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Dynamic imaging of nascent RNA reveals general principles of transcription dynamics and stochastic splice site selection.

Cell | 2021

The activities of RNA polymerase and the spliceosome are responsible for the heterogeneity in the abundance and isoform composition of mRNA in human cells. However, the dynamics of these megadalton enzymatic complexes working in concert on endogenous genes have not been described. Here, we establish a quasi-genome-scale platform for observing synthesis and processing kinetics of single nascent RNA molecules in real time. We find that all observed genes show transcriptional bursting. We also observe large kinetic variation in intron removal for single introns in single cells, which is inconsistent with deterministic splice site selection. Transcriptome-wide footprinting of the U2AF complex, nascent RNA profiling, long-read sequencing, and lariat sequencing further reveal widespread stochastic recursive splicing within introns. We propose and validate a unified theoretical model to explain the general features of transcription and pervasive stochastic splice site selection.

Pubmed ID: 33979654 RIS Download

Research resources used in this publication

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Associated grants

  • Agency: Intramural NIH HHS, United States
    Id: Z99 CA999999
  • Agency: Intramural NIH HHS, United States
    Id: ZIA BC011383

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RRID:SCR_016366

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RRID:SCR_018550

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RRID:SCR_018982

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