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ZC3H4/Restrictor Exerts a Stranglehold on Pervasive Transcription

Chris Estell, Steven West

2024Journal of Molecular Biology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) underpins all cellular processes and is perturbed in thousands of diseases. In humans, RNAPII transcribes ∼20000 protein-coding genes and engages in apparently futile non-coding transcription at thousands of other sites. Despite being so ubiquitous, this transcription is usually attenuated soon after initiation and the resulting products are immediately degraded by the nuclear exosome. We and others have recently described a new complex, "Restrictor", which appears to control such unproductive transcription. Underpinned by the RNA binding protein, ZC3H4, Restrictor curtails unproductive/pervasive transcription genome-wide. Here, we discuss these recent discoveries and speculate on some of the many unknowns regarding Restrictor function and mechanism.

Topics & Concepts

Transcription (linguistics)RNA polymerase IIBiologyTranscription factorRNACell biologyGeneGenomeComputational biologyGeneticsPromoterGene expressionLinguisticsPhilosophyRNA Research and SplicingGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
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