Targeted protein degradation reveals a direct role of SPT6 in RNAPII elongation and termination

Ashwin Narain(University of Würzburg), Pranjali Bhandare(University of Würzburg), Bikash Adhikari(University of Würzburg), Simone Backes(University of Würzburg), Martin Eilers(University of Würzburg), Lars Dölken(University of Würzburg), Andreas Schlösser(University of Würzburg), Florian Erhard(University of Würzburg), Apoorva Baluapuri(University of Würzburg), Elmar Wolf(University of Würzburg)
Molecular Cell
July 6, 2021
Cited by 82Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

SPT6 is a histone chaperone that tightly binds RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) during transcription elongation. However, its primary role in transcription is uncertain. We used targeted protein degradation to rapidly deplete SPT6 in human cells and analyzed defects in RNAPII behavior by a multi-omics approach and mathematical modeling. Our data indicate that SPT6 is a crucial factor for RNAPII processivity and is therefore required for the productive transcription of protein-coding genes. Unexpectedly, SPT6 also has a vital role in RNAPII termination, as acute depletion induced readthrough transcription for thousands of genes. Long-term depletion of SPT6 induced cryptic intragenic transcription, as observed earlier in yeast. However, this phenotype was not observed upon acute SPT6 depletion and therefore can be attributed to accumulated epigenetic perturbations in the prolonged absence of SPT6. In conclusion, targeted degradation of SPT6 allowed the temporal discrimination of its function as an epigenetic safeguard and RNAPII elongation factor.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis