scholarly journals The temporal landscape of recursive splicing during Pol II transcription elongation in human cells

PLoS Genetics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. e1007579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-Ou Zhang ◽  
Yu Fu ◽  
Haiwei Mou ◽  
Wen Xue ◽  
Zhiping Weng
2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (41) ◽  
pp. 25486-25493 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Xu ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Liang Xu ◽  
Jia-Yu Chen ◽  
Jenny Chong ◽  
...  

While loss-of-function mutations in Cockayne syndrome group B protein (CSB) cause neurological diseases, this unique member of the SWI2/SNF2 family of chromatin remodelers has been broadly implicated in transcription elongation and transcription-coupled DNA damage repair, yet its mechanism remains largely elusive. Here, we use a reconstituted in vitro transcription system with purified polymerase II (Pol II) and Rad26, a yeast ortholog of CSB, to study the role of CSB in transcription elongation through nucleosome barriers. We show that CSB forms a stable complex with Pol II and acts as an ATP-dependent processivity factor that helps Pol II across a nucleosome barrier. This noncanonical mechanism is distinct from the canonical modes of chromatin remodelers that directly engage and remodel nucleosomes or transcription elongation factors that facilitate Pol II nucleosome bypass without hydrolyzing ATP. We propose a model where CSB facilitates gene expression by helping Pol II bypass chromatin obstacles while maintaining their structures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. iii287-iii287
Author(s):  
Hiroaki Katagi ◽  
Nozomu Takata ◽  
Yuki Aoi ◽  
Yongzhan Zhang ◽  
Emily J Rendleman ◽  
...  

Abstract Diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) is highly aggressive brain stem tumor and needed to develop novel therapeutic agents for the treatment. The super elongation complex (SEC) is essential for transcription elongation through release of RNA polymerase II (Pol II). We found that AFF4, a scaffold protein of the SEC, is required for the growth of H3K27M-mutant DIPG cells. In addition, the small molecule SEC inhibitor, KL-1, increased promoter-proximal pausing of Pol II, and reduced transcription elongation, resulting in down-regulate cell cycle, transcription and DNA repair genes. KL-1 treatment decreased cell growth and increased apoptosis in H3K27M-mutant DIPG cells, and prolonged animal survival in our human H3K27M-mutant DIPG xenograft model. Our results demonstrate that the SEC disruption by KL-1 is a novel therapeutic strategy for H3K27M-mutant DIPG.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Yu ◽  
Robert Roeder ◽  
Aiwei Wu ◽  
Junhong Zhi ◽  
Tian Tian ◽  
...  

DOT1L, the only H3K79 methyltransferase in human cells and a homolog of the yeast Dot1, normally forms a complex with AF10, AF17 and ENL/AF9, is dysregulated in most of the cases of mixed lineage leukemia (MLL) and is believed to regulate transcriptional elongation without much evidence. Here we show that DOT1L depletion reduced the global occupancy without affecting the traveling ratio or the elongation rate of Pol II, suggesting it not a major elongation factor. An examination of general transcription factors binding revealed globally reduced TBP and TFIIA occupancies near promoters after DOT1L loss, pointing to a role in transcriptional initiation. Proteomic studies uncovered that DOT1L regulates transcriptional initiation likely by facilitating the recruitment of TFIID. Moreover, ENL, a DOT1L complex subunit with a known role in DOT1L recruitment, also regulates transcriptional initiation. Furthermore, DOT1L stimulates H2B monoubiquitination by limiting the recruitment of human SAGA complex, and the connection between Dot1/DOT1L and SAGA complex is conserved between yeast and human. These results advanced current understanding of roles of DOT1L complex in transcriptional regulation and MLL.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (6) ◽  
pp. e2007450118
Author(s):  
Peiyuan Feng ◽  
An Xiao ◽  
Meng Fang ◽  
Fangping Wan ◽  
Shuya Li ◽  
...  

RNA polymerase II (Pol II) generally pauses at certain positions along gene bodies, thereby interrupting the transcription elongation process, which is often coupled with various important biological functions, such as precursor mRNA splicing and gene expression regulation. Characterizing the transcriptional elongation dynamics can thus help us understand many essential biological processes in eukaryotic cells. However, experimentally measuring Pol II elongation rates is generally time and resource consuming. We developed PEPMAN (polymerase II elongation pausing modeling through attention-based deep neural network), a deep learning-based model that accurately predicts Pol II pausing sites based on the native elongating transcript sequencing (NET-seq) data. Through fully taking advantage of the attention mechanism, PEPMAN is able to decipher important sequence features underlying Pol II pausing. More importantly, we demonstrated that the analyses of the PEPMAN-predicted results around various types of alternative splicing sites can provide useful clues into understanding the cotranscriptional splicing events. In addition, associating the PEPMAN prediction results with different epigenetic features can help reveal important factors related to the transcription elongation process. All these results demonstrated that PEPMAN can provide a useful and effective tool for modeling transcription elongation and understanding the related biological factors from available high-throughput sequencing data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-118.e4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan M. Sheridan ◽  
Nova Fong ◽  
Angelo D’Alessandro ◽  
David L. Bentley

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 2379-2379
Author(s):  
Qiwen Yang ◽  
Xiuli Liu ◽  
Ting Zhou ◽  
Jennifer Cook ◽  
Kim Nguyen ◽  
...  

Abstract Regulation of RNA polymerase II (Pol II)-mediated gene transcription is a fundamental mechanism to control cell fate during developmental organogenesis, including the emergence of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in vertebrate embryos. Increasing evidences in recent years have demonstrated that transcriptionally engaged Pol II often pauses shortly after initiation by pausing factors such as DSIF and NELF, and requires positive elongation factors such as P-TEFb for pause release. How this pause-to-elongation transition contributes to HSC development is largely unknown. In a zebrafish spt5 mutant, we detected a dramatic loss of HSCs in early embryos. Spt5 is a key subunit of DSIF, which plays a dual role in both Pol II pausing and elongation. The mutation of the zebrafish spt5 mutant has been reported to specifically disrupt the pausing function of DSIF. Similarly, reduction of HSCs was also detected in embryos lacking the other pausing factor NELF. Consistent with the loss-of-pausing in Spt5- and NELF-deficient embryos, we found that the HSC defect could be rescued by inhibiting Pol II pause-to-elongation transition with either P-TEFb inhibitors or knockdown of the P-TEFb subunit cdk9. Intriguingly, we identified that two essential signaling pathways involved in HSC development, the TGFβ signaling pathway and the JAK-STAT mediated proinflammation pathway, were oppositely regulated by Pol II pausing. In spt5 mutant embryos, the TGFβ signaling pathway is upregulated with an enhanced transcription elongation at several TGFβ signaling regulators, as revealed by Pol II ChIP assays; whereas the transcription of multiple genes involved in proinflammation signaling pathways, especially the genes regulating the interferon signaling, are downregulated. Pol II ChIP and nucleosome mapping studies revealed an increase of nucleosome occupancy at the promoters of proinflammation genes, leading to attenuated transcription initiation. These results suggest that paused Pol II can compete with nucleosomes for occupancy on some promoters to maintain accessible chromatin thus the basal transcription level of these genes. Consistent with the change of signaling activity, the HSC defect in mutant embryos could be effectively rescued by TGFβ inhibitors or by activation of JAK-STAT, the downstream effector of IFNγ signaling. Thus Pol II pausing affects HSC emergence through differentially regulating the transcription of distinct signaling regulators: while they negatively regulate the HSC inhibitory signaling (such as TGFβ) by preventing premature transcription elongation, they are also required to maintain the basal transcription of HSC-promoting signaling (such as the inflammation signaling) by preventing promoter nucleosome reassembly. In summary, our study suggests that Pol II pausing/elongation regulators and developmental signals converge at the paused Pol II to regulate HSC emergence in vertebrate embryos. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (22) ◽  
pp. 3810-3828 ◽  
Author(s):  
Swapna Aravind Gudipaty ◽  
Ryan P. McNamara ◽  
Emily L. Morton ◽  
Iván D'Orso

Transcription elongation programs are vital for the precise regulation of several biological processes. One key regulator of such programs is the P-TEFb kinase, which phosphorylates RNA polymerase II (Pol II) once released from the inhibitory 7SK small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) complex. Although mechanisms of P-TEFb release from the snRNP are becoming clearer, how P-TEFb remains in the 7SK-unbound state to sustain transcription elongation programs remains unknown. Here we report that the PPM1G phosphatase (inducibly recruited by nuclear factor κB [NF-κB] to target promoters) directly binds 7SK RNA and the kinase inhibitor Hexim1 once P-TEFb has been released from the 7SK snRNP. This dual binding activity of PPM1G blocks P-TEFb reassembly onto the snRNP to sustain NF-κB-mediated Pol II transcription in response to DNA damage. Notably, the PPM1G-7SK RNA interaction is direct, kinetically follows the recruitment of PPM1G to promoters to activate NF-κB transcription, and is reversible, since the complex disassembles before resolution of the program. Strikingly, we found that the ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) kinase regulates the interaction between PPM1G and the 7SK snRNP through site-specific PPM1G phosphorylation. The precise and temporally regulated interaction of a cellular enzyme and a noncoding RNA provides a new paradigm for simultaneously controlling the activation and maintenance of inducible transcription elongation programs.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kinga Winczura ◽  
Hurmuz Ceylan ◽  
Monika Sledziowska ◽  
Matt Jones ◽  
Holly Fagarasan ◽  
...  

The regulation of transcription is an essential process that allows the cell to respond to various internal and external signals. RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) activity is controlled by a number of factors which bind to the C-terminal domain (CTD) of its largest subunit, RPB1, and stimulate or suppress RNA synthesis. Here, we demonstrate that CTD-interacting proteins, RPRD2, RPRD1B and RPRD1A act as negative regulators of transcription and their levels inversely correlate with the accumulation of nascent and newly transcribed RNA in human cells. We show that the RPRD proteins form mutually exclusive complexes with Pol II to coordinate their roles in transcriptional control. Our data indicate that RPRD2 exerts the most substantial impact on transcription and has the potential to alter key biological processes including the cellular stress response and cell growth.


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