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Nascent RNA Sequencing Reveals Widespread Pausing and Divergent Initiation at Human Promoters
Leighton J. Core,*Joshua J. Waterfall,*John T. Lis
RNA polymerases are highly regulated molecular machines. Wepresent a method (global run-on sequencing, GRO-seq) that mapsthe position, amount, and orientation of transcriptionally engagedRNA polymerases genome-wide. In this method, nuclear run-onRNA molecules are subjected to large-scale parallel sequencingand mapped to the genome. We show that peaks of promoter-proximalpolymerase reside on 30% of human genes, transcription extendsbeyond pre-messenger RNA 3' cleavage, and antisense transcriptionis prevalent. Additionally, most promoters have an engaged polymeraseupstream and in an orientation opposite to the annotated gene.This divergent polymerase is associated with active genes butdoes not elongate effectively beyond the promoter. These resultsimply that the interplay between polymerases and regulatorsover broad promoter regions dictates the orientation and efficiencyof productive transcription.
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
* These authors contributed equally to this work.
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jtl10{at}cornell.edu
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