Journal article

Degradation of DNA damage-independently stalled RNA polymerase II is independent of the E3 ligase Elc1


Authors listKarakasili, E; Burkert-Kautzsch, C; Kieser, A; Sträßer, K

Publication year2014

Pages10503-10515

JournalNucleic Acids Research

Volume number42

Issue number16

ISSN0305-1048

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku731

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract
Transcription elongation is a highly dynamic and discontinuous process, which includes frequent pausing of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). RNAPII complexes that stall persistently on a gene during transcription elongation block transcription and thus have to be removed. It has been proposed that the cellular pathway for removal of these DNA damage-independently stalled RNAPII complexes is similar or identical to the removal of RNAPII complexes stalled due to DNA damage. Here, we show that-consistent with previous data-DNA damage-independent stalling causes polyubiquitylation and proteasome-mediated degradation of Rpb1, the largest subunit of RNAPII, using Saccharomyces cerevisiae as model system. Moreover, recruitment of the proteasome to RNAPII and transcribed genes is increased when transcription elongation is impaired indicating that Rpb1 degradation takes place at the gene. Importantly, in contrast to the DNA damage-dependent pathway Rpb1 degradation of DNA damage-independently stalled RNAPII is independent of the E3 ligase Elc1. In addition, deubiquitylation of RNAPII is also independent of the Elc1-antagonizing deubiquitylase Ubp3. Thus, the pathway for degradation of DNA damage-independently stalled RNAPII is overlapping yet distinct from the previously described pathway for degradation of RNAPII stalled due to DNA damage. Taken together, we provide the first evidence that the cell discriminates between DNA damage-dependently and -independently stalled RNAPII.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKarakasili, E., Burkert-Kautzsch, C., Kieser, A. and Sträßer, K. (2014) Degradation of DNA damage-independently stalled RNA polymerase II is independent of the E3 ligase Elc1, Nucleic Acids Research, 42(16), pp. 10503-10515. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku731

APA Citation styleKarakasili, E., Burkert-Kautzsch, C., Kieser, A., & Sträßer, K. (2014). Degradation of DNA damage-independently stalled RNA polymerase II is independent of the E3 ligase Elc1. Nucleic Acids Research. 42(16), 10503-10515. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku731


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:24