4.5 Article

Recruitment of Xrn1 to stress-induced genes allows efficient transcription by controlling RNA polymerase II backtracking

Journal

RNA BIOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue 10, Pages 1458-1474

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15476286.2020.1857521

Keywords

Xrn1; RNA polymerase II; osmotic stress; backtracking; mRNA stability; transcription; Hog1

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This study demonstrates the crucial role of Xrn1 in the transcriptional response of yeast cells to osmotic stress, showing that a lack of Xrn1 results in significantly lower transcriptional induction of upregulated genes, despite similar high levels of their transcripts due to parallel mRNA stabilization. In addition, Xrn1 seems to be directly involved in the formation of a competent elongation complex, recruiting to stress-upregulated genes in parallel with the RNAPII complex.
A new paradigm has emerged proposing that the crosstalk between nuclear transcription and cytoplasmic mRNA stability keeps robust mRNA levels in cells under steady-state conditions. A key piece in this crosstalk is the highly conserved 5 '-3 ' RNA exonuclease Xrn1, which degrades most cytoplasmic mRNAs but also associates with nuclear chromatin to activate transcription by not well-understood mechanisms. Here, we investigated the role of Xrn1 in the transcriptional response of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells to osmotic stress. We show that a lack of Xrn1 results in much lower transcriptional induction of the upregulated genes but in similar high levels of their transcripts because of parallel mRNA stabilization. Unexpectedly, lower transcription in xrn1 occurs with a higher accumulation of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) at stress-inducible genes, suggesting that this polymerase remains inactive backtracked. Xrn1 seems to be directly implicated in the formation of a competent elongation complex because Xrn1 is recruited to the osmotic stress-upregulated genes in parallel with the RNAPII complex, and both are dependent on the mitogen-activated protein kinase Hog1. Our findings extend the role of Xrn1 in preventing the accumulation of inactive RNAPII at highly induced genes to other situations of rapid and strong transcriptional upregulation.

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