Transmission of active transcriptional states from mother to daughter cells has the potential to foster precision in the gene expression programs underlying development. Such transcriptional memory has been specifically proposed to promote rapid reactivation of complex gene expression profiles after successive mitoses in Drosophila development [1]. By monitoring transcription in living Drosophila embryos, we provide the first evidence for transcriptional memory in animal development. We specifically monitored the activities of stochastically expressed transgenes in order to distinguish active and inactive mother cells and the behaviors of their daughter nuclei after mitosis. Quantitative analyses reveal that there is a 4-fold higher probability for rapid reactivation after mitosis when the mother experienced transcription. Moreover, memory nuclei activate transcription twice as fast as neighboring inactive mothers, thus leading to augmented levels of gene expression. We propose that transcriptional memory is a mechanism of precision, which helps coordinate gene activity during embryogenesis.
Transcriptional Memory in the Drosophila Embryo
Ferraro, T.; Esposito, E.; Mancini, L.; Ng, S.; Lucas, T.; Coppey, M.; Dostatni, N.; Walczak, A. M.; Levine, M.; Lagha, M.
2016
Curr Biol
2016-01-25 / vol 26 / pages 212-8
Abstract
10.1016/j.cub.2015.11.058
1879-0445 (Electronic) 0960-9822 (Linking)
PMCID: PMC4970865
IGMM team(s) involved in this publication