Cell
Volume 150, Issue 6, 14 September 2012, Pages 1147-1157
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Article
Microprocessor, Setx, Xrn2, and Rrp6 Co-operate to Induce Premature Termination of Transcription by RNAPII

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Summary

Transcription elongation is increasingly recognized as an important mechanism of gene regulation. Here, we show that microprocessor controls gene expression in an RNAi-independent manner. Microprocessor orchestrates the recruitment of termination factors Setx and Xrn2, and the 3′–5′ exoribonuclease, Rrp6, to initiate RNAPII pausing and premature termination at the HIV-1 promoter through cleavage of the stem-loop RNA, TAR. Rrp6 further processes the cleavage product, which generates a small RNA that is required to mediate potent transcriptional repression and chromatin remodeling at the HIV-1 promoter. Using chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled to high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq), we identified cellular gene targets whose transcription is modulated by microprocessor. Our study reveals RNAPII pausing and premature termination mediated by the co-operative activity of ribonucleases, Drosha/Dgcr8, Xrn2, and Rrp6, as a regulatory mechanism of RNAPII-dependent transcription elongation.

Highlights

► Microprocessor functions in transcription independently of RNAi ► Microprocessor induces premature termination by recruiting Setx, Xrn2, and Rrp6 ► Rrp6-dependent biogenesis of small TAR RNAs mediates silencing of HIV-1 LTR ► Microprocessor also regulates endogenous retroviruses and a subset of cellular genes

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These authors contributed equally to this work