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Dive into the research topics where Ralf Erik Wellinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Ralf Erik Wellinger.


The EMBO Journal | 1998

Histone acetylation facilitates RNA polymerase II transcription of the Drosophila hsp26 gene in chromatin.

Karl P. Nightingale; Ralf Erik Wellinger; José M. Sogo; Peter B. Becker

A number of activators are known to increase transcription by RNA polymerase (pol) II through protein acetylation. While the physiological substrates for those acetylases are poorly defined, possible targets include general transcription factors, activator proteins and histones. Using a cell‐free system to reconstitute chromatin with increased histone acetylation levels, we directly tested for a causal role of histone acetylation in transcription by RNA pol II. Chromatin, containing either control or acetylated histones, was reconstituted to comparable nucleosome densities and characterized by electron microscopy after psoralen cross‐linking as well as by in vitro transcription. While H1‐containing control chromatin severely repressed transcription of our model hsp26 gene, highly acetylated chromatin was significantly less repressive. Acetylation of histones, and particularly of histone H4, affected transcription at the level of initiation. Monitoring the ability of the transcription machinery to associate with the promoter in chromatin, we found that heat shock factor, a crucial regulator of heat shock gene transcription, profited most from histone acetylation. These experiments demonstrate that histone acetylation can modulate activator access to their target sites in chromatin, and provide a causal link between histone acetylation and enhanced transcription initiation of RNA pol II in chromatin.


The EMBO Journal | 1997

Nucleosome structure and positioning modulate nucleotide excision repair in the non-transcribed strand of an active gene.

Ralf Erik Wellinger; Fritz Thoma

Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is a major pathway to remove pyrimidine dimers (PDs), a class of DNA lesions generated by ultraviolet light. Since folding of DNA into nucleosomes restricts its accessibility and since transcription and DNA repair require access to DNA, nucleosome structure and positioning as well as the transcriptional state may affect DNA repair. We recently determined the chromatin structure of the yeast URA3 gene at high resolution and found multiple positions of nucleosomes as well as strand‐ and site‐specific variation in DNA accessibility to DNase I (internal protected regions). Here, the same high‐resolution primer extension technique was used to investigate NER of PDs in the URA3 gene of a minichromosome in vivo. In the non‐transcribed strand (NTS), fast repair correlates with PD locations in linker DNA and towards the 5′ end of a positioned nucleosome. Slow repair correlates with the internal protected region of the nucleosome. This repair heterogeneity reflects a modulation of NER by positioned nucleosomes in the NTS. NER in the transcribed strand (TS) is fast, less heterogeneous and shows no correlation with chromatin structure. Apparently, transcription‐coupled repair overrides chromatin modulation of NER in the TS. Heterogeneity in NER generated by chromatin structure on the NTS may contribute to heterogeneity in mutagenesis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Replication Fork Progression Is Impaired by Transcription in Hyperrecombinant Yeast Cells Lacking a Functional THO Complex

Ralf Erik Wellinger; Félix Prado; Andrés Aguilera

ABSTRACT THO/TREX is a conserved, eukaryotic protein complex operating at the interface between transcription and messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) metabolism. THO mutations impair transcription and lead to increased transcription-associated recombination (TAR). These phenotypes are dependent on the nascent mRNA; however, the molecular mechanism by which impaired mRNP biogenesis triggers recombination in THO/TREX mutants is unknown. In this study, we provide evidence that deficient mRNP biogenesis causes slowdown or pausing of the replication fork in hpr1Δ mutants. Impaired replication appears to depend on sequence-specific features since it was observed upon activation of lacZ but not leu2 transcription. Replication fork progression could be partially restored by hammerhead ribozyme-guided self-cleavage of the nascent mRNA. Additionally, hpr1Δ increased the number of S-phase but not G2-dependent TAR events as well as the number of budded cells containing Rad52 repair foci. Our results link transcription-dependent genomic instability in THO mutants with impaired replication fork progression, suggesting a molecular basis for a connection between inefficient mRNP biogenesis and genetic instability.


Molecular Cell | 2003

Equal Sister Chromatid Exchange Is a Major Mechanism of Double-Strand Break Repair in Yeast

Sergio González-Barrera; Felipe Cortés-Ledesma; Ralf Erik Wellinger; Andrés Aguilera

Equal sister chromatid exchange (SCE) has been thought to be an important mechanism of double-strand break (DSB) repair in eukaryotes, but this has never been proven due to the difficulty of distinguishing SCE products from parental molecules. To evaluate the biological relevance of equal SCE in DSB repair and to understand the underlying molecular mechanism, we developed recombination substrates for the analysis of DSB repair by SCE in yeast. In these substrates, most breaks are limited to one chromatid, allowing the intact sister chromatid to serve as the repair template; both equal and unequal SCE can be detected. We show that equal SCE is a major mechanism of DSB repair, is Rad51 dependent, and is stimulated by Rad59 and Mre11. Our work provides a physical analysis of mitotically occurring SCE in vivo and opens new perspectives for the study and understanding of DSB repair in eukaryotes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Architecture of the replication fork stalled at the 3' end of yeast ribosomal genes.

Markus Gruber; Ralf Erik Wellinger; José M. Sogo

ABSTRACT Every unit of the rRNA gene cluster of Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains a unique site, termed the replication fork barrier (RFB), where progressing replication forks are stalled in a polar manner. In this work, we determined the positions of the nascent strands at the RFB at nucleotide resolution. Within anHpaI-HindIII fragment essential for the RFB, a major and two closely spaced minor arrest sites were found. In the majority of molecules, the stalled lagging strand was completely processed and the discontinuously synthesized nascent lagging strand was extended three bases farther than the continuously synthesized leading strand. A model explaining these findings is presented. Our analysis included for the first time the use of T4 endonuclease VII, an enzyme recognizing branched DNA molecules. This enzyme cleaved predominantly in the newly synthesized homologous arms, thereby specifically releasing the leading arm.


The EMBO Journal | 2001

Nucleosome positioning at the replication fork

Renzo Lucchini; Ralf Erik Wellinger; José M. Sogo

In order to determine the time required for nucleosomes assembled on the daughter strands of replication forks to assume favoured positions with respect to DNA sequence, psoralen cross‐linked replication intermediates purified from preparative two‐dimensional agarose gels were analysed by exonuclease digestion or primer extension. Analysis of sites of psoralen intercalation revealed that nucleosomes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae rDNA intergenic spacer are positioned shortly after passage of the replication machinery. Therefore, both the ‘old’ randomly segregated nucleosomes as well as the ‘new’ assembled histone octamers rapidly position themselves (within seconds) on the newly replicated DNA strands, suggesting that the positioning of nucleosomes is an initial step in the chromatin maturation process.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

An hpr1 Point Mutation That Impairs Transcription and mRNP Biogenesis without Increasing Recombination

Pablo Huertas; María L. García-Rubio; Ralf Erik Wellinger; Rosa Luna; Andrés Aguilera

ABSTRACT THO/TREX, a conserved eukaryotic protein complex, is a key player at the interface between transcription and mRNP metabolism. The lack of a functional THO complex impairs transcription, leads to transcription-dependent hyperrecombination, causes mRNA export defects and fast mRNA decay, and retards replication fork progression in a transcription-dependent manner. To get more insight into the interconnection between mRNP biogenesis and genomic instability, we searched for HPR1 mutations that differentially affect gene expression and recombination. We isolated mutants that were barely affected in gene expression but exhibited a hyperrecombination phenotype. In addition, we isolated a mutant, hpr1-101, with a strong defect in transcription, as observed for lacZ, and a general defect in mRNA export that did not display a relevant hyperrecombination phenotype. In THO single-null mutants, but not in the hpr1 point mutants studied, THO and its subunits were unstable. Interestingly, in contrast to hyperrecombinant null mutants, hpr1-101 did not cause retardation of replication fork progression. Transcription and mRNP biogenesis can therefore be impaired by THO/TREX dysfunction without increasing recombination, suggesting that it is possible to separate the mechanism(s) responsible for mRNA biogenesis defects from the further step of triggering transcription-dependent recombination.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

A new connection of mRNP biogenesis and export with transcription-coupled repair

Hélène Gaillard; Ralf Erik Wellinger; Andrés Aguilera

Although DNA repair is faster in the transcribed strand of active genes, little is known about the possible contribution of mRNP biogenesis and export in transcription-coupled repair (TCR). Interestingly, mutants of THO, a transcription complex involved in maintenance of genome integrity, mRNP biogenesis and export, were recently found to be deficient in nucleotide excision repair. In this study we show by molecular DNA repair analysis, that Sub2-Yra1 and Thp1-Sac3, two main mRNA export complexes, are required for efficient TCR in yeast. Careful analysis revealed that THO mutants are also specifically affected in TCR. Ribozyme-mediated mRNA self-cleavage between two hot spots for UV damage showed that efficient TCR does not depend on the nascent mRNA, neither in wild-type nor in mutant cells. Along with severe UV damage-dependent loss in processivity, RNAPII was found binding to chromatin upon UV irradiation in THO mutants, suggesting that RNAPII remains stalled at DNA lesions. Furthermore, Def1, a factor responsible for the degradation of stalled RNAPII, appears essential for the viability of THO mutants subjected to DNA damage. Our results indicate that RNAPII is not proficient for TCR in mRNP biogenesis and export mutants, opening new perspectives on our knowledge of TCR in eukaryotic cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Role for RNA:DNA hybrids in origin-independent replication priming in a eukaryotic system.

Ruth Stuckey; Néstor García-Rodríguez; Andrés Aguilera; Ralf Erik Wellinger

Significance R-loop formation has been related to genome instability and human disease, yet the role of R-loops in replication priming remains to be explored in the eukaryotic genome. This investigation discloses that transcription-dependent R-loops have the potential to initiate origin-independent replication events in ribosomal DNA. Taken together, our data suggest that R-loops contribute to transcription-driven endoreplication events and alterations in genome copy number. DNA replication initiates at defined replication origins along eukaryotic chromosomes, ensuring complete genome duplication within a single S-phase. A key feature of replication origins is their ability to control the onset of DNA synthesis mediated by DNA polymerase-α and its intrinsic RNA primase activity. Here, we describe a novel origin-independent replication process that is mediated by transcription. RNA polymerase I transcription constraints lead to persistent RNA:DNA hybrids (R-loops) that prime replication in the ribosomal DNA locus. Our results suggest that eukaryotic genomes have developed tools to prevent R-loop–mediated replication events that potentially contribute to copy number variation, particularly relevant to carcinogenesis.


Current Biology | 2015

COPII Coat Composition Is Actively Regulated by Luminal Cargo Maturation

Javier Manzano-Lopez; Ana M. Perez-Linero; Auxiliadora Aguilera-Romero; María Esther Martín; Tatsuki Okano; Daniel Varon Silva; Peter H. Seeberger; Howard Riezman; Kouichi Funato; Veit Goder; Ralf Erik Wellinger; Manuel Muñiz

BACKGROUND Export from the ER is an essential process driven by the COPII coat, which forms vesicles at ER exit sites (ERESs) to transport mature secretory proteins to the Golgi. Although the basic mechanism of COPII assembly is known, how COPII machinery is regulated to meet varying cellular secretory demands is unclear. RESULTS Here, we report a specialized COPII system that is actively recruited by luminal cargo maturation. Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) are luminal secretory proteins anchored to the membrane by the glycolipid GPI. After protein attachment in the ER lumen, lipid and glycan parts of the GPI anchor are remodeled. In yeast, GPI-lipid remodeling concentrates GPI-APs into specific ERESs. We found that GPI-glycan remodeling induces subsequent recruitment of the specialized ER export machinery that enables vesicle formation from these specific ERESs. First, the transmembrane cargo receptor p24 complex binds GPI-APs as a lectin by recognizing the remodeled GPI-glycan. Binding of remodeled cargo induces the p24 complex to recruit the COPII subtype Lst1p, specifically required for GPI-AP ER export. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that COPII coat recruitment by cargo receptors is not constitutive but instead is actively regulated by binding of mature ligands. Therefore, we reveal a novel functional link between luminal cargo maturation and COPII vesicle budding, providing a mechanism to adjust specialized COPII vesicle production to the amount and quality of their luminal cargos that are ready for ER exit. This helps to understand how the ER export machinery adapts to different needs for luminal cargo secretion.

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Andrés Aguilera

Spanish National Research Council

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José M. Sogo

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Hélène Gaillard

Spanish National Research Council

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Néstor García-Rodríguez

Spanish National Research Council

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Elisabet Fernández-García

Spanish National Research Council

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Enrique Herrero

Spanish National Research Council

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