DNA-directed termination of RNA polymerase II transcription

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RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) transcription involves initiation from a promoter, transcriptional elongation through the gene, and termination in the terminator region. In bacteria, terminators often contain specific DNA elements provoking polymerase dissociation, but RNAPII transcription termination is thought to be driven entirely by protein co-factors. We used biochemical reconstitution, single-molecule studies, and genome-wide analysis in yeast to study RNAPII termination. Transcription into natural terminators by pure RNAPII results in spontaneous termination at specific sequences containing T-tracts. Single-molecule analysis indicates that termination involves pausing without backtracking. The “torpedo” Rat1-Rai1 exonuclease (XRN2 in humans) greatly stimulates spontaneous termination but is ineffectual on other paused RNAPIIs. By contrast, elongation factor Spt4-Spt5 (DSIF) suppresses termination. Genome-wide analysis further indicates that termination occurs by transcript cleavage at the poly(A) site exposing a new 5′ RNA-end that allows Rat1-Rai1 loading, which then catches up with destabilized RNAPII at specific termination sites to end transcription.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftMolecular Cell
Vol/bind83
Udgave nummer18
Sider (fra-til)3253-3267.e7
Antal sider15
ISSN1097-2765
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Laureate grant from the Novo Nordisk Foundation ( NNF19OC0055875 ), a Chair grant ( DNRF153 ), and a Center of Excellence grant ( DNRF166 ) from the Danish National Research Foundation to J.Q.S., and by an EMBO Fellowship ( ALTF 5-2019 ) to Z.H. It was also funded by the Francis Crick Institute ( FC001166 ), which receives funding from Cancer Research UK , the UK Medical Research Council , and the Wellcome Trust . Rueda Lab was supported by a grant of the UKRI MRC-London Institute of Medical Sciences ( UKRI MC-A658-5TY10 ) and a Wellcome Trust Collaborative Grant ( 206292/Z/17/Z ). G.A.M. was supported by an Imperial College London Presidential Scholarship . We thank CRICK’s Advanced Sequencing Facility and Fermentation facility for expert assistance, the Freiburg Galaxy platform ( usegalaxy.eu ) for providing computational resources, Patrick Cramer for providing yeast anchor-away strains, Joseph Reese for providing Spt4-Spt5 plasmids, Peter Verrijzer for comments on the manuscript, and Svejstrup lab members for discussions.

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© 2023 The Authors

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