Transcription initiation entails chromatin opening followed by pre-initiation complex formation and RNA polymerase II recruitment. Subsequent polymerase elongation requires additional signals, resulting in increased residence time downstream of the start site, a phenomenon referred to as pausing. Here, we harnessed single-molecule footprinting to quantify distinct steps of initiation in vivo throughout the Drosophila genome. This identifies the impact of promoter structure on initiation dynamics in relation to nucleosomal occupancy. Additionally, perturbation of transcriptional initiation reveals an unexpectedly high turnover of polymerases at paused promoters-an observation confirmed at the level of nascent RNAs. These observations argue that absence of elongation is largely caused by premature termination rather than by stable polymerase stalling. In support of this non-processive model, we observe that induction of the paused heat shock promoter depends on continuous initiation. Our study provides a framework to quantify protein binding at single-molecule resolution and refines concepts of transcriptional pausing.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2017.06.027 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
December 2024
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90033, USA.
A major challenge in epigenetics is uncovering the dynamic distribution of nucleosomes and other DNA-binding proteins, which plays a crucial role in regulating cellular functions. Established approaches such as ATAC-seq, ChIP-seq, and CUT&RUN provide valuable insights but are limited by the ensemble nature of their data, masking the cellular and molecular heterogeneity that is often functionally significant. Recently, long-read sequencing technologies, particularly Single Molecule, Real-Time (SMRT/PacBio) sequencing, have introduced transformative capabilities, such as N-methyladenine (6mA) footprinting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2024
Changping Laboratory, Beijing 102206, China.
Decades of research have established that mammalian transcription factors (TFs) bind to each gene's regulatory regions and cooperatively control tissue specificity, timing, and intensity of gene transcription. Mapping the combination of TF binding sites genome wide is critically important for understanding functional genomics. Here, we report a technique to measure TFs' binding sites on the human genome with a near single-base resolution by footprinting with deaminase (FOODIE) on a single-molecule and single-cell basis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
January 2025
Structural and Computational Biology Unit, European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), Meyerhofstrasse 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany.
Transcription of transfer RNA (tRNA) genes by RNA polymerase (Pol) III requires the general transcription factor IIIC (TFIIIC), which recognizes intragenic A-box and B-box DNA motifs of type II gene promoters. However, the underlying mechanism has remained elusive, in part due to missing structural information for A-box recognition. In this study, we use single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (smFRET) to reveal structural and real-time kinetic insights into how the 520-kDa yeast TFIIIC complex engages A-box and B-box DNA motifs in the context of a tRNA gene promoter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Rep Methods
December 2024
Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA; Department of Neuroscience, Friedman Brain Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA; Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Center for Advanced Genomics Technology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029, USA. Electronic address:
We apply a single-molecule chromatin fiber sequencing (Fiber-seq) protocol designed for amplification-free cell-type-specific mapping of the regulatory architecture at nucleosome resolution along extended ∼10-kb chromatin fibers to neuronal and non-neuronal nuclei sorted from human brain tissue. Specifically, application of this method enables the resolution of cell-selective promoter and enhancer architectures on single fibers, including transcription factor footprinting and position mapping, with sequence-specific fixation of nucleosome arrays flanking transcription start sites and regulatory motifs. We uncover haplotype-specific chromatin patterns, multiple regulatory elements cis-aligned on individual fibers, and accessible chromatin at 20,000 unique sites encompassing retrotransposons and other repeat sequences hitherto "unmappable" by short-read epigenomic sequencing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
December 2024
Department of Pharmacology, Weill Medical College, Cornell University, New York, United States.
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