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Gene architecture is a determinant of the transcriptional response to bulky DNA damages
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Bulky DNA damages block transcription and compromise genome integrity and function. The cellular response to these damages includes global transcription shutdown. Still, active transcription is necessary for transcription-coupled repair and for induction of damage-response genes. To uncover common features of a general bulky DNA damage response, and to identify response-related transcripts that are expressed despite damage, we performed a systematic RNA-seq study comparing the transcriptional response to three independent damage-inducing agents: UV, the chemotherapy cisplatin, and benzo[a]pyrene, a component of cigarette smoke. Reduction in gene expression after damage was associated with higher damage rates, longer gene length, and low GC content. We identified genes with relatively higher expression after all three damage treatments, includingNR4A2, a potential novel damage-response transcription factor. Up-regulated genes exhibit higher exon content that is associated with preferential repair, which could enable rapid damage removal and transcription restoration. The attenuated response to BPDE highlights that not all bulky damages elicit the same response. These findings frame gene architecture as a major determinant of the transcriptional response that is hardwired into the human genome.
Life Science Alliance, LLC
Title: Gene architecture is a determinant of the transcriptional response to bulky DNA damages
Description:
Bulky DNA damages block transcription and compromise genome integrity and function.
The cellular response to these damages includes global transcription shutdown.
Still, active transcription is necessary for transcription-coupled repair and for induction of damage-response genes.
To uncover common features of a general bulky DNA damage response, and to identify response-related transcripts that are expressed despite damage, we performed a systematic RNA-seq study comparing the transcriptional response to three independent damage-inducing agents: UV, the chemotherapy cisplatin, and benzo[a]pyrene, a component of cigarette smoke.
Reduction in gene expression after damage was associated with higher damage rates, longer gene length, and low GC content.
We identified genes with relatively higher expression after all three damage treatments, includingNR4A2, a potential novel damage-response transcription factor.
Up-regulated genes exhibit higher exon content that is associated with preferential repair, which could enable rapid damage removal and transcription restoration.
The attenuated response to BPDE highlights that not all bulky damages elicit the same response.
These findings frame gene architecture as a major determinant of the transcriptional response that is hardwired into the human genome.
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