Authors
Sergei Nechaev, David C Fargo, Gilberto dos Santos, Liwen Liu, Yuan Gao, Karen Adelman
Publication date
2010/1/15
Journal
Science
Volume
327
Issue
5963
Pages
335-338
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Emerging evidence indicates that gene expression in higher organisms is regulated by RNA polymerase II stalling during early transcription elongation. To probe the mechanisms responsible for this regulation, we developed methods to isolate and characterize short RNAs derived from stalled RNA polymerase II in Drosophila cells. Significant levels of these short RNAs were generated from more than one-third of all genes, indicating that promoter-proximal stalling is a general feature of early polymerase elongation. Nucleotide composition of the initially transcribed sequence played an important role in promoting transcriptional stalling by rendering polymerase elongation complexes highly susceptible to backtracking and arrest. These results indicate that the intrinsic efficiency of early elongation can greatly affect gene expression.
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