Molecular Cell
Volume 65, Issue 1, 5 January 2017, Pages 25-38
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Article
Distinctive Patterns of Transcription and RNA Processing for Human lincRNAs

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2016.11.029Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • lincRNAs and pre-mRNAs are transcribed by different Pol II phospho-CTD isoforms

  • lincRNAs are rarely spliced and mainly non-polyadenylated

  • lincRNAs are stabilized in the nucleoplasm following exosome inactivation

  • lincRNAs are co-transcriptionally cleaved

Summary

Numerous long intervening noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs) are generated from the mammalian genome by RNA polymerase II (Pol II) transcription. Although multiple functions have been ascribed to lincRNAs, their synthesis and turnover remain poorly characterized. Here, we define systematic differences in transcription and RNA processing between protein-coding and lincRNA genes in human HeLa cells. This is based on a range of nascent transcriptomic approaches applied to different nuclear fractions, including mammalian native elongating transcript sequencing (mNET-seq). Notably, mNET-seq patterns specific for different Pol II CTD phosphorylation states reveal weak co-transcriptional splicing and poly(A) signal-independent Pol II termination of lincRNAs as compared to pre-mRNAs. In addition, lincRNAs are mostly restricted to chromatin, since they are rapidly degraded by the RNA exosome. We also show that a lincRNA-specific co-transcriptional RNA cleavage mechanism acts to induce premature termination. In effect, functional lincRNAs must escape from this targeted nuclear surveillance process.

Keywords

mNET-seq
lincRNA
splicing
phosphor CTD marks
exosome
transcription termination
polyadenylation
CPSF73
empigen

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