iScience (Jun 2024)

N-terminal tagging of RNA Polymerase II shapes transcriptomes more than C-terminal alterations

  • Adam Callan-Sidat,
  • Emmanuel Zewdu,
  • Massimo Cavallaro,
  • Juntai Liu,
  • Daniel Hebenstreit

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 6
p. 109914

Abstract

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Summary: RNA polymerase II (Pol II) has a C-terminal domain (CTD) that is unstructured, consisting of a large number of heptad repeats, and whose precise function remains unclear. Here, we investigate how altering the CTD’s length and fusing it with protein tags affects transcriptional output on a genome-wide scale in mammalian cells at single-cell resolution. While transcription generally appears to occur in burst-like fashion, where RNA is predominantly made during short bursts of activity that are interspersed with periods of transcriptional silence, the CTD’s role in shaping these dynamics seems gene-dependent; global patterns of bursting appear mostly robust to CTD alterations. Introducing protein tags with defined structures to the N terminus cause transcriptome-wide effects, however. We find the type of tag to dominate characteristics of the resulting transcriptomes. This is possibly due to Pol II-interacting factors, including non-coding RNAs, whose expression correlates with the tags. Proteins involved in liquid-liquid phase separation appear prominently.

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