4.5 Article

Alternative transcription start sites contribute to acute-stress-induced transcriptome response in human skeletal muscle

Journal

HUMAN GENOMICS
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40246-022-00399-8

Keywords

Transcription start site; CAGE; Differential TSSs usage; Promoter shift; Transcription factor

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR) [17-00-00308K, 20-015-00415]

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This study investigated the role of alternative transcription start sites (TSSs) in the acute stress-induced transcriptome response in human skeletal muscle. The activation of alternative TSSs was found to play a key role in gene expression changes, and the function of these TSSs is predominantly associated with the specific activation of transcription factors. A resource of accurate TSSs and individual promoter regions for each TSS in muscle was created, allowing for accurate prediction of transcription factors involved in the response of skeletal muscle to various stimuli.
Background More than half of human protein-coding genes have an alternative transcription start site (TSS). We aimed to investigate the contribution of alternative TSSs to the acute-stress-induced transcriptome response in human tissue (skeletal muscle) using the cap analysis of gene expression approach. TSSs were examined at baseline and during recovery after acute stress (a cycling exercise). Results We identified 44,680 CAGE TSS clusters (including 3764 first defined) belonging to 12,268 genes and annotated for the first time 290 TSSs belonging to 163 genes. The transcriptome dynamically changes during the first hours after acute stress; the change in the expression of 10% of genes was associated with the activation of alternative TSSs, indicating differential TSSs usage. The majority of the alternative TSSs do not increase proteome complexity suggesting that the function of thousands of alternative TSSs is associated with the fine regulation of mRNA isoform expression from a gene due to the transcription factor-specific activation of various alternative TSSs. We identified individual muscle promoter regions for each TSS using muscle open chromatin data (ATAC-seq and DNase-seq). Then, using the positional weight matrix approach we predicted time course activation of classic transcription factors involved in response of skeletal muscle to contractile activity, as well as diversity of less/un-investigated factors. Conclusions Transcriptome response induced by acute stress related to activation of the alternative TSSs indicates that differential TSSs usage is an essential mechanism of fine regulation of gene response to stress stimulus. A comprehensive resource of accurate TSSs and individual promoter regions for each TSS in muscle was created. This resource together with the positional weight matrix approach can be used to accurate prediction of TFs in any gene(s) of interest involved in the response to various stimuli, interventions or pathological conditions in human skeletal muscle.

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