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Human histone H1 variants impact splicing outcome by controlling RNA polymerase II elongation

Authors :
Israel Science Foundation
Israel Cancer Research Fund
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
Tel Aviv University
Pascal, Corina
Zonszain, Jonathan
Hameiri, Ofir
Gargi-Levi, Chen
Lev-Maor, Galit
Tammer, Luna
Levy, Tamar
Tarabeih, Anan
Roy, Vanessa Rachel
Ben-Salmon, Stav
Elbaz, Liraz
Eid, Mireille
Hakim, Tamar
Abu Rabe'a, Salima
Shalev, Nana
Jordan, Albert
Meshorer, Eran
Ast, Gil
Israel Science Foundation
Israel Cancer Research Fund
United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
Tel Aviv University
Pascal, Corina
Zonszain, Jonathan
Hameiri, Ofir
Gargi-Levi, Chen
Lev-Maor, Galit
Tammer, Luna
Levy, Tamar
Tarabeih, Anan
Roy, Vanessa Rachel
Ben-Salmon, Stav
Elbaz, Liraz
Eid, Mireille
Hakim, Tamar
Abu Rabe'a, Salima
Shalev, Nana
Jordan, Albert
Meshorer, Eran
Ast, Gil
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Histones shape chromatin structure and the epigenetic landscape. H1, the most diverse histone in the human genome, has 11 variants. Due to the high structural similarity between the H1s, their unique functions in transferring information from the chromatin to mRNA-processing machineries have remained elusive. Here, we generated human cell lines lacking up to five H1 subtypes, allowing us to characterize the genomic binding profiles of six H1 variants. Most H1s bind to specific sites, and binding depends on multiple factors, including GC content. The highly expressed H1.2 has a high affinity for exons, whereas H1.3 binds intronic sequences. H1s are major splicing regulators, especially of exon skipping and intron retention events, through their effects on the elongation of RNA polymerase II (RNAPII). Thus, H1 variants determine splicing fate by modulating RNAPII elongation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442723651
Document Type :
Electronic Resource