1. Basis of gene-specific transcription regulation by the Integrator complex.
- Author
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Sabath, Kevin, Nabih, Amena, Arnold, Christian, Moussa, Rim, Domjan, David, Zaugg, Judith B., and Jonas, Stefanie
- Subjects
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RNA polymerase II , *GENETIC transcription , *TRANSCRIPTION factors , *GENE expression , *GLYCOGENOLYSIS - Abstract
The Integrator complex attenuates gene expression via the premature termination of RNA polymerase II (RNAP2) at promoter-proximal pausing sites. It is required for stimulus response, cell differentiation, and neurodevelopment, but how gene-specific and adaptive regulation by Integrator is achieved remains unclear. Here, we identify two sites on human Integrator subunits 13/14 that serve as binding hubs for sequence-specific transcription factors (TFs) and other transcription effector complexes. When Integrator is attached to paused RNAP2, these hubs are positioned upstream of the transcription bubble, consistent with simultaneous TF-promoter tethering. The TFs co-localize with Integrator genome-wide, increase Integrator abundance on target genes, and co-regulate responsive transcriptional programs. For instance, sensory cilia formation induced by glucose starvation depends on Integrator-TF contacts. Our data suggest TF-mediated promoter recruitment of Integrator as a widespread mechanism for targeted transcription regulation. [Display omitted] • Integrator binds a variety of gene-specific TFs and transcription effector complexes • TF-binding pockets on Integrator are positioned toward the promoter during pausing • Bound TFs co-localize on chromatin with Integrator and co-regulate target genes • Integrator-TF binding is required for transcriptional response to starvation stress Sabath et al. show that Integrator binds various transcription factors (TFs) directly and co-localizes with them on chromatin. TF binding is structurally consistent with Integrator-mediated termination of paused RNAP2. Integrator co-regulates genes with TFs, and Integrator-TF tethering is required for adaptive transcriptional programs such as cellular starvation response and cilia formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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