Pervasive transcription: Detecting functional RNAs in bacteria

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Abstract

Pervasive, or genome-wide, transcription has been reported in all domains of life. In bacteria, most pervasive transcription occurs antisense to proteincoding transcripts, although recently a new class of pervasive RNAs was identified that originates from within annotated genes. Initially considered to be non-functional transcriptional noise, pervasive transcription is increasingly being recognized as important in regulating gene expression. The function of pervasive transcription is an extensively debated question in the field of transcriptomics and regulatory RNA biology. Here, we highlight the most recent contributions addressing the purpose of pervasive transcription in bacteria and discuss their implications.

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Lybecker, M., Bilusic, I., & Raghavan, R. (2014). Pervasive transcription: Detecting functional RNAs in bacteria. Transcription, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.4161/21541272.2014.944039

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