4.5 Article

PRC1 drives Polycomb-mediated gene repression by controlling transcription initiation and burst frequency

Journal

NATURE STRUCTURAL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 10, Pages 811-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41594-021-00661-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [209400/Z/17/Z]
  2. European Research Council [681440]
  3. Lister Institute of Preventive Medicine
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [681440] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  5. Wellcome Trust [209400/Z/17/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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The authors discovered that the Polycomb repressive complex PRC1 functions independently of PRC2 to counteract Pol II binding and regulate transcription initiation by controlling transcriptional burst frequency. This finding provides a mechanistic and conceptual framework for Polycomb-dependent transcriptional control.
Here the authors find that Polycomb repressive complex PRC1 functions independently of PRC2 to counteract Pol II binding, regulating transcription initiation and burst frequency. The Polycomb repressive system plays a fundamental role in controlling gene expression during mammalian development. To achieve this, Polycomb repressive complexes 1 and 2 (PRC1 and PRC2) bind target genes and use histone modification-dependent feedback mechanisms to form Polycomb chromatin domains and repress transcription. The inter-relatedness of PRC1 and PRC2 activity at these sites has made it difficult to discover the specific components of Polycomb chromatin domains that drive gene repression and to understand mechanistically how this is achieved. Here, by exploiting rapid degron-based approaches and time-resolved genomics, we kinetically dissect Polycomb-mediated repression and discover that PRC1 functions independently of PRC2 to counteract RNA polymerase II binding and transcription initiation. Using single-cell gene expression analysis, we reveal that PRC1 acts uniformly within the cell population and that repression is achieved by controlling transcriptional burst frequency. These important new discoveries provide a mechanistic and conceptual framework for Polycomb-dependent transcriptional control.

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