Sheryl T. Smith
Thomas Jefferson University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sheryl T. Smith.
Nature Cell Biology | 2004
Sheryl T. Smith; Svetlana Petruk; Yurii Sedkov; Elizabeth Cho; Sergei V. Tillib; Eli Canaani; Alexander Mazo
Rapid induction of the Drosophila melanogaster heat shock gene hsp70 is achieved through the binding of heat shock factor (HSF) to heat shock elements (HSEs) located upstream of the transcription start site (reviewed in ref. 3). The subsequent recruitment of several other factors, including Spt5, Spt6 and FACT, is believed to facilitate Pol II elongation through nucleosomes downstream of the start site. Here, we report a novel mechanism of heat shock gene regulation that involves modifications of nucleosomes by the TAC1 histone modification complex. After heat stress, TAC1 is recruited to several heat shock gene loci, where its components are required for high levels of gene expression. Recruitment of TAC1 to the 5′-coding region of hsp70 seems to involve the elongating Pol II complex. TAC1 has both histone H3 Lys 4-specific (H3-K4) methyltransferase (HMTase) activity and histone acetyltransferase activity through Trithorax (Trx) and CREB-binding protein (CBP), respectively. Consistently, TAC1 is required for methylation and acetylation of nucleosomal histones in the 5′-coding region of hsp70 after induction, suggesting an unexpected role for TAC1 during transcriptional elongation.
Nature | 2003
Yurii Sedkov; Elizabeth Cho; Svetlana Petruk; Lucy Cherbas; Sheryl T. Smith; Richard S. Jones; Peter Cherbas; Eli Canaani; James B. Jaynes; Alexander Mazo
Steroid hormones fulfil important functions in animal development. In Drosophila, ecdysone triggers moulting and metamorphosis through its effects on gene expression. Ecdysone works by binding to a nuclear receptor, EcR, which heterodimerizes with the retinoid X receptor homologue Ultraspiracle. Both partners are required for binding to ligand or DNA. Like most DNA-binding transcription factors, nuclear receptors activate or repress gene expression by recruiting co-regulators, some of which function as chromatin-modifying complexes. For example, p160 class coactivators associate with histone acetyltransferases and arginine histone methyltransferases. The Trithorax-related gene of Drosophila encodes the SET domain protein TRR. Here we report that TRR is a histone methyltransferases capable of trimethylating lysine 4 of histone H3 (H3-K4). trr acts upstream of hedgehog (hh) in progression of the morphogenetic furrow, and is required for retinal differentiation. Mutations in trr interact in eye development with EcR, and EcR and TRR can be co-immunoprecipitated on ecdysone treatment. TRR, EcR and trimethylated H3-K4 are detected at the ecdysone-inducible promoters of hh and BR-C in cultured cells, and H3-K4 trimethylation at these promoters is decreased in embryos lacking a functional copy of trr. We propose that TRR functions as a coactivator of EcR by altering the chromatin structure at ecdysone-responsive promoters.
British Journal of Cancer | 2004
Eli Canaani; Tatsuya Nakamura; Tatiana Rozovskaia; Sheryl T. Smith; Takesada Mori; Carlo M. Croce; Alexander Mazo
Rearrangements of the ALL-1/MLL1 gene underlie the majority of infant acute leukaemias, as well as of therapy-related leukaemias developing in cancer patients treated with inhibitors of topoisomerase II, such as VP16 and doxorubicin. The rearrangements fuse ALL-1 to any of >50 partner genes or to itself. Here, we describe the unique features of ALL-1-associated leukaemias, and recent progress in understanding molecular mechanisms involved in the activity of the ALL-1 protein and of its Drosophila homologue TRITHORAX.
Development | 2008
Svetlana Petruk; Sheryl T. Smith; Yurii Sedkov; Alexander Mazo
Polycomb group (PcG) and trithorax group (trxG) proteins act in an epigenetic fashion to maintain active and repressive states of expression of the Hox and other target genes by altering their chromatin structure. Genetically, mutations in trxG and PcG genes can antagonize each others function, whereas mutations of genes within each group have synergistic effects. Here, we show in Drosophila that multiple trxG and PcG proteins act through the same or juxtaposed sequences in the maintenance element (ME) of the homeotic gene Ultrabithorax. Surprisingly, trxG or PcG proteins, but not both, associate in vivo in any one cell in a salivary gland with the ME of an activated or repressed Ultrabithorax transgene, respectively. Among several trxG and PcG proteins, only Ash1 and Asx require Trithorax in order to bind to their target genes. Together, our data argue that at the single-cell level, association of repressors and activators correlates with gene silencing and activation, respectively. There is, however, no overall synergism or antagonism between and within the trxG and PcG proteins and, instead, only subsets of trxG proteins act synergistically.
Development | 1996
Sheryl T. Smith; James B. Jaynes
Science | 2001
Svetlana Petruk; Yurii Sedkov; Sheryl T. Smith; Sergei Tillib; Vladislav Kraevski; Tatsuya Nakamura; Eli Canaani; Carlo M. Croce; Alexander Mazo
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1997
Michael C. Rice; Sheryl T. Smith; Florencia Bullrich; Pamela Havre; Eric B. Kmiec
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999
Tanya Rozovskaia; Sergei Tillib; Sheryl T. Smith; Yurii Sedkov; Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen; Svetlana Petruk; Takahiro Yano; Tatsuya Nakamura; Levana Ben-Simchon; John Gildea; Carlo M. Croce; Allen Shearn; Eli Canaani; Alexander Mazo
Development | 1995
Aleyamma John; Sheryl T. Smith; James B. Jaynes
Archive | 1997
Eric B. Kmiec; William K. Holloman; Michael C. Rice; Sheryl T. Smith; Zhigang Shu