The DEAD-box helicase Hlc regulates basal transcription and chromatin opening of stress-responsive genes

Abstract Stress-responsive genes are lowly transcribed under normal conditions and robustly induced in response to stress. The significant difference between basal and induced transcription indicates that the general transcriptional machinery requires a mechanism to distinguish each transcription st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nucleic acids research 2022-09, Vol.50 (16), p.9175-9189
Hauptverfasser: Jia, Ruirui, Lin, Jiamei, You, Jin, Li, Shi, Shan, Ge, Huang, Chuan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Stress-responsive genes are lowly transcribed under normal conditions and robustly induced in response to stress. The significant difference between basal and induced transcription indicates that the general transcriptional machinery requires a mechanism to distinguish each transcription state. However, what factors specifically function in basal transcription remains poorly understood. Using a classic model stress-responsive gene (Drosophila MtnA), we found that knockdown of the DEAD-box helicase Hlc resulted in a significant transcription attenuation of MtnA under normal, but not stressed, conditions. Mechanistically, Hlc directly binds to the MtnA locus to maintain the accessibility of chromatin near the transcriptional start site, which allows the recruitment of RNA polymerase II and subsequent MtnA transcription. Using RNA-seq, we then identified plenty of additional stress-responsive genes whose basal transcription was reduced upon knockdown of Hlc. Taken together, these data suggest that Hlc-mediated basal transcription regulation is an essential and widespread mechanism for precise control of stress-responsive genes. Graphical Abstract Graphical Abstract Hlc regulates the basal transcription of stress-responsive genes by enhancing the genomic accessibility.
ISSN:0305-1048
1362-4962
DOI:10.1093/nar/gkac684