Publication:
Human prefoldin modulates co-transcriptional pre-mRNA splicing.

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2021

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Payán-Bravo, Laura
Fontalva, Sara
Peñate, Xenia
Cases, Ildefonso
Guerrero-Martínez, José Antonio
Pareja-Sánchez, Yerma
Odriozola-Gil, Yosu
Lara, Esther
Jimeno-González, Silvia
Suñé, Carles

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Prefoldin is a heterohexameric complex conserved from archaea to humans that plays a cochaperone role during the co-translational folding of actin and tubulin monomers. Additional functions of prefoldin have been described, including a positive contribution to transcription elongation and chromatin dynamics in yeast. Here we show that prefoldin perturbations provoked transcriptional alterations across the human genome. Severe pre-mRNA splicing defects were also detected, particularly after serum stimulation. We found impairment of co-transcriptional splicing during transcription elongation, which explains why the induction of long genes with a high number of introns was affected the most. We detected genome-wide prefoldin binding to transcribed genes and found that it correlated with the negative impact of prefoldin depletion on gene expression. Lack of prefoldin caused global decrease in Ser2 and Ser5 phosphorylation of the RNA polymerase II carboxy-terminal domain. It also reduced the recruitment of the CTD kinase CDK9 to transcribed genes, and the association of splicing factors PRP19 and U2AF65 to chromatin, which is known to depend on CTD phosphorylation. Altogether the reported results indicate that human prefoldin is able to act locally on the genome to modulate gene expression by influencing phosphorylation of elongating RNA polymerase II, and thereby regulating co-transcriptional splicing.

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Cell Line
Humans
Introns
Molecular Chaperones
RNA Polymerase II
RNA Precursors
RNA Splicing
RNA Splicing Factors
RNA, Messenger
Repressor Proteins
Transcription, Genetic
Transcriptome

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