7 research outputs found

    Widespread occurrence of non-canonical transcription termination by human RNA polymerase III

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    Human RNA polymerase (Pol) III-transcribed genes are thought to share a simple termination signal constituted by four or more consecutive thymidine residues in the coding DNA strand, just downstream of the RNA 3ā€²-end sequence. We found that a large set of human tRNA genes (tDNAs) do not display any Tā‰„4 stretch within 50ā€‰bp of 3ā€²-flanking region. In vitro analysis of tDNAs with a distanced Tā‰„4 revealed the existence of non-canonical terminators resembling degenerate Tā‰„5 elements, which ensure significant termination but at the same time allow for the production of Pol III read-through pre-tRNAs with unusually long 3ā€² trailers. A panel of such non-canonical signals was found to direct transcription termination of unusual Pol III-synthesized viral pre-miRNA transcripts in gammaherpesvirus 68-infected cells. Genome-wide location analysis revealed that human Pol III tends to trespass into the 3ā€²-flanking regions of tDNAs, as expected from extensive terminator read-through. The widespread occurrence of partial termination suggests that the Pol III primary transcriptome in mammals is unexpectedly enriched in 3ā€²-trailer sequences with the potential to contribute novel functional ncRNA

    Widespread occurrence of non-canonical transcription termination by human RNA polymerase III

    Get PDF
    Human RNA polymerase (Pol) III-transcribed genes are thought to share a simple termination signal constituted by four or more consecutive thymidine residues in the coding DNA strand, just downstream of the RNA 3ā€²-end sequence. We found that a large set of human tRNA genes (tDNAs) do not display any Tā‰„4 stretch within 50ā€‰bp of 3ā€²-flanking region. In vitro analysis of tDNAs with a distanced Tā‰„4 revealed the existence of non-canonical terminators resembling degenerate Tā‰„5 elements, which ensure significant termination but at the same time allow for the production of Pol III read-through pre-tRNAs with unusually long 3ā€² trailers. A panel of such non-canonical signals was found to direct transcription termination of unusual Pol III-synthesized viral pre-miRNA transcripts in gammaherpesvirus 68-infected cells. Genome-wide location analysis revealed that human Pol III tends to trespass into the 3ā€²-flanking regions of tDNAs, as expected from extensive terminator read-through. The widespread occurrence of partial termination suggests that the Pol III primary transcriptome in mammals is unexpectedly enriched in 3ā€²-trailer sequences with the potential to contribute novel functional ncRNAs

    Mature and functional viral miRNAs transcribed from novel RNA polymerase III promoters

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    Murid herpesvirus 4 (MuHV-4) microRNAs were previously cloned from latently infected tumor cells and predicted to be processed from a series of RNA polymerase III primary transcripts. We detected maturely processed MuHV-4 miRNAs within total RNA from lytically infected cells in vitro and infected tissues ex vivo, using a highly sensitive reverse ligation meditated RT-PCR strategy. We determined that the MuHV-4 microRNAs are biologically active during infection by a luciferase reporter system. We experimentally demonstrated that transcription of the MuHV-4 microRNAs is by RNA polymerase III by Ī±-amanitin insensitivity and by specific deletion of the RNA polymerase III type 2-like promoter elements of MuHV-4, resulting in the complete loss of miRNA detection and function. Finally, we demonstrate that these 10 viral miRNAs, each transcribed from highly conserved and novel polymerase III promoter elements, vary markedly in their relative abundance and activity
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