Human capping enzyme promotes formation of transcriptional R loops in vitro
- *Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027; and
- ‡Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine, Piscataway, NJ 08854
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Contributed by Aaron J. Shatkin, September 18, 2007 (received for review August 17, 2007)
Abstract
Cap formation is the first step of pre-mRNA processing in eukaryotic cells. Immediately after transcription initiation, capping enzyme (CE) is recruited to RNA polymerase II (Pol II) by the phosphorylated carboxyl-terminal domain of the Pol II largest subunit (CTD), allowing cotranscriptional capping of the nascent pre-mRNA. Recent studies have indicated that CE affects transcription elongation and have suggested a checkpoint model in which cotranscriptional capping is a necessary step for the early phase of transcription. To investigate further the role of the CTD in linking transcription and processing, we generated a fusion protein of the mouse CTD with T7 RNA polymerase (CTD-T7 RNAP). Unexpectedly, in vitro transcription assays with CTD-T7 RNAP showed that CE promotes formation of DNA·RNA hybrids or R loops. Significantly, phosphorylation of the CTD was required for CE-dependent R-loop formation (RLF), consistent with a critical role for the CTD in CE recruitment to the transcription complex. The guanylyltransferase domain was necessary and sufficient for RLF, but catalytic activity was not required. In vitro assays with appropriate synthetic substrates indicate that CE can promote RLF independent of transcription. ASF/SF2, a splicing factor known to prevent RLF, and GTP, which affects CE conformation, antagonized CE-dependent RLF. Our findings suggest that CE can play a direct role in transcription by modulating displacement of nascent RNA during transcription.
Footnotes
- §To whom correspondence may be addressed. E-mail: shatkin{at}cabm.rutgers.edu or jlm2{at}columbia.edu
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Author contributions: S.K. and J.L.M. designed research; S.K. performed research; C.C. and A.J.S. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; S.K. and J.L.M. analyzed data; and S.K. and J.L.M. wrote the paper.
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↵ †Present address: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, New York University School of Medicine–Smilow Research Center, Biochemistry Department, New York, NY 10016.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Abbreviations:
- CE,
- capping enzyme;
- CTD,
- carboxyl-terminal domain;
- EC,
- elongation complex;
- GTase,
- RNA guanylyltransferase;
- HMW,
- high-molecular-weight;
- NELF,
- negative elongation factor;
- RLF,
- R-loop formation;
- Pol II,
- RNA polymerase II.
- © 2007 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





