Author:
Hobbs Matthew,Ender Christine,Baillie Gregory J.,Crawford Joanna,Ru Kelin,Taft Ryan J.,Taft Ryan J.,Mattick John S.
Abstract
AbstractTranscription initiation RNAs (tiRNAs) are small, predominantly 18 nt, RNAs whose biogenesis is associated with nucleosomes adjacent to active transcription initiation sites. These loci usually contain modified histones associated with transcription initiation, including histone H3 trimethylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me3). To further characterize the relationship of tiRNAs and H3K4me3 marked nucleosomes, H3K4me3-targeted RNA:chromatin immunoprecipitations were performed in a murine macrophage cell line, and small RNA sequence libraries were constructed and subjected to deep sequencing. The H3K4me3 libraries exhibited a distinct profile of read lengths with a noticeable enrichment of sequences 17-26 nt in length, with a peak at ∼18nt that included tiRNAs. These RNAs show clear enrichment of sequences that map to genomic features known to be associated with transcription initiation, including CAGE transcription initiation sites (TSSs), sites of RNAPII occupancy, and H3K4me3 sites. The distribution of sequences that map in the vicinity of TSSs is consistent with previous descriptions of tiRNAs; viz. a major peak at approximately 40 nt downstream of the TSS, and a minor broader peak approximately 150-200 nt upstream of, and on the opposite strand to, the TSS. These results show that tiRNAs are physically associated with H3K4me3-marked chromatin. tiRNAs may be markers of RNAPII pausing and it remains a possibility that their association with H3K4me3 is part of an epigenetic signaling system.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory