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The pleiotropic roles of SPT5 in transcription

Aixia Song, Fei Chen

2022Transcription38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Initially discovered by genetic screens in budding yeast, SPT5 and its partner SPT4 form a stable complex known as DSIF in metazoa, which plays pleiotropic roles in multiple steps of transcription. SPT5 is the most conserved transcription elongation factor, being found in all three domains of life; however, its structure has evolved to include new domains and associated posttranslational modifications. These gained features have expanded transcriptional functions of SPT5, likely to meet the demand for increasingly complex regulation of transcription in higher organisms. This review discusses the pleiotropic roles of SPT5 in transcription, including RNA polymerase II (Pol II) stabilization, enhancer activation, Pol II pausing and its release, elongation, and termination, with a focus on the most recent progress of SPT5 functions in regulating metazoan transcription.

Topics & Concepts

RNA polymerase IITranscription (linguistics)EnhancerBiologyTranscription factor II FTranscription factorGeneral transcription factorTranscription factor II DTranscription preinitiation complexPromoterRNA polymerase II holoenzymeCell biologyGeneticsTranscriptional regulationComputational biologyGeneGene expressionPhilosophyLinguisticsGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA Research and SplicingFungal and yeast genetics research