A CSB-PAF1C axis restores processive transcription elongation after DNA damage repair

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Abstract

Bulky DNA lesions in transcribed strands block RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) elongation and induce a genome-wide transcriptional arrest. The transcription-coupled repair (TCR) pathway efficiently removes transcription-blocking DNA lesions, but how transcription is restored in the genome following DNA repair remains unresolved. Here, we find that the TCR-specific CSB protein loads the PAF1 complex (PAF1C) onto RNAPII in promoter-proximal regions in response to DNA damage. Although dispensable for TCR-mediated repair, PAF1C is essential for transcription recovery after UV irradiation. We find that PAF1C promotes RNAPII pause release in promoter-proximal regions and subsequently acts as a processivity factor that stimulates transcription elongation throughout genes. Our findings expose the molecular basis for a non-canonical PAF1C-dependent pathway that restores transcription throughout the human genome after genotoxic stress.

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van den Heuvel, D., Spruijt, C. G., González-Prieto, R., Kragten, A., Paulsen, M. T., Zhou, D., … Luijsterburg, M. S. (2021). A CSB-PAF1C axis restores processive transcription elongation after DNA damage repair. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21520-w

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