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Conserved DNA sequence features underlie pervasive RNA polymerase pausing
Authors:Martyna Gajos,Olga Jasnovidova,Alena van   B  mmel,Susanne Freier,Martin Vingron,Andreas Mayer
Affiliation:Otto-Warburg-Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin 14195, Germany;Department of Mathematics and Computer Science, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 14195, Germany;Department of Computational Molecular Biology, Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin 14195, Germany
Abstract:Pausing of transcribing RNA polymerase is regulated and creates opportunities to control gene expression. Research in metazoans has so far mainly focused on RNA polymerase II (Pol II) promoter-proximal pausing leaving the pervasive nature of pausing and its regulatory potential in mammalian cells unclear. Here, we developed a pause detecting algorithm (PDA) for nucleotide-resolution occupancy data and a new native elongating transcript sequencing approach, termed nested NET-seq, that strongly reduces artifactual peaks commonly misinterpreted as pausing sites. Leveraging PDA and nested NET-seq reveal widespread genome-wide Pol II pausing at single-nucleotide resolution in human cells. Notably, the majority of Pol II pauses occur outside of promoter-proximal gene regions primarily along the gene-body of transcribed genes. Sequence analysis combined with machine learning modeling reveals DNA sequence properties underlying widespread transcriptional pausing including a new pause motif. Interestingly, key sequence determinants of RNA polymerase pausing are conserved between human cells and bacteria. These studies indicate pervasive sequence-induced transcriptional pausing in human cells and the knowledge of exact pause locations implies potential functional roles in gene expression.
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