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Stochastic pausing at latent HIV-1 promoters generates transcriptional bursting.

Katjana TantaleEncar Garcia-OliverMarie-Cécile RobertAdèle L'HostisYueyuxiao YangNikolay TsanovRachel TopnoThierry GostanAlja Kozulic-PirherMeenakshi Basu-ShrivastavaKamalika MukherjeeVera SlaninovaJean-Christophe AndrauFlorian MuellerEugenia BasyukOvidiu RadulescuEdouard Bertrand
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
Promoter-proximal pausing of RNA polymerase II is a key process regulating gene expression. In latent HIV-1 cells, it prevents viral transcription and is essential for latency maintenance, while in acutely infected cells the viral factor Tat releases paused polymerase to induce viral expression. Pausing is fundamental for HIV-1, but how it contributes to bursting and stochastic viral reactivation is unclear. Here, we performed single molecule imaging of HIV-1 transcription. We developed a quantitative analysis method that manages multiple time scales from seconds to days and that rapidly fits many models of promoter dynamics. We found that RNA polymerases enter a long-lived pause at latent HIV-1 promoters (>20 minutes), thereby effectively limiting viral transcription. Surprisingly and in contrast to current models, pausing appears stochastic and not obligatory, with only a small fraction of the polymerases undergoing long-lived pausing in absence of Tat. One consequence of stochastic pausing is that HIV-1 transcription occurs in bursts in latent cells, thereby facilitating latency exit and providing a rationale for the stochasticity of viral rebounds.
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