1 and GA3ox (GIBBERELLIN 3-OXIDASE) genes controlling GA perception and biosynthesis, respectively. Furthermore, we show that SWI3C also interacts with the O-GlcNAc (O-linked N-acetylglucosamine) transferase SPINDLY required for proper functioning of DELLAs and acts hypostatically to (SPINDLY) in the GA response pathway. These findings suggest that DELLA-mediated effects in GA signaling as well as their role as a hub in hormonal cross talk may be, at least in part, dependent on their direct physical interaction with complexes responsible for modulation of chromatin structure.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Rafal Archacki; Daniel Buszewicz; Tomasz J. Sarnowski; Elżbieta Sarnowska; Anna T. Rolicka; Takayuki Tohge; Alisdair R. Fernie; Yusuke Jikumaru; Maciej Kotliński; Roksana Iwanicka-Nowicka; Katarzyna Kalisiak; Jacek Patryn; Joanna Halibart-Puzio; Yuji Kamiya; Seth J. Davis; Marta Koblowska; Andrzej Jerzmanowski
SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complexes perform a pivotal function in the regulation of eukaryotic gene expression. Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) mutants in major SWI/SNF subunits display embryo-lethal or dwarf phenotypes, indicating their critical role in molecular pathways controlling development and growth. As gibberellins (GA) are major positive regulators of plant growth, we wanted to establish whether there is a link between SWI/SNF and GA signaling in Arabidopsis. This study revealed that in brm-1 plants, depleted in SWI/SNF BRAHMA (BRM) ATPase, a number of GA-related phenotypic traits are GA-sensitive and that the loss of BRM results in markedly decreased level of endogenous bioactive GA. Transcriptional profiling of brm-1 and the GA biosynthesis mutant ga1-3, as well as the ga1-3/brm-1 double mutant demonstrated that BRM affects the expression of a large set of GA-responsive genes including genes responsible for GA biosynthesis and signaling. Furthermore, we found that BRM acts as an activator and directly associates with promoters of GA3ox1, a GA biosynthetic gene, and SCL3, implicated in positive regulation of the GA pathway. Many GA-responsive gene expression alterations in the brm-1 mutant are likely due to depleted levels of active GAs. However, the analysis of genetic interactions between BRM and the DELLA GA pathway repressors, revealed that BRM also acts on GA-responsive genes independently of its effect on GA level. Given the central position occupied by SWI/SNF complexes within regulatory networks controlling fundamental biological processes, the identification of diverse functional intersections of BRM with GA-dependent processes in this study suggests a role for SWI/SNF in facilitating crosstalk between GA-mediated regulation and other cellular pathways.
Plant Physiology | 2015
Kinga Rutowicz; Marcin Puzio; Joanna Halibart-Puzio; Maciej Lirski; Maciej Kotliński; Magdalena A. Kroteń; Lukasz Knizewski; Bartosz Lange; Anna Muszewska; Katarzyna Śniegowska-Świerk; Janusz Kościelniak; Roksana Iwanicka-Nowicka; Krisztian Buza; Franciszek Janowiak; Katarzyna Żmuda; Indrek Jõesaar; Katarzyna Laskowska-Kaszub; Anna Fogtman; Hannes Kollist; Piotr Zielenkiewicz; Jerzy Tiuryn; Pawel Siedlecki; Szymon Swiezewski; Krzysztof Ginalski; Marta Koblowska; Rafal Archacki; Bartek Wilczynski; Marcin Rapacz; Andrzej Jerzmanowski
Stress-inducible linker histone variant is required for adaptive response of Arabidopsis to complex environmental stress. Linker (H1) histones play critical roles in chromatin compaction in higher eukaryotes. They are also the most variable of the histones, with numerous nonallelic variants cooccurring in the same cell. Plants contain a distinct subclass of minor H1 variants that are induced by drought and abscisic acid and have been implicated in mediating adaptive responses to stress. However, how these variants facilitate adaptation remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the single Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) stress-inducible variant H1.3 occurs in plants in two separate and most likely autonomous pools: a constitutive guard cell-specific pool and a facultative environmentally controlled pool localized in other tissues. Physiological and transcriptomic analyses of h1.3 null mutants demonstrate that H1.3 is required for both proper stomatal functioning under normal growth conditions and adaptive developmental responses to combined light and water deficiency. Using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis, we show that H1.3 has superfast chromatin dynamics, and in contrast to the main Arabidopsis H1 variants H1.1 and H1.2, it has no stable bound fraction. The results of global occupancy studies demonstrate that, while H1.3 has the same overall binding properties as the main H1 variants, including predominant heterochromatin localization, it differs from them in its preferences for chromatin regions with epigenetic signatures of active and repressed transcription. We also show that H1.3 is required for a substantial part of DNA methylation associated with environmental stress, suggesting that the likely mechanism underlying H1.3 function may be the facilitation of chromatin accessibility by direct competition with the main H1 variants.
Planta | 2009
Rafal Archacki; Tomasz J. Sarnowski; Joanna Halibart-Puzio; Katarzyna Brzeska; Daniel Buszewicz; Marta Prymakowska-Bosak; Csaba Koncz; Andrzej Jerzmanowski
In yeast and mammals, ATP-dependent chromatin remodelling complexes of the SWI/SNF family play critical roles in the regulation of transcription, cell proliferation, differentiation and development. Homologues of conserved subunits of SWI/SNF-type complexes, including Snf2-type ATPases and SWI3-type proteins, participate in analogous processes in Arabidopsis. Recent studies indicate a remarkable similarity between phenotypic effects of mutations in the SWI3 homologue ATSWI3C and bromodomain-ATPase BRM genes. To verify the extent of functional similarity between BRM and ATSWI3C, we have constructed atswi3cbrm double mutants and compared their phenotypic traits to those of simultaneously grown single atswi3c and brm mutants. In addition to inheritance of characteristic developmental abnormalities shared by atswi3c and brm mutants, some additive brm-specific traits were also observed in the atswi3cbrm double mutants. Unlike atswi3c, the brm mutation results in the enhancement of abnormal carpel development and pollen abortion leading to complete male sterility. Despite the overall similarity of brm and atswi3c phenotypes, a critical requirement for BRM in the differentiation of reproductive organs suggests that its regulatory functions do not entirely overlap those of ATSWI3C. The detection of two different transcript isoforms indicates that BRM is regulated by alternative splicing that creates an in-frame premature translation stop codon in its SNF2-like ATPase coding domain. The analysis of Arabidopsis mutants in nonsense-mediated decay suggests an involvement of this pathway in the control of alternative BRM transcript level.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2016
Daniel Buszewicz; Rafal Archacki; Antoni Palusiński; Maciej Kotliński; Anna Fogtman; Roksana Iwanicka-Nowicka; Katarzyna Sosnowska; Jan Kuciński; Piotr Pupel; Jacek Olędzki; Michal Dadlez; Aleksandra Misicka; Andrzej Jerzmanowski; Marta Koblowska
Studies in yeast and animals have revealed that histone deacetylases (HDACs) often act as components of multiprotein complexes, including chromatin remodelling complexes (CRCs). However, interactions between HDACs and CRCs in plants have yet to be demonstrated. Here, we present evidence for the interaction between Arabidopsis HD2C deacetylase and a BRM-containing SWI/SNF CRC. Moreover, we reveal a novel function of HD2C as a regulator of the heat stress response. HD2C transcript levels were strongly induced in plants subjected to heat treatment, and the expression of selected heat-responsive genes was up-regulated in heat-stressed hd2c mutant, suggesting that HD2C acts to down-regulate heat-activated genes. In keeping with the HDAC activity of HD2C, the altered expression of HD2C-regulated genes coincided in most cases with increased histone acetylation at their loci. Microarray transcriptome analysis of hd2c and brm mutants identified a subset of commonly regulated heat-responsive genes, and the effect of the brm hd2c double mutation on the expression of these genes was non-additive. Moreover, heat-treated 3-week-old hd2c, brm and brm hd2c mutants displayed similar rates of growth retardation. Taken together, our findings suggest that HD2C and BRM act in a common genetic pathway to regulate the Arabidopsis heat stress response.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2016
Rafal Archacki; Ruslan Yatusevich; Daniel Buszewicz; Katarzyna Krzyczmonik; Jacek Patryn; Roksana Iwanicka-Nowicka; Przemysław Biecek; Bartek Wilczynski; Marta Koblowska; Andrzej Jerzmanowski; Szymon Swiezewski
Abstract ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes are important regulators of gene expression in Eukaryotes. In plants, SWI/SNF-type complexes have been shown critical for transcriptional control of key developmental processes, growth and stress responses. To gain insight into mechanisms underlying these roles, we performed whole genome mapping of the SWI/SNF catalytic subunit BRM in Arabidopsis thaliana, combined with transcript profiling experiments. Our data show that BRM occupies thousands of sites in Arabidopsis genome, most of which located within or close to genes. Among identified direct BRM transcriptional targets almost equal numbers were up- and downregulated upon BRM depletion, suggesting that BRM can act as both activator and repressor of gene expression. Interestingly, in addition to genes showing canonical pattern of BRM enrichment near transcription start site, many other genes showed a transcription termination site-centred BRM occupancy profile. We found that BRM-bound 3΄ gene regions have promoter-like features, including presence of TATA boxes and high H3K4me3 levels, and possess high antisense transcriptional activity which is subjected to both activation and repression by SWI/SNF complex. Our data suggest that binding to gene terminators and controlling transcription of non-coding RNAs is another way through which SWI/SNF complex regulates expression of its targets.
Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2016
Kamil Kowalski; Rafal Archacki; Karolina Archacka; Wladyslawa Streminska; Anna Paciorek; Magdalena Gołąbek; Maria A. Ciemerych; Edyta Brzoska
The skeletal muscle has the ability to regenerate after injury. This process is mediated mainly by the muscle specific stem cells, that is, satellite cells. In case of extensive damage or under pathological conditions, such as muscular dystrophy, the process of muscle reconstruction does not occur properly. The aim of our study was to test whether mobilized stem cells, other than satellite cells, could participate in skeletal muscle reconstruction.
Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2015
Edyta Brzoska; Kamil Kowalski; Agnieszka Markowska-Zagrajek; Magdalena Kowalewska; Rafal Archacki; Izabela Plaskota; Wladyslawa Streminska; Katarzyna Jańczyk-Ilach; Maria A. Ciemerych
IntroductionUnderstanding the mechanism of stem cell mobilization into injured skeletal muscles is a prerequisite step for the development of muscle disease therapies. Many of the currently studied stem cell types present myogenic potential; however, when introduced either into the blood stream or directly into the tissue, they are not able to efficiently engraft injured muscle. For this reason their use in therapy is still limited. Previously, we have shown that stromal-derived factor-1 (Sdf-1) caused the mobilization of endogenous (not transplanted) stem cells into injured skeletal muscle improving regeneration. Here, we demonstrate that the beneficial effect of Sdf-1 relies on the upregulation of the tetraspanin CD9 expression in stem cells.MethodsThe expression pattern of adhesion proteins, including CD9, was analysed after Sdf-1 treatment during regeneration of rat skeletal muscles and mouse Pax7-/- skeletal muscles, that are characterized by the decreased number of satellite cells. Next, we examined the changes in CD9 level in satellite cells-derived myoblasts, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells, and embryonic stem cells after Sdf-1 treatment or silencing expression of CXCR4 and CXCR7. Finally, we examined the potential of stem cells to fuse with myoblasts after Sdf-1 treatment.ResultsIn vivo analyses of Pax7-/- mice strongly suggest that Sdf-1-mediates increase in CD9 levels also in mobilized stem cells. In the absence of CXCR4 receptor the effect of Sdf-1 on CD9 expression is blocked. Next, in vitro studies show that Sdf-1 increases the level of CD9 not only in satellite cell-derived myoblasts but also in bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells, as well as embryonic stem cells. Importantly, the Sdf-1 treated cells migrate and fuse with myoblasts more effectively.ConclusionsWe suggest that Sdf-1 binding CXCR4 receptor improves skeletal muscle regeneration by upregulating expression of CD9 and thus, impacting at stem cells mobilization to the injured muscles.
Archive | 2013
Andrzej Jerzmanowski; Rafal Archacki
In the past 10 years, enormous progress has been made in elucidating the nature of plant hormone receptors. This has allowed much greater insight into the mechanisms underlying hormone-mediated effects on the level of gene expression, particularly for hormones whose main receptors are localized in the nucleus. Surprisingly, and in contrast to the case for intensively studied nuclear hormone receptors in animals, very little is known about the contribution of chromatin-based epigenetic mechanisms in conveying and integrating responses to plant hormones. Here, we examine the similarities and differences between plant and animal nuclear receptor systems with the aim of revealing analogies that could help identify possible intersections between plant hormone signaling and epigenetic mechanisms.