Litcius/Paper detail

Collisions of RNA polymerases behind the replication fork promote alternative RNA splicing in newly replicated chromatin

Federica Bruno, Cristóbal Coronel Rodríguez, Cristina González‐Aguilera

2023Molecular Cell21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

DNA replication produces a global disorganization of chromatin structure that takes hours to be restored. However, how these chromatin rearrangements affect the regulation of gene expression and the maintenance of cell identity is not clear. Here, we use ChOR-seq and ChrRNA-seq experiments to analyze RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) activity and nascent RNA synthesis during the first hours after chromatin replication in human cells. We observe that transcription elongation is rapidly reactivated in nascent chromatin but that RNAPII abundance and distribution are altered, producing heterogeneous changes in RNA synthesis. Moreover, this first wave of transcription results in RNAPII blockages behind the replication fork, leading to changes in alternative splicing. Altogether, our results deepen our understanding of how transcriptional programs are regulated during cell division and uncover molecular mechanisms that explain why chromatin replication is an important source of gene expression variability.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyChromatinRNA polymerase IIRNA splicingTranscription (linguistics)Cell biologyDNA replicationRNAGeneticsGene expressionGenePromoterLinguisticsPhilosophyGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancer