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RNA polymerase II clustering through carboxy-terminal domain phase separation.

Marc BoehningClaire Dugast-DarzacqMarija RankovicAnders S HansenTaekyung YuHerve Marie-NellyDavid T McSwiggenGoran KokicGina M DaileyPatrick CramerXavier DarzacqMarkus Zweckstetter
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2018)
The carboxy-terminal domain (CTD) of RNA polymerase (Pol) II is an intrinsically disordered low-complexity region that is critical for pre-mRNA transcription and processing. The CTD consists of hepta-amino acid repeats varying in number from 52 in humans to 26 in yeast. Here we report that human and yeast CTDs undergo cooperative liquid phase separation, with the shorter yeast CTD forming less-stable droplets. In human cells, truncation of the CTD to the length of the yeast CTD decreases Pol II clustering and chromatin association, whereas CTD extension has the opposite effect. CTD droplets can incorporate intact Pol II and are dissolved by CTD phosphorylation with the transcription initiation factor IIH kinase CDK7. Together with published data, our results suggest that Pol II forms clusters or hubs at active genes through interactions between CTDs and with activators and that CTD phosphorylation liberates Pol II enzymes from hubs for promoter escape and transcription elongation.
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