Abstract

A surprising portion of both mammalian and Drosophila genomes are transcriptionally paused, undergoing initiation without elongation. We tested the hypothesis that transcriptional pausing is an obligate transition state between definitive activation and silencing as human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) change state from pluripotency to mesoderm. Chromatin immunoprecipitation for trimethyl lysine 4 on histone H3 (ChIP-Chip) was used to analyze transcriptional initiation, and 3′ transcript arrays were used to determine transcript elongation. Pluripotent and mesodermal cells had equivalent fractions of the genome in active and paused transcriptional states (∼48% each), with ∼4% definitively silenced (neither initiation nor elongation). Differentiation to mesoderm changed the transcriptional state of 12% of the genome, with roughly equal numbers of genes moving toward activation or silencing. Interestingly, almost all loci (98–99%) changing transcriptional state do so either by entering or exiting the paused state. A majority of these transitions involve either loss of initiation, as genes specifying alternate lineages are archived, or gain of initiation, in anticipation of future full-length expression. The addition of chromatin dynamics permitted much earlier predictions of final cell fate compared to sole use of conventional transcript arrays. These findings indicate that the paused state may be the major transition state for genes changing expression during differentiation, and implicate control of transcriptional elongation as a key checkpoint in lineage specification.

Highlights

  • Transcriptional pausing is the phenomenon in which genes experience initiation of transcription without elongation

  • Human Embryonic Stem Cell Culture Undifferentiated H7 (WiCell) human embryonic stem cells were maintained on Matrigel-coated plates in mouse embryo fibroblast (MEF) conditioned medium as previously described [14,15,16]

  • In order to assess the relative contribution of the paused state to early human development, we used a recently established system of directing the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells to early mesoderm [20]

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Summary

Introduction

Transcriptional pausing is the phenomenon in which genes experience initiation of transcription without elongation. Thought to occur only in rare instances such as Drosophila heat shock genes (reviewed in [1]), Krumm et al proposed that pausing might be a more general mechanism based on detailed analysis of the mouse c-myc gene [2]. Constitutively active housekeeping genes generally do not exhibit transcriptional pausing [12]. This suggests that transcriptional pausing is a widespread mechanism of controlling cell-type specific gene expression programs

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