Publication

Transcriptional Burst Initiation and Polymerase Pause Release Are Key Control Points of Transcriptional Regulation.

current
   December 20th, 2018 at 10:03pm

Overview


Abstract

Transcriptional regulation occurs via changes to rates of different biochemical steps of transcription, but it remains unclear which rates are subject to change upon biological perturbation. Biochemical studies have suggested that stimuli predominantly affect the rates of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) recruitment and polymerase release from promoter-proximal pausing. Single-cell studies revealed that transcription occurs in discontinuous bursts, suggesting that features of such bursts like frequency and intensity could also be regulated. We combined Pol II chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) and single-cell transcriptional measurements to show that an independently regulated burst initiation step is required before polymerase recruitment can occur. Using a number of global and targeted transcriptional regulatory perturbations, we showed that biological perturbations regulated both burst initiation and polymerase pause release rates but seemed not to regulate polymerase recruitment rate. Our results suggest that transcriptional regulation primarily acts by changing the rates of burst initiation and polymerase pause release.

Authors

Bartman CR  •  Hamagami N  •  Keller CA  •  Giardine B  •  Hardison RC  •  Blobel GA  •  Raj A

Link

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30554946


Journal

Molecular cell

PMID:30554946

Published

December 6th, 2018