A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.

Making the correct choice between transcription elongation and transcription termination is essential to the function of RNA polymerase II, and fundamental to gene expression. This choice can be influenced by factors modifying the transcription complex, factors modifying chromatin, or signals mediat...

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Main Authors: Ayan Banerjee, Mimi C Sammarco, Scott Ditch, Jeffrey Wang, Ed Grabczyk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2702688?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3c4d30044e9d47c49ba4683a46ae93cb2020-11-25T00:23:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-07-0147e619310.1371/journal.pone.0006193A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.Ayan BanerjeeMimi C SammarcoScott DitchJeffrey WangEd GrabczykMaking the correct choice between transcription elongation and transcription termination is essential to the function of RNA polymerase II, and fundamental to gene expression. This choice can be influenced by factors modifying the transcription complex, factors modifying chromatin, or signals mediated by the template or transcript. To aid in the study of transcription elongation and termination we have developed a transcription elongation reporter system that consists of tandem luciferase reporters flanking a test sequence of interest. The ratio of expression from the reporters provides a measure of the relative rates of successful elongation through the intervening sequence.Size matched fragments containing the polyadenylation signal of the human beta-actin gene (ACTB) and the human beta-globin gene (HBB) were evaluated for transcription termination using this new ratiometric tandem reporter assay. Constructs bearing just 200 base pairs on either side of the consensus poly(A) addition site terminated 98% and 86% of transcription for ACTB and HBB sequences, respectively. The nearly 10-fold difference in read-through transcription between the two short poly(A) regions was eclipsed when additional downstream poly(A) sequence was included for each gene. Both poly(A) regions proved very effective at termination when 1100 base pairs were included, stopping 99.6% of transcription. To determine if part of the increased termination was simply due to the increased template length, we inserted several kilobases of heterologous coding sequence downstream of each poly(A) region test fragment. Unexpectedly, the additional length reduced the effectiveness of termination of HBB sequences 2-fold and of ACTB sequences 3- to 5-fold.The tandem construct provides a sensitive measure of transcription termination in human cells. Decreased Xrn2 or Senataxin levels produced only a modest release from termination. Our data support overlap in allosteric and torpedo mechanisms of transcription termination and suggest that efficient termination is ensured by redundancy.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2702688?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ayan Banerjee
Mimi C Sammarco
Scott Ditch
Jeffrey Wang
Ed Grabczyk
spellingShingle Ayan Banerjee
Mimi C Sammarco
Scott Ditch
Jeffrey Wang
Ed Grabczyk
A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Ayan Banerjee
Mimi C Sammarco
Scott Ditch
Jeffrey Wang
Ed Grabczyk
author_sort Ayan Banerjee
title A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
title_short A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
title_full A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
title_fullStr A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
title_full_unstemmed A novel tandem reporter quantifies RNA polymerase II termination in mammalian cells.
title_sort novel tandem reporter quantifies rna polymerase ii termination in mammalian cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-07-01
description Making the correct choice between transcription elongation and transcription termination is essential to the function of RNA polymerase II, and fundamental to gene expression. This choice can be influenced by factors modifying the transcription complex, factors modifying chromatin, or signals mediated by the template or transcript. To aid in the study of transcription elongation and termination we have developed a transcription elongation reporter system that consists of tandem luciferase reporters flanking a test sequence of interest. The ratio of expression from the reporters provides a measure of the relative rates of successful elongation through the intervening sequence.Size matched fragments containing the polyadenylation signal of the human beta-actin gene (ACTB) and the human beta-globin gene (HBB) were evaluated for transcription termination using this new ratiometric tandem reporter assay. Constructs bearing just 200 base pairs on either side of the consensus poly(A) addition site terminated 98% and 86% of transcription for ACTB and HBB sequences, respectively. The nearly 10-fold difference in read-through transcription between the two short poly(A) regions was eclipsed when additional downstream poly(A) sequence was included for each gene. Both poly(A) regions proved very effective at termination when 1100 base pairs were included, stopping 99.6% of transcription. To determine if part of the increased termination was simply due to the increased template length, we inserted several kilobases of heterologous coding sequence downstream of each poly(A) region test fragment. Unexpectedly, the additional length reduced the effectiveness of termination of HBB sequences 2-fold and of ACTB sequences 3- to 5-fold.The tandem construct provides a sensitive measure of transcription termination in human cells. Decreased Xrn2 or Senataxin levels produced only a modest release from termination. Our data support overlap in allosteric and torpedo mechanisms of transcription termination and suggest that efficient termination is ensured by redundancy.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2702688?pdf=render
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