Molecular Cell
Volume 50, Issue 2, 25 April 2013, Pages 212-222
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Article
Signaling Pathways Differentially Affect RNA Polymerase II Initiation, Pausing, and Elongation Rate in Cells

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Summary

RNA polymerase II (Pol II) transcribes hundreds of kilobases of DNA, limiting the production of mRNAs and lncRNAs. We used global run-on sequencing (GRO-seq) to measure the rates of transcription by Pol II following gene activation. Elongation rates vary as much as 4-fold at different genomic loci and in response to two distinct cellular signaling pathways (i.e., 17β-estradiol [E2] and TNF-α). The rates are slowest near the promoter and increase during the first ∼15 kb transcribed. Gene body elongation rates correlate with Pol II density, resulting in systematically higher rates of transcript production at genes with higher Pol II density. Pol II dynamics following short inductions indicate that E2 stimulates gene expression by increasing Pol II initiation, whereas TNF-α reduces Pol II residence time at pause sites. Collectively, our results identify previously uncharacterized variation in the rate of transcription and highlight elongation as an important, variable, and regulated rate-limiting step during transcription.

Highlights

► Pol II rates vary by 4-fold between genes, cell types, and induction conditions ► Rates correlate strongly with gene expression but weakly with nucleosome occupancy ► Rate variation has important consequences for mRNA and lncRNA production ► E2 signaling stimulates Pol II initiation; TNF-α signaling reduces Pol II pause time

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Present address: Gene Expression Laboratory, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA