| Literature DB >> 25957685 |
Evangelos Pefanis1, Jiguang Wang2, Gerson Rothschild3, Junghyun Lim3, David Kazadi3, Jianbo Sun3, Alexander Federation4, Jaime Chao3, Oliver Elliott2, Zhi-Ping Liu5, Aris N Economides6, James E Bradner4, Raul Rabadan7, Uttiya Basu8.
Abstract
We have ablated the cellular RNA degradation machinery in differentiated B cells and pluripotent embryonic stem cells (ESCs) by conditional mutagenesis of core (Exosc3) and nuclear RNase (Exosc10) components of RNA exosome and identified a vast number of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) and enhancer RNAs (eRNAs) with emergent functionality. Unexpectedly, eRNA-expressing regions accumulate R-loop structures upon RNA exosome ablation, thus demonstrating the role of RNA exosome in resolving deleterious DNA/RNA hybrids arising from active enhancers. We have uncovered a distal divergent eRNA-expressing element (lncRNA-CSR) engaged in long-range DNA interactions and regulating IgH 3' regulatory region super-enhancer function. CRISPR-Cas9-mediated ablation of lncRNA-CSR transcription decreases its chromosomal looping-mediated association with the IgH 3' regulatory region super-enhancer and leads to decreased class switch recombination efficiency. We propose that the RNA exosome protects divergently transcribed lncRNA expressing enhancers by resolving deleterious transcription-coupled secondary DNA structures, while also regulating long-range super-enhancer chromosomal interactions important for cellular function.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25957685 PMCID: PMC4428671 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.04.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582