4.8 Article

RNA Polymerase II Read-Through Promotes Expression of Neighboring Genes in SAL1-PAP-XRN Retrograde Signaling

Journal

PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 4, Pages 1614-1630

Publisher

AMER SOC PLANT BIOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.1104/pp.18.00758

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Funding

  1. ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology [CE140100008]
  2. Grains Research and Development Council scholarships [GRS184, GRS11010, GRS10683]
  3. ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award [DE150101206]
  4. Australian Research Training Program (RTP) scholarships

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In plants, the molecular function(s) of the nucleus-localized 5'-3' EXORIBONUCLEASES (XRNs) are unclear; however, their activity is reported to have a significant effect on gene expression and SAL1-mediated retrograde signaling. Using parallel analysis of RNA ends, we documented a dramatic increase in uncapped RNA substrates of the XRNs in both sail and xrn2xrn3 mutants. We found that a major consequence of reducing SAL1 or XRN activity was RNA Polymerase II 3' read-through. This occurred at 72% of expressed genes, demonstrating a major genome-wide role for the XRN-torpedo model of transcription termination in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana). Read-through is speculated to have a negative effect on transcript abundance; however, we did not observe this. Rather, we identified a strong association between read-through and increased transcript abundance of tandemly orientated downstream genes, strongly correlated with the proximity (less than 1,000 bp) and expression of the upstream gene. We observed read-through in the proximity of 903 genes up-regulated in the sall-8 retrograde signaling mutant; thus, this phenomenon may account directly for up to 23% of genes up-regulated in sail-8. Using APX2 and AT5G43770 as exemplars, we genetically uncoupled read-through loci from downstream genes to validate the principle of read-through-mediated mRNA regulation, providing one mechanism by which an ostensibly posttranscriptional exoribonuclease that targets uncapped RNAs could modulate gene expression.

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