| Literature DB >> 34039974 |
Linda S Forero-Quintero1, William Raymond2, Tetsuya Handa3,4, Matthew N Saxton1, Tatsuya Morisaki1, Hiroshi Kimura3,5, Edouard Bertrand6, Brian Munsky7, Timothy J Stasevich8,9.
Abstract
The carboxyl-terminal domain of RNA polymerase II (RNAP2) is phosphorylated during transcription in eukaryotic cells. While residue-specific phosphorylation has been mapped with exquisite spatial resolution along the 1D genome in a population of fixed cells using immunoprecipitation-based assays, the timing, kinetics, and spatial organization of phosphorylation along a single-copy gene have not yet been measured in living cells. Here, we achieve this by combining multi-color, single-molecule microscopy with fluorescent antibody-based probes that specifically bind to different phosphorylated forms of endogenous RNAP2 in living cells. Applying this methodology to a single-copy HIV-1 reporter gene provides live-cell evidence for heterogeneity in the distribution of RNAP2 along the length of the gene as well as Serine 5 phosphorylated RNAP2 clusters that remain separated in both space and time from nascent mRNA synthesis. Computational models determine that 5 to 40 RNAP2 cluster around the promoter during a typical transcriptional burst, with most phosphorylated at Serine 5 within 6 seconds of arrival and roughly half escaping the promoter in ~1.5 minutes. Taken together, our data provide live-cell support for the notion of efficient transcription clusters that transiently form around promoters and contain high concentrations of RNAP2 phosphorylated at Serine 5.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34039974 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23417-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919