Selective inhibition of CDK7 reveals high-confidence targets and new models for TFIIH function in transcription

Jenna K. Rimel(University of Colorado Boulder), Zachary C. Poss(University of Colorado Boulder), Benjamin Erickson(University of Colorado Denver), Zachary L. Maas(University of Colorado Boulder), Christopher C. Ebmeier(University of Colorado Boulder), Jared L. Johnson(Cornell University), Tim-Michael Decker(University of Colorado Boulder), Tomer M. Yaron(Cornell University), Michael J. Bradley(Innovation Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Kristin B. Hamman(Innovation Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Shanhu Hu(Innovation Pharmaceuticals (United States)), G. Malojcic(Innovation Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Jason Marineau(Innovation Pharmaceuticals (United States)), Peter W. White(Paraza Pharma (Canada)), Martine Brault(Paraza Pharma (Canada)), Limei Tao(Paraza Pharma (Canada)), Patrick DeRoy(Paraza Pharma (Canada)), Christian Clavette(Paraza Pharma (Canada)), Shraddha Nayak(University of Utah), Leah J. Damon(University of Colorado Boulder), Ines H. Kaltheuner(University of Bonn), Heeyoun Bunch(Kyungpook National University), Lewis C. Cantley(Cornell University), Matthias Geyer(University of Bonn), Janet Iwasa(University of Utah), Robin D. Dowell(University of Colorado Boulder), David L. Bentley(University of Colorado Denver), William M. Old(University of Colorado Boulder), Dylan J. Taatjes(University of Colorado Boulder)
Genes & Development
October 15, 2020
Cited by 86Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

CDK7 associates with the 10-subunit TFIIH complex and regulates transcription by phosphorylating the C-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). Few additional CDK7 substrates are known. Here, using the covalent inhibitor SY-351 and quantitative phosphoproteomics, we identified CDK7 kinase substrates in human cells. Among hundreds of high-confidence targets, the vast majority are unique to CDK7 (i.e., distinct from other transcription-associated kinases), with a subset that suggest novel cellular functions. Transcription-associated factors were predominant CDK7 substrates, including SF3B1, U2AF2, and other splicing components. Accordingly, widespread and diverse splicing defects, such as alternative exon inclusion and intron retention, were characterized in CDK7-inhibited cells. Combined with biochemical assays, we establish that CDK7 directly activates other transcription-associated kinases CDK9, CDK12, and CDK13, invoking a "master regulator" role in transcription. We further demonstrate that TFIIH restricts CDK7 kinase function to the RNAPII CTD, whereas other substrates (e.g., SPT5 and SF3B1) are phosphorylated by the three-subunit CDK-activating kinase (CAK; CCNH, MAT1, and CDK7). These results suggest new models for CDK7 function in transcription and implicate CAK dissociation from TFIIH as essential for kinase activation. This straightforward regulatory strategy ensures CDK7 activation is spatially and temporally linked to transcription, and may apply toward other transcription-associated kinases.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis