Cell
Volume 161, Issue 3, 23 April 2015, Pages 526-540
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Article
Mammalian NET-Seq Reveals Genome-wide Nascent Transcription Coupled to RNA Processing

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2015.03.027Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Development of mammalian native elongating transcript sequencing (mNET-seq)

  • Dynamic Pol II CTD phosphorylation during transcription cycle

  • Co-transcriptional splicing and microprocessing detected by mNET-seq

  • Termination factors are associated with Pol II pausing at both TES and TSS

Summary

Transcription is a highly dynamic process. Consequently, we have developed native elongating transcript sequencing technology for mammalian chromatin (mNET-seq), which generates single-nucleotide resolution, nascent transcription profiles. Nascent RNA was detected in the active site of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) along with associated RNA processing intermediates. In particular, we detected 5′splice site cleavage by the spliceosome, showing that cleaved upstream exon transcripts are associated with Pol II CTD phosphorylated on the serine 5 position (S5P), which is accumulated over downstream exons. Also, depletion of termination factors substantially reduces Pol II pausing at gene ends, leading to termination defects. Notably, termination factors play an additional promoter role by restricting non-productive RNA synthesis in a Pol II CTD S2P-specific manner. Our results suggest that CTD phosphorylation patterns established for yeast transcription are significantly different in mammals. Taken together, mNET-seq provides dynamic and detailed snapshots of the complex events underlying transcription in mammals.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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Co-first author