Pcf11/Spt5 condensates stall RNA polymerase II to regulate gene-looping
ID:37
Submission ID:92 View Protection:ATTENDEE
Updated Time:2024-10-27 16:29:13
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Invited speech
Abstract
The Piwi-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway plays a crucial role in protecting animal germ cells by repressing transposons. However, the mechanism of piRNA-guided heterochromatin formation and its relationship to transcriptional termination remains elusive. Through RNA interference screening, we discovered Pcf11 and PNUTS as essential for piRNA-guided silencing in Drosophila germline. Enforced tethering of Pcf11 leads to co-transcriptional repression and RNA polymerase II stalling, both are dependent on an α-helical region of Pcf11 capable of forming condensates. An intrinsically disordered region can substitute for the α-helical region of Pcf11 in its silencing capacity and support animal development, demonstrating a causal relationship between phase separation and Pcf11’s function. Pcf11 stalls RNA polymerase II by preferentially forming condensates with the unphosphorylated Spt5, promoted by the PP1/PNUTS phosphatase during termination. We propose that Pcf11/Spt5 condensates control termination by decelerating polymerase elongation, a property exploited by piRNAs to silence transposons and initiate RNA-mediated heterochromatin formation. Additionally, we have performed micro-C experiments to explore if Pcf11 degradation would affect gene-looping.
Keywords
Pcf11,Pol II, gene-looping
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